The Life Stories of the Female Lay Disciples – 2246
wearing and offered them to use as buffers underneath the alms bowls. That
thoughtful deed was the merit she earned.
Queen Māgaṇḍiyā’s Intrigue against Queen Sāmāvatī
Although Queen Sāmāvatī and her 500 ladies-in-waiting had become Stream-
enterers, they never had the opportunity of meeting the Buddha because King
Udena was a non-believer. Since they were Stream-enterers, they had a great
longing to see the Buddha in person. All they could hope for was to get a
glimpse of the Buddha whenever he was passing through the city. As there were
no sufficient trellis windows to peep through, the ladies bore holes in the walls
of their sleeping quarters, through which they peeped to gain precious glimpses
of the Buddha.
One day, as Queen Māgaṇḍiyā was strolling outside she noticed the small holes
on the walls of the ladies-in-waiting of Queen Sāmāvatī and asked the maidens
what the holes were for. They did not know that Queen Māgaṇḍiyā was holding
a grudge against the Buddha and honestly divulged their secret arrangement that
had enabled them to watch the Buddha passing by and to honour him by
standing in their own rooms and peeping through the small holes in the wall.
Queen Māgaṇḍiyā thought to herself, grinning, thus: “Now my time has come to
avenge ascetic Gotama. These girl followers of Gotama will also have their
deserts!”
Then, when Queen Māgaṇḍiyā was alone with King Udena, she said to him:
“Great King, Queen Sāmāvatī and her ladies-in-waiting have given their hearts
to someone else besides you. They are plotting against your life in a few days.
They have no affection for you. They have such great interest in ascetic Gotama
that they peep at him whenever he goes into the city. They have made holes in
the wall of their rooms to get a view of the ascetic Gotama. The king did not
believe her at first but Māgaṇḍiyā repeated her story another time, yet the king
still did not believe her. For the third time, she repeated it, and when the king
refused to believe her, she suggested that the king go to the private quarters of
the ladies-in-waiting and inquire. The king did as she had suggested and saw the
small holes. He asked the ladies-in-waiting about the holes and they honestly
and truthfully told him the purpose of the holes. The king was not angry with
them but merely ordered that the holes be closed. He let a trellis windows be