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The Shepherd Who Didn’t Go Part 2

   

So they went on, impatient and eager for this wondrous quest, Ezra and Joel muttering now and then
at the obstinacy of the boy, but Samuel full of glowing admiration. Dahvid watched them as they moved up
the hill. That dream of finding the Christ-child—how could he give it up? Once he started forward: “I
will go!” But something held him back, and he threw himself on the ground and kept back tears of bitter
disappointment. After a time he grew calmer, and found a certain comfort in thinking of the helplessness of
his flock.
Suddenly the low growling of his dog brought him to his feet. But he saw nothing, heard nothing, and bade
the dog be still. In a moment, with a bark of alarm, the dog was up again and away. Dahvid sprang up, certain

now that danger was near. There was panic in the flock. Toward the wilderness he could see lean, gray forms,
moving stealthily and swiftly among the sheep. Wolves! Springing upon a rock, and waving his cloak in
circles about his head, he uttered the familiar call which gathered the sheep about him, his own sheep nearest,
and behind them the flocks of Samuel, Ezra, and Joel. The wolves made off and Dahvid quickly looked over
his flock to see if all were there—for the Eastern shepherd knows his sheep by name.
One by one he named them, with an increasing feeling of relief. They were all there. No! One was
missing—Ke-barbara, the pet of the flock. Ke-barbara means striped, and the little sheep was so called
because of the dark marking of her fleece. After waving his staff over the huddled beasts, and uttering a few
times the soothing cry, “Hoo-o-o, ta-a-a! hoo-o-o, ta-a-a!” he rushed off in the direction which the wolves had
taken. At the top [Pg 140]of the steep bank, at the edge of the pasture, he stopped and called, “Ke-barbara!
Ke-barbara!” and for answer heard an anguished bleat from the rocks below.
It was a steep and slippery way, but Dahvid plunged down with no thought of anything but the sheep. Loose
stones gave way and he lost his footing. At the bottom he picked himself up unhurt, and there beside him were
two wolves quarreling over the wounded sheep. One of them slunk away at sight of the boy, but the other had
a taste of blood and sprang at Dahvid, missing his throat but sinking his teeth into his leg. Then Dahvid, as the
beast turned to spring again, struck him a heavy blow on the head with his staff and killed him. His own
wounds were bleeding and painful, but he turned at once with caressing words to the sheep.
“Ke-barbara, they have hurt you, little sheep! But they have not killed you! I reached you just in time. You
cannot walk; can you? And I am afraid I cannot carry you. But I can help. There, put your head on my arm.”
He groaned with pain. “No, the other one.” So he talked to her, as to a child, as the wounded boy and the
wounded sheep slowly made their way up the steep hillside and over the rough rocks. It was not a long way,
and, half an hour before, the sturdy shepherd lad would have bounded over it quickly enough. But now the
wounded leg was slow, the wounded arm was weak, and the wounded lamb seemed very heavy. It was a
weary journey, with many stops. When at last they reached the flock, still huddled trembling together, Dahvid
had only strength to give one reassuring “Hoo-o-o, ta-a-a,” then fell exhausted.
How long he lay there he did not know, but the dawn [Pg 141]was growing bright when three men appeared
from the direction of the town. It was not the shepherds, but old Abraham and two of his servants. As the old
man caught sight of his flock, but he saw no shepherd, he raged with anger. “Dahvid!” he shouted fiercely.
“Dahvid!” There was no answer.
“The young vagabond! He has left the sheep. Of great worth are his promises! He would keep my flock.
‘Come life—come death!’ Dahvid! Let me once find him and I will give him something he will
remember longer than he does his vows.”
As he drew near the flock he discovered the boy lying on the ground. “Ah, asleep is he? and the sun this high!
Come, get up!” he shouted fiercely, and lifted his staff to strike. But, as he did so he caught sight of the white
face and the bleeding arm, and noticed the wounded sheep. Old Abraham dropped his angry arm, and there
was a touch of tenderness that was strange to him, as he continued: “Ah, Dahvid, boy! You did not forget your
promises; did you, Dahvid? And I would have struck you! Forgive me, my lad.” Then, turning to his servants,
he gave them command: “Take him to the inn and bid them care for him. I, myself, will keep the flock today.”
The servants bowed low, “The inn is full, my lord.”
Old Abraham commanded again positively, “Take him to the inn, I say.”
“But the inn is full, my lord,” replied the older servant, trembling.

Then the other servant spoke, “There is perhaps room in the stable, my lord.”
[Pg 142]“Then bear him thither, and bid them give him the best of care. Go at once.”
So the servants bore Dahvid away, still unconscious from his wounds and made him comfortable on a bed of
straw in the stable of the inn.
It was some hours before he came to himself. When at last he opened his eyes, and his ears began to catch
once more the sounds about him, the first thing he heard was a faint cry.
“What is that?” he asked eagerly of Samuel, who was watching beside him.
“That,” said the old shepherd, in tones of mingled joy and reverence, “is the Child the angels told us about, the
Child we came to see. We found him here in the stable, in a manger.”
“And I am not to see him?”
“Yes, you are,” said Samuel, and a grave-faced man brought the Child and laid Him in Dahvid’s arms, the
Child for whose coming the people had been longing for a thousand years.
The color at length came back to Dahvid’s white cheeks and strength and health to his limbs and he went back
again to the plain. Old Abraham embraced him, “Forgive me, my son. I have been a hard master. Thou hast
been very faithful, and for thy reward I make thee lord over all my flocks and half of them shall be thine
own.”
So Dahvid became a man of flocks, and all his days he was known among the other shepherds as the one [Pg
143]who had held the Christ-child in his arms. And there was none among them who was thought so brave,
and gentle, and wise as the Shepherd Who Didn’t Go

By Jay T. Stocking

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