Thirty-Two

FOR OVER A WEEK AFTER THE ISRAELITE SPIES HAD escaped, life for Rahab was quiet. No one in the family besides Shemu and Atene knew what had happened under their roof, for which Rahab was immensely grateful.

The men across the street had disappeared. Whether it was because they had finally seen Rahab, or because the guards were more vigilant in dispersing them, they were gone. She was still shackled to the house, however. Her father said that too many people had seen her during the New Year procession, and he feared she would be the subject of gossip and innuendo and the bold stares of knowing men if she went out.

As quiet day succeeded quiet day, Rahab grew progressively more restive. After the life-and-death situation she had just passed through, the conversation of her mother and sisters-in-law seemed tedious and trivial. Her greatest frustration, however, was that she could not see Sala, and she longed for him with all her heart.

Finally she decided to beg Shemu to help her. She knew it wasn’t fair to ask him to go against the authority of their father, but she was desperate. She looked for an opportunity to catch him alone, and at last she succeeded.

He was in the small storeroom at the back of the house inspecting a barrel of barley Mepu had just received when Rahab slipped quietly into the room and closed the door behind her.

“I must talk to you, Shemu,” she said.

He turned in surprise when he heard her voice. “What is it?”

She threaded her way between the other barrels and looked up at him with pleading eyes. “I want to see Sala. I need to see Sala. We love each other, Shemu. How would you feel if you were imprisoned in this house and couldn’t see Atene?”

He said gently, “You know Father doesn’t want you to go out of the house.”

“Of course I know that. I have been a prisoner here ever since I came home from the shrine. It’s not fair, Shemu. None of that was my fault, and Papa is punishing me for it.”

“He’s not trying to punish you, he’s trying to protect you, Rahab.”

Rahab folded her arms across her chest. “You and I both know, my brother, that it is I who am protecting him.” Her eyes held his steadily and her husky voice left no room for him to disagree.

He held her gaze. “I know you are not a little girl any longer, Rahab. You are a woman of strength and courage. But Father—”

She said, “I want you to go to see Sala and arrange someplace where we can meet privately.”

“Rahab, the city is stuffed with people! There is no private place anywhere.”

“What about our roof?”

He shook his head. “With the weather growing warmer, there is always someone up there.”

“There must be some way to do this,” she cried despairingly.

He thought for a long minute, then said, “Sometimes the best place to hide is out in the open. Suppose I take you to the market, to that jeweler’s shop that you and Atene like to look at. I can tell Sala that you will be there at noon. If you pull your headscarf forward over your face, perhaps no one will recognize you. At least you will have a chance to see each other and to talk.”

“That would be fine.” She smiled as she had not smiled in quite some time. “Just seeing him and talking to him will be something. Thank you, Shemu!”

He looked at her and a return smile tugged at the corners of his mouth. “When you look like that, Rahab, I don’t think any man could deny you.”

She laughed. “I don’t care about other men. I only care about Sala.”

“I know he loves you—he told me so. But I don’t know what kind of future you can have together, my sister. Will his family accept you, you who have Canaanite blood in your veins? And if they don’t, will Sala—a lord among his own people—be content to settle down as a farmer with your family?”

Rahab had spent many night hours thinking about what had happened to her and to Sala during the time they had been together in Jericho, and now she answered her brother: “I believe in Yahweh, Shemu. I believe He saved me from the slavers. I believe He saved me from the king. I think He always wanted Sala and me to be together. Sala says Yahweh has a mission for us. We don’t know exactly what it is, but we must be alert and listen for His voice. Yahweh will make things right for us if we do as He wishes.”

“You really do believe in this Yahweh, Rahab.”

“I do. And I think perhaps He has a mission for you as well.”

Shemu looked down at the barrel of barley he had been inspecting, then back up to Rahab. “Perhaps you are right,” he said softly. “Atene has told me about the Israelite Abraham, how Yahweh gave him and his wife a child in their old age. Perhaps it is not a coincidence that Atene conceived only after she prayed to Him. I would like to know more about Him, and I know she would too.”

Rahab’s heart flooded with joy. “I am so glad, my brother, that you feel this way! I want to know more too.”

He bent and kissed her on the forehead.

Voices sounded outside the storeroom door.

Rahab said urgently, “You must go to find Sala now, before someone sees you and wants to go with you.”

