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Authors: Beatrice Gormley

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A plaintive note in his voice made me think of my uncle Reuben, watching my grandmother gaze lovingly at my father. It made me sad. Why was there never enough love to go around?

“Simon the Rock!” sighed Yeshua. “How well your nickname suits you!” (By this time, the rabbi had given me a nickname, too. Finding out about my family’s smelly business, he began calling me Sardine Mari.)

As if Yeshua hadn’t just indicated that Simon had said something dense, Andrew went on in the same vein. “It’s bad enough, Rabbi, that people see you traveling with women. They’re saying it doesn’t look right, for a holy man. It gives people the wrong idea about your Way.”

“So you think women have no place in the kingdom of heaven?” asked Yeshua gently.

“No, of course, women can contribute money for the mission,” said Andrew. “But they ought to stay at home.”

“Andrew, Andrew!” Yeshua sighed again. “Where should I begin? Let me tell you two a story….”

I waited for a day to let Yeshua’s words to Simon sink in. Then I found a chance to speak with him out of earshot of the others. “I only want to say, I would never try to take your place with the rabbi. I can see how precious you are to him. He depends on you.”

Simon looked at me half-suspiciously, but he said, “Do you think so?”

“Everyone knows it,” I said earnestly. “You’re the most solid, dependable one of all the disciples. That’s what he means, even when he teases you and calls you the Rock.”

I was only speaking the truth to Simon. But there was a larger truth behind it: every one of us was precious to Yeshua. He spent time with
each
of us, somehow giving each one his full attention. I remarked on this to Joanna, and she nodded. “He’s so eager to find the jewel in each person,” she said, “so sure the jewel is there.”

“Is that how you felt—when he healed you?” I asked. I knew that Joanna had first come to Yeshua with a wasting illness.

“Yes,” she said quietly. “The rabbi made me see what my life could be if I understood that the Lord loves me—loves each one of us—so dearly.”

“It’s a shock to feel so cherished,” I said, thinking of the moment when I stared at Yeshua through the fishing net.

“And another shock to
realize
how much he expects of you,” said Joanna wryly.

Indeed. I thought of what Yeshua had told me, that I would be a bridge to the unseen world for the others. The very idea made me gasp. And yet, I saw that I’d already begun to serve in this way: for Matthew as he waited for a sign to follow Yeshua, and for the young mother who asked about the mustard seed. Maybe I’d even helped Simon to feel more confident of his worth.

Each one of the disciples seemed to be growing their gifts, as fast as barley sprouts when the rains come. Late one afternoon, as we stopped to camp between villages, Matthew joined me in gathering firewood. He told me that his brother, James, had set about memorizing all of Rabbi Yeshua’s sayings and deeds. He was talking to the other disciples, gathering whatever each one remembered.

“Your brother can remember as much as twenty others put together?” I was impressed.

Matthew explained that before James joined Yeshua’s family, he’d studied with a scholarly sect near the Dead Sea. “They taught him how to store many scrolls’ worth of words in his mind. For instance,” Matthew said with a note of pride, “James can recite the Torah from beginning to end. So I told him the deeds I knew about: how Yeshua cast out your
demons, and also how Yeshua healed the possessed man on the other side of the lake.”

“Does James know the rabbi’s saying about the kingdom of heaven being like a mustard seed?” I asked.

“Yes, I reminded him of that one,” Matthew assured me. “Also ‘Blessed are the merciful, for they—’” He had to stop, overcome with emotion.

I finished the saying for him: “‘For they shall receive mercy.’”

After I’d been with Yeshua’s family for a few months, I ran across someone I’d never expected to see again: Ramla. I’d assumed that she’d gone back to Tiberias after the elders of Magdala banished her, but she turned up in Bethsaida-Julias.

Yeshua generally avoided cities, which were expensive and inhospitable to strangers. But at this time, he was more concerned with avoiding Herod Antipas’s soldiers. Friends had brought word that Antipas wanted to question the wandering preacher who drew such large crowds. So we left Capernaum and headed for the east side of the lake, outside Antipas’s territory. Just over the border, we came to the city of Bethsaida-Julias.

And there, in a curtained stall in the market, was a woman in shimmering robes and a crescent-moon headdress.
She scowled when she caught sight of me, but I went up to her anyway.
“Shalom—”

She cut me off. “Spare me your poisoned honey. You saved your own skin, didn’t you, and let the council drive me out of town? I suppose you wouldn’t have lifted a finger if they’d flogged me, too.”

I flinched at “poisoned honey.” I knew how it felt, to be betrayed by someone I trusted. “I did you wrong,” I admitted. “I hope you’ll come to forgive me.” I started to explain how I’d become controlled by the demonic spirits I met in my private garden, and how, under possession, I’d done harm to everyone around me.

But the more I explained, the angrier Ramla looked. “Demons!” She gave a caustic laugh. “What a good excuse! Stars above, now
I
feel a possession coming on, and it’s forcing me to …” Deliberately she leaned forward and spit in my face. “I hope you’ll come to forgive me,” she added in a mincing tone.

I wiped my face. “I do hope so, even if you don’t believe me. For your own sake, won’t you at least come into the Jewish market and listen to Rabbi Yeshua?”

“Yeshua of Nazareth, that one?” Ramla made the sign to ward off the evil eye. “I’ve heard of him. If he had his way, all the magicians of Galilee and Judea would be out of business.”

