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The Man on the Threshold
by
Here he was interrupted by people who were leaving the ceremony.
“To a madman,” he repeated, “so that God’s wisdom might speak through his mouth and shame human pride. His name has been forgotten, or was never known, but he went naked through the streets, or was clothed in rags, counting his fingers with a thumb and mocking at the trees.”
My common sense rebelled. I said that to hand over the verdict to a madman was to nullify the trial.
“The defendant accepted the judge,” was his answer, “seeing, perhaps, that because of the risk the conspirators would run if they set him free, only from a man who was mad might he not expect a sentence of death. I heard that he laughed when he was told who the judge was. The trial lasted many days and nights, drawn out by the swelling of the number of witnesses.”
The old man stopped. Something was troubling him. In order to bridge the lapse, I asked him how many days.
“At least nineteen,” he replied.
People who were leaving the ceremony interrupted him again; wine is forbidden to Muslims, but the faces and voices were those of drunkards. One, on passing, shouted something to the old man.
“Nineteen days—exactly,” he said, setting matters straight.”The faithless dog heard sentence passed, and the knife feasted on his throat.”
He had spoken fiercely, joyfully. With a different voice now he brought the story to an end.”He died without fear; in the most vile of men there is some virtue.”
“Where did all this happen?” I asked him.”In a farmhouse?”
For the first time, he looked into my eyes. Then he made things clear, slowly, measuring his words.”I said that he had been confined in a farmhouse, not that he was tried there. He was tried in this city, in a house like any other, like this one. One house differs little from another; what is important to know is whether the house is built in Hell or in Heaven.”
I asked him about the fate of the conspirators.
“I don’t know,” he told me patiently.”These things took place and were forgotten many years ago now. Maybe what they did was condemned by men, but not by the Lord.”
Having said this, he got up. I felt his words as a dismissal, and from that moment I no longer existed for him. Men and women from all the corners of the Punjab swarmed over us, praying and intoning, and nearly swept us away. I wondered how, from courtyards so narrow they were little more than long passageways, so many persons could be pouring out. Others were coming from the neighboring houses; it seems they had leaped over the walls. By shoving and cursing, I forced my way inside. At the heart of the innermost courtyard, I came upon a naked man, crowned with yellow flowers, whom everyone kissed and caressed, with a sword in his hand. The sword was stained, for it had dealt Glencairn his death. I found his mutilated body in the stables out back.