‘Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord.’
HE WAS AN EASY CHILD to overlook. Small and wiry, whose rags
were the colour of the dust he slept in. His long dead parents had named him
Elias, but most of the village just called him Runt. Rabbi Jacob allowed the
orphan boy to sleep in a corner of his storehouse and would feed him when
others wouldn’t. Which wasn’t often, because Runt was forever making himself
useful: running errands, carrying messages, hauling olives to the village press.
Occasionally, people tossed him a coin, but mostly Runt worked for food. Rabbi
Jacob’s generosity was seldom tested.
Which was more than could be said for his patience. Runt was
forever asking the old teacher questions. Shrewd questions. Questions inspired
by the lad’s uncanny knack for seeing and hearing things that his neighbours, had
they but known, would certainly wish he hadn’t seen and heard. Runt kept a detailed
mental ledger of the villagers’ good and evil words and deeds. “What that boy
knows,” the Rabbi would mutter to himself, “will get him into trouble one of
these days – and me, too, I shouldn’t wonder!”
But it was only after the village carpenter and his young
wife had returned from their travels with a brand new baby boy, that the
trouble Jacob had for so long anticipated came calling.
“Rabbi, do you think that the carpenter’s wife’s child is
truly the carpenter’s son?”
“How many times must I warn you, Elias, about asking such
questions? What possible reason would you have to doubt that Mary’s baby is
Joseph’s son?”
The boy poked the fire, sending sparks and shadows flying.
“Are you cold, boy? You’re shivering.”
“What I saw and heard that night still makes me shiver,
Rabbi.”
“Tell me, then, Elias – what did you see and hear?”
Runt pulled his knees up under his chin and stared into the
flames.
“Mary was in her father’s garden. Nothing unusual in that,
of course, and I was just about to turn the corner when I noticed that she
wasn’t alone. A man, clad all in white, was seated on the garden wall. I say
white, but to tell the truth I’m not sure what colour it was. All I know is
that there was a glimmering in that garden like moonlight, except that the moon
had not yet risen. I ducked down, and hidden by the wall’s shadow, crept
closer.”
“And what did you hear, Elias?”
“Words I’ll never forget, Rabbi. The man in white spoke
quietly, but I heard every syllable. ‘Do not be afraid, Mary,’ he said, “for
you have found favour with God. Very soon you will conceive and bear a son, and
you shall call him Jesus. He will be the son of the Most High and of his
kingdom there will be no end.’ Mary was taken aback, as you might imagine. ‘But
Joseph and I have not yet wed”, she said, ‘and until we do there will be no
babies – of that you may be sure!’ The man in white smiled. ‘The Holy Spirit
will be with you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. A child
there will be. A holy child. And he will be the
Son of God.’ And as he spoke these words the light about him began to grow
brighter. Mary fell to her knees.”
“What did she say, boy, what did she say! Jacob’s eyes were
wide and flames were reflected in them.
Runt looked up into the old man’s eager countenance. “She
said: ‘Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord.’ And suddenly the man wasn’t
there anymore. Just Mary on her knees, praying in the dark garden. I rose then
to go and there, just a few paces before me, stood the man.”
“Did he speak to you, Elias? What did he say?”
“He spoke no word, but somehow I knew that I must say
nothing of what I had seen and heard until after the baby was born. Then I
could speak of it freely, because the whole world must know who has come among
them.”
The old Rabbi fell to his knees and gathered the boy in his
arms: “God is with us, Elias!”, he whispered hoarsely, his eyes fixed upon the single
brilliant star flaring in his narrow window. “God is with us!”
This short story was
originally published in The Waikato Times, The Taranaki Daily News, The
Timaru Herald, The Otago Daily Times and The Greymouth Star of Friday, 23 December 2016.