“Don’t you remember what you said, that afternoon at Susannah’s house?” I pleaded. “You told us it was a time of new beginnings. You were right! Rabbi Yeshua’s message could be a new beginning for you, too. Please come and listen.”

Ramla wasn’t paying attention; her eyes were on someone behind me. I turned to see a man with two young boys in tow. “How much for a good fortune for each of my sons?” he asked.

“Only a silver denarius apiece, sir,” said Ramla, beckoning them into the curtained booth. As I left, I heard Ramla say in her best Egyptian accent, “Of course, I cannot guarantee the outcome of the reading, sir. Ramla only discerns the truth as it is revealed in the stars.”

What is it that makes one person listen to Rabbi Yeshua and another close her ears? As we left the city, I asked Yeshua that question. “Nothing
makes
them listen, or not listen,” he said. “They choose.”

TWENTY-SEVEN
MIRYAM FROM MAGDALA

Now I am living a new life, my life as Miryam from Magdala, disciple and dear friend of Rabbi Yeshua. This life is so different from the life of Mariamne, daughter of Tobias, or wife and widow of Eleazar, or sister of Alexandros, that it’s hard to believe I’m the same person. And yet, I know this is what I was born for.

I would gladly spend the rest of my life this way, with the rabbi and his odd mix of followers. But I sense that a change is coming. We’re planning a trip to Jerusalem for the Passover next spring, and then … I don’t know.

Sometimes Simon’s mother-in-law chides Yeshua, “Rabbi, you’re tired; you should rest. You’re so thin … sit and eat!”

He looks at her fondly and answers, “Time is short.” The simple words fill me with dread.

And what of the sparrow? I began my story with a sparrow, so I’ll end the same way. Here’s another of Rabbi Yeshua’s upside-down pronouncements: “Your heavenly Father cares about every sparrow that falls to the ground.”

When I heard Yeshua declare that last sentence, I blurted out, “He does?” I seemed to be a young child again, grieving over the sparrow felled by my brother’s slingshot. Then, I’d been sure that no one but me cared about the small, common bird.

Now I see, with the eyes of my soul, that every sparrow is a messenger from heaven.

AUTHOR’S NOTE

For centuries, people have imagined Mary of Magdala as a reformed prostitute. We’ve seen her portrayed this way in numerous paintings and sculptures, books and movies. So it’s hard for us to accept the fact that there is
no
evidence that she was ever a prostitute of any kind. The text of the Gospels (and other texts written close to these dates) gives no such indication.

Depending on which Gospel you read, they do say that she was a follower of Jesus, one from whom he drove out seven demons. (“Seven” used in this sense means “completely,” “to the nth degree.”) The Gospels also say that she stood by him while he was crucified, that she discovered the empty tomb, and that she was the first to see the resurrected Jesus.

During the centuries following Jesus’s lifetime, information about the role Mary played in his movement was gradually lost. In the sixth century, Pope Gregory I (probably with good intentions) preached sermons identifying Mary Magdalene with the “sinning” woman who washed Jesus’s feet with her tears (Luke 7:37–39) and with the “woman taken in adultery” (John 8:3–11), although there was no reason to think either of these women was Mary Magdalene. The legend of the Magdalene, the repentant whore, was officially launched.

In medieval times, many legends grew up around Mary Magdalene, including one that she traveled from Galilee to southern France, where she lived for the rest of her life and performed many miracles. Recently the bestselling novel
The Da Vinci Code
has promoted this legend, as well as a more controversial one, that Mary was Jesus’s wife and the mother of his child. But I haven’t found any convincing evidence that Mary of Magdala ever traveled outside Galilee and Judea, or that she was married to anyone, much less Jesus, at the time she was following him.

What does seem reasonable to assume about Mary is that:

she was from Magdala, a town on the shore of the Sea of Galilee (Lake Gennesaret);

she was tormented by what she believed to be a horde of demons;

she was healed by Jesus and joined his movement;

she became one of his closest disciples.

    Working from these points, I began to write my story.

All my quotations from the Bible follow the Revised Standard Version, 1977, published by Oxford University Press.

THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 2010 by Beatrice Gormley

All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.

Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

Visit us on the Web!
www.randomhouse.com/teens

Educators and librarians, for a variety of teaching tools, visit us at
www.randomhouse.com/teachers

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Gormley, Beatrice.

Poisoned honey : a story of Mary Magdalene / Beatrice Gormley. — 1st ed.
p. cm.

Summary: Relates events from the life of a girl who would grow up to be a close follower of Jesus Christ, interspersed with stories of the Apostle Matthew. Includes author’s note distinguishing what Scripture says of Mary Magdalene from later traditions.

eISBN: 978-0-375-89361-2

1. Mary Magdalene, Saint—Juvenile fiction. [1. Mary Magdalene, Saint—Fiction.
2. Saints—Fiction. 3. Jews—History—168 B.C.–135 A.D.—Fiction. 4. Marriage—Fiction.
5. Matthew, the Apostle, Saint—Fiction. 6. Demoniac possession—Fiction.
7. Jesus Christ—Fiction. 8. Bible. N.T.—History of Biblical events—Fiction.
9. Jerusalem—History—1st century—Fiction.] I. Title.

PZ7.G6696Poi 2010

[Fic]—dc22

2009005095

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