“All right.” He patted her on the shoulder, and she watched as he made his way through the barrels and out the storeroom door.

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Sala couldn’t believe his luck when Shemu walked into the front room of the inn just as Sala was going out. The two men stopped and said each other’s names in surprise. Then they both spoke at once.

Shemu said, “I have been looking for you.”

Sala said, “How is Rahab? Is she all right? Did anyone else in the family find out about the spies?”

They grinned sheepishly and Sala said, “Let’s go for a walk.”

Shemu spoke first, answering Sala’s question. “Everything went smoothly. I held the rope while Rahab watched the door for me. We had them on their way in no time. But my father has been protective of her, not letting her out of the house, and she sent me here to see if I could arrange a meeting between you.”

Relief flooded through Sala at this and he grinned broadly. “That is wonderful news. I have been so anxious to see her, but I haven’t been able to think of a way to get word to her.”

“If you will go to the jeweler’s shop in the market, the one across from the tool shop, I will have her there at noontime.”

Sala couldn’t hide his disappointment. “In the middle of the marketplace? Can’t we meet on your roof again?”

“No, too many people are using it now. Besides . . .” Shemu gave him a calculating look. “I’m not sure if I want my sister to be alone with you.”

Sala couldn’t hide his disappointment. He didn’t just want to talk to Rahab. He wanted to feel her in his arms, he wanted to— He sighed. “Perhaps you are right.”

“I heard that your father was arrested. How did that happen?”

“It was because Gideon and Isaac were seen at the inn, and my father had taken them away from the wine shop. Someone reported him to the guards as an Israelite spy himself. He was taken to military quarters for questioning. Fortunately, Rahab’s tale that the spies had been in her house and had left the day before helped to convince the commander that my father wasn’t involved with them. They ended up letting him go. But it was an unpleasant experience, and he owes Rahab for saving him as well as saving Gideon and Isaac.”

“Good. I’m glad he realizes that.”

Sala stopped walking for a moment and put his hand on Shemu’s arm. “Thank you for doing this for us. And thank you for your help in saving my people from discovery.”

Shemu nodded and the two men continued to walk on, each concerned with their own thoughts. Finally Shemu said in a low voice, “I must confess I am curious about this God of yours. After four years of marriage Atene is finally with child, and it didn’t happen until she prayed to Yahweh.”

Sala slapped Shemu on the shoulder in congratulations. “That is wonderful news. I am happy for you both and I am also happy you want to learn about Yahweh. He has touched you and Atene, I think. He wants you to come to Him.”

Shemu shrugged uncomfortably and Sala did not pursue the topic. When they reached the main road, Sala said, “I think I will go along to the market now. Can you go to fetch Rahab?”

“I will,” Shemu said.

The two men parted and Sala stood watching Rahab’s brother stride away, every part of him, body and soul, reverberating with happiness that soon he would see her.

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Every minute seemed like an hour to Rahab as she awaited Shemu’s return. When he finally came up to the roof where she was sewing with some of her sisters-in-law, she flew to him.

“Get your headscarf,” he said as she followed him down the stairs. “We’re going right now.”

Another one of her sisters-in-law was in their bedroom suckling her baby when Rahab came in. “Where are you going?” she asked when Rahab grabbed her most concealing headscarf.

“Just outdoors for a bit,” Rahab called back as she descended the stairs to where Shemu awaited her.

Kata was in the front room, folding clothes with the help of a few of her granddaughters. She looked up sharply as Shemu and Rahab came through on their way to the door.

“Where are you going?” she asked in bewilderment.

“I’m taking Rahab out for some air, Mother. She’s been cooped up in the house for too long.”

“But your father—!”

“Don’t worry, Mama,” Rahab said, “I’m in disguise.”

She pulled the headscarf so far forward that it almost covered her eyes and followed Shemu out the door before Kata could reply.

Rahab didn’t say anything as she walked closely behind Shemu on their way to the market. She was happy about seeing Sala, unhappy they could not be alone, and worried about what he might have to tell her of the Israelite attack.

Deep in her heart, Rahab was conflicted about the coming confrontation between the Israelites and the people of Jericho. It was hard for her to imagine what such a battle might be like. She believed what Sala had told her about Yahweh’s desire for the Israelites to return to Canaan after their long captivity in Egypt. She believed they were His people, and she wanted to be one of them.

