This is a story I wrote while studying Genesis:
“Ouch!” I grunted. My hand sliced the air for a kill. A plump deerfly  fell off my arm, dead. “Too bad that wasn’t a real animal,” I observed.  “Oh what I would give for a bow and arrow right now!” But then, a bow  and arrow wouldn’t shoot me a drink from the sky, and a beast with hide  softer than jerky would be hard to find without a stream nearby. Too bad  such things are rare commodities in a desert.
 My scalp itched, and I dug at it with my fingernails, scraping out  the sand that had recently made its home there. I still didn’t quite  understand how I had gotten where I was, sitting in the shade of a big  scraggly bush in the middle of the wilderness, my tongue almost as dry  as a block of sandalwood. My mind darted back through the past several  days and beyond to when I was a little boy. What had gone wrong?
 I had loved my father. I guess some would call him old, but I think  that old men have young hearts. When I dug up the dirt on the floor of  my father’s tent to build imagined houses, he would sit down with me and  show me how to construct ziggurats like the best of them. When I had  nightmares and ran into his tent, he would take me outside and show me  the stars. When I got frustrated with throwing stones to “hunt” game, he  got me a bow and arrows and showed me how to shoot them even though he  had to learn first himself. Sometimes he told stories. Sometimes he  laughed. Sometimes he just listened.
 And he always prayed.
 That pretty much sums up my first blissful thirteen years. Few  ripples broke the stillness of the sweet pond of fellowship I shared  with my father and everyone else in the camp. I was extremely fond of my  mother Hagar, even if she was a little overbearing at times. Slender,  strong, and beautiful, she spoke with an accent a little different from  anyone else I knew. Her hair was jet black and her eyes dark and  piercing, shooting lighting bolts to those she hated and sunbeams to  those she loved. I suppose some would say she was haughty for a servant,  but she always told me that if she seemed that way it was only because  she was so proud of her boy and wanted to see that he got everything he  deserved. For a long time I never understood what she meant.
 One day when I was thirteen my father took me into his special tent  to have a “man to man” talk. He sat me in front of him and gazed  thoughtfully at me for awhile. When I think about it, he had been giving  me a similar look for years now, only this time it seemed especially  drawn out and almost . . . sad.
 “I have some news to share with you, Ishmael,” he told me gravely,  “joyous news.” Somehow I doubted him. “You are going to have a baby  brother! As you may know, Sarah has wanted to have a child for a long  time but has been unable to bear one. But nothing is too difficult for  the LORD, and He is finally giving us what He promised us long ago. You  will still always be my boy, but I thought you should know that some  adjustments may need to be made.”
 If my ears hadn’t been attached to my head I daresay they would have  fallen off from the shock. Mother’s mistress was going to have a baby?  Why, her hair was almost all white! I nearly laughed at the picture of  her holding a newborn. I couldn’t understand the gravity in my father’s  voice. This was excellent news! I was going to have a baby brother! I  tried to picture what it would be like. I would show him how to make  ziggurats, how to find Orion in the night sky, and how to shoot a bow  and arrow. We would be best friends and do everything together.
 An unnamed doubt wormed its way across my mind, but I shook it off.  What thirteen-year-old needs to be worried about the arrival of a baby? I  left my father’s tent with a light heart.
 Three years later I left my father’s tent again, this time with my  heart sinking into my sandals. My mother and I were being sent away. My  father had a tear in is eye as he handed us some bread and a bulging  water skin. His tear was cold and lusterless in the predawn light.
 What had happened? During the past three years a shadow had  repeatedly slipped its icy fingers around my heart. It groped for me  when father first called me to visit Sarah and the baby. I saw the red  gleam flash in Sarah’s eye as she caught sight of me. She greedily  clutched closer to her the wrinkly bundle that was baby Isaac. After  that day, the shadow probed and prodded me every time she turned me away  from seeing Isaac until I finally gave up trying. It burrowed as I  watched servants ignore my broken wrist for a child’s stubbed toe, and  as my pet donkey disappeared for “the promised son’s use.” It stung  every time my mother cried herself to sleep when she didn’t think I  knew. What inflicted the most pain however was that my father seemed to  have forgotten me.
 I remember one night when I hadn’t been able to sleep I decided to go  have a talk with my father. Maybe we would get a chance to gaze at the  stars together. As I approached his tent, I spotted him with Isaac in  his arms. I ducked behind a bush.
 “You see all those stars?” he was saying to the gurgling little boy.  “You’re going to have as many descendants as there are stars up there.”
