get rid of. The fact that they don’t do anything about it doesn’t necessarily mean they are immune to the
desire to kill. In fact, everyone has it in him to kill someday. People don’t get that until it happens to them.
They think of themselves as incapable of murder. But it is just a matter of coincidence. Sometimes even a
gesture is enough to inflame their tempers. A deliberate misunderstanding, a squabble over nothing, or
simply being at the wrong place at the wrong time can bring out a destructive streak in people who are
otherwise good and decent fellows. Anyone can kill. But not everyone can kill a stranger in cold blood.
That is where I enter the picture.
I did the dirty work of others. Even God recognized the need for someone like me in His holy scheme
when He appointed Azrael the Archangel of Death to terminate lives. In
this way human beings feared,
cursed, and hated the angel while His hands remained clean and His name unblemished. It wasn’t fair to
the angel. But then again, this world was not known for its justice, was it?
When darkness settled, I went to the tavern. The table by the window happened to be occupied by a
scar-faced man who seemed to be in deep sleep. It occurred to me to wake him up and tell him to go
somewhere else, but with drunks you never
knew how they would react, and I had to be careful not to
draw too much attention to myself. So I sat at the next available table, facing the window.
Before long, two men arrived. They sat on either side of me so as not to show their faces. I didn’t need
to look at them, though, to realize how young they were and how unprepared for the step they were about
to take.
“You came highly recommended,” said one of them, his tone not so much cautious as apprehensive.
“We were told you were the best.”
It felt funny, the way he said it, but I suppressed my smile. I noticed they were scared of me, which was
a good thing. If they were scared sufficiently, they could not dare to do me wrong.
So I said, “Yes, I am the best. That is why they call me Jackal Head. I have never let my clients down,
no matter how hard the task.”
“Good.” He sighed. “Because this might not be an easy task.”
Now the other guy spoke. “See, there is this man who has made himself too many enemies. Ever since
he came to this town, he has brought nothing but trouble. We have warned him several times, but he pays
us no attention. If anything, he has become all the more contentious. He leaves us no other option.”
It was always the same. Each time the clients tried to explain themselves before we cut a deal, as if my
approval could in any way lessen the gravity of what they were about to do.
“I know what you mean. Tell me, who is this person?” I asked.
They seemed reluctant to give me a name, offering vague descriptions instead.
“He is a heretic who has nothing to do with Islam. An unruly man full of sacrilege and blasphemy. A
maverick of a dervish.”
As soon as I heard this last word, a creepy feeling spread over my arms. My mind raced. I had killed
all sorts of people, young and old, men and women, but a dervish, a man of faith, was not among them. I
had my superstitions and didn’t want to draw God’s wrath upon me, for despite everything I believed in
God.
“I’m afraid I’m going to have to turn it down. I don’t think I want to kill a dervish. Find someone else.”
With that, I stood up to leave. But one of the men grabbed my hand and beseeched, “Wait, please. Your
payment will be commensurate with your effort. Whatever your fee is, we are ready to double the price.”
“How about triple?” I asked, convinced that they wouldn’t be able to raise the amount that high.
But to my surprise, after a brief hesitation, they both agreed. I sat back in my seat, feeling jittery. With
this money I could finally afford the price of a bride and get married and stop fretting over how to make
ends meet. Dervish or not, anyone was worth killing for this amount.
How could I know in that moment that I was making the biggest mistake of my life and would spend the
rest of my days regretting it? How could I know it would be so hard to kill the dervish and that even long