But when she thought of all the people who were packed into Jericho. All of the men and women and children . . . how could it be possible they all would die? It was an idea her mind struggled to understand but could not encompass.

All of these thoughts disappeared the moment she saw Sala. He was hard to miss, he was so much taller than most of the men around him. He spied her almost as soon as she saw him and, even though she was almost covered by the headscarf, his face lit up with a blinding smile.

He was in front of the jeweler’s shop and, aside from the grin, he made no move toward her. She continued to follow closely behind Shemu.

When they had reached the shop, Shemu acted surprised. “Arut! What are you doing here?”

Sala said, “Just passing the time until I have to meet a friend. How are you, Shemu?”

“Very well. I’ve come to pick out a piece of jewelry for my wife and I’ve brought my sister with me to help me choose.”

“Good idea,” Sala said, nodding toward Rahab’s partially covered face.

Shemu said, “I also have to pick up something for my father in the tool maker’s shop. Can my sister stay with you while I go in? She has no interest in tools.”

“Of course,” Sala said with grave courtesy.

“I won’t be long.” Shemu gave a warning look at Sala, then ducked across the street.

“Let us move into the shade over there,” Sala said.

Rahab nodded, not trusting herself to speak.

They walked over to the small patch of shade provided by the overlapping awning of one of the stalls and stopped, facing each other.

Sala’s expression was as intense as his voice. “I have missed you so much, Rahab. And I’ve been worried about you.”

“I’ve missed you too,” she answered.

He looked around. “Can’t you at least push that headscarf up so I can see your eyes?”

She did as he asked.

He gave her a crooked smile. “When I’m away from you, I think that you can’t possibly be as wonderful as I remember, and then when I see you again I discover that my memory was dim compared to the reality.”

Rahab smiled back at him. “I feel the same way about you.”

He laughed at this, then pressed his lips together. “I wish we could be alone!”

“I wish it too,” she said, a tremble in her voice.

He inhaled deeply, as if to steady himself. Before he could speak, however, there was a rush of movement by the crowd and a rising rumble of excitement. Rahab and Sala looked in the direction in which the crowd had begun to move and Sala asked someone what was happening.

“There is a proclamation from the king,” came the answer. “And there is a unit of guards marching down the main street!”

Sala put his arm around Rahab’s shoulder, to keep her from being pushed by the now thrusting crowd. To his relief he saw Shemu come out of the shop across the way. Shemu fought his way to them and took Rahab away from Sala and into his own protective embrace. He said, “Someone came into the shop and said there was a proclamation from the king.”

“That’s what we heard,” Sala returned.

The two men looked at each other across Rahab’s head. Then Shemu said, “You go and find out what the proclamation is about. I will take Rahab into the jewelry store to keep her safe.”

Sala nodded and slid gracefully into the moving mass of people while Shemu guided Rahab into the shop to wait.

They remained inside until Sala came back some twenty minutes later with a report. “I missed the proclamation but I heard about it from some people who were there. The Israelites have crossed the Jordan and are encamped five miles south of Jericho. The king has ordered the military to take their battle stations on the wall and he urges the city not to panic. He says Jericho is the best protected city in all of Canaan and it will never fall.”

Shemu looked stunned. “They crossed the river? But it’s still in full flood!”

“Nothing is impossible for Yahweh,” Sala replied soberly. “Did you not know that He parted the sea for us when we escaped from Egypt? Jericho is doomed. Shemu, it is vital that you make certain your family knows what to do when the attack comes. They will be protected but they must be inside your house.”

Rahab said urgently, “Shemu, I want Sala and his father to come stay with us. They are Israelites and we will be safer if we have them there to vouch for us.”

Shemu gave Sala a grim look.

Rahab put a hand on his arm and said his name.

Shemu shrugged. “All right. You had better come.”

“How will you explain our presence to your father?” Sala asked. “He does not know about your bargain with Gideon and Isaac. Or does he?”

“He knows nothing,” Shemu replied. “I will tell him you have volunteered to vouch for us if our family is endangered, that you have some power with the Israelite leader.”

“I will speak to my father and see if I can get him to agree to move in with your family.”

The two men looked at each other for a long time. Then, “That will be best,” said Shemu.