 I couldn’t remember him saying anything like that to me. I returned  to my tent, purposing never to trouble my father again. The shadow was  at home inside of me now, and my heart was heavy under a crushing  weight.
 Then the celebration day arrived. My little brother was now three,  and my father decided to hold a big feast for him. Much fuss was made  over Isaac, and I was awed by the magnitude of the festivities–my father  had never done anything so elaborate for me. I guess I was a little  jealous. All right, very jealous. The pent up frustrations of three  years were loaded under a mountain of stones on my heart. And that night  the stones split to reveal a volcano.
 I don’t remember exactly what I said or did, only that it was stupid.  But then the whole situation seemed stupid, so I guess it’s no wonder  that I laughed. Yes, I laughed. I laughed at all the servants who were  going milky eyed and fawning over Isaac. I laughed at the big commotion  made over a toddler who didn’t even know what was going on. And I  laughed at Isaac, “the chosen one.”
 We left the next morning.
 And now I sat under a bush, the final glimpse of my father’s sagging  shoulders as we left burning in my memory. My mother had tried to bear  it well. She had grasped the water skin tightly as we set out, her back  straight and her head held high. Only I saw the tremble in her lip and  the glistening of her eyes.
 We started off toward Egypt, my mother’s homeland, but we took a  wrong shortcut and ended up wandering in the wilderness for five days.  The bread and water gone, my mother told me to sit in the shade of a  bush as she went off somewhere. She claimed she was going to look for  water, but I’m pretty sure she left me just so she could go cry without  my seeing her.
 I sighed and gingerly tried lying down on the rocky ground in what  little shade the scraggly bush could offer. The sun was scorching and my  temples throbbed. It seemed as though every throb served as a reminder  of something I had lost. Throb: I had no food or water. Throb: I had no  home. Throb: I had no inheritance. Throb: I had no mother here with me.  Throb: I seemed to no longer have a father.
 I knew now that I was wrong to mock my brother the way I did—he  couldn’t help it if everyone saw him as a gift from God. Maybe I hadn’t  been fairly dealt with, but it wasn’t really my brother or my father’s  fault. Life isn’t always fair. My father of all people had discovered  that, and yet he had never complained. He had set out from his home  having no idea exactly where he was going. God hadn’t given him a map,  only a compass. And that compass was God Himself.
 And here I was, having left my home and having no idea where I was  going, or if I’d even live out the day. Did I have a compass? My mind  tossed about fruitlessly for some natural ability that I might have to  help me out, but I came up with nothing. The only thing I had was the  unconditional love of my father (somehow I knew he still loved me  despite everything). Was that enough?
 “God,” I prayed. “I know I haven’t really prayed much to you before  this. I’m sorry about that. I know after everything that’s happened I  don’t deserve to have you listen to me, but I thought I’d try anyway.  I’m thirsty, God. I’m thirsty for water but even more than that I’m  thirsty for the same kind of purpose and direction that my father had.  He’s gone through tough times too but all along he’s had you to hold his  hand.” I paused, afraid to continue. “Would you hold my hand, God? I  realize that’s a lot to ask and I can’t think of any good reason why you  would, but you love my father—maybe, just maybe, you could love me too  if only for that reason.” Oh, what am I thinking? I grabbed a rock and  hurled it, trying fiercely not to cry. God is too busy to hear my voice  of all people! I’m just a youth, the son of a servant, and a worthless  maggot. Why even bother to pray at all?
 With that, I slumped into timeless existence, drifting off into feverish unconsciousness.
 “Ishmael,” a voice echoed. “Ishmael!” A hand shook me until my  mother’s face came into focus. For the first time in months, she was  smiling. Next thing I knew, cool water trickled through my cracked lips.  It could have been the ambrosia of angels.
 Gradually I realized I was lying in my mother’s lap, beams of joy  shooting from her face. “God has heard your voice, my son,” she said.  “It is with good reason that you are called Ishmael. Come, let’s go from  here. I found a well, and we now have plenty of water to travel.” She  eased me to a sitting position before springing to her feet. She held  out her hand. I suppose young men my age usually don’t take hold of  their mothers’ hands, but I didn’t care. It was more than a hand I saw  stretching out to me. It was a promise of hope. I grasped it firmly as I  rose to my feet. The hand felt bigger and stronger than my mother’s,  and I checked to be sure that it was really hers. More life pulsated in  my grasp than any my mother could possibly possess. Then I remembered my  prayer. And I remembered that I’m called Ishmael. God hears.