to bear. I jumped to my feet.
“I need to go,” I said.
“You cannot go now,” Kimya said in a voice that didn’t sound like her. “What will people say if you
leave the room now? They will know that this marriage was not consummated. And they’ll think it was
because of me.”
“What do you mean?” I murmured, half to myself, because I knew what she was suggesting.
Averting her eyes, she mumbled something incomprehensible, and then she said quietly, “They’ll think I
wasn’t a virgin. I’ll have to live in shame.”
It made my blood boil that society imposed such ridiculous rules on its individuals.
These codes of
honor had less to do with the harmony God created than with the order human beings wanted to sustain.
“That’s nonsense. People should mind their own business,” I objected, but I knew that Kimya was right.
With one quick move, I grabbed the knife beside the pomegranate. I
glimpsed a trace of panic in
Kimya’s face, slowly replaced by the expression of someone who recognized a sad situation and accepted
it. Without hesitation I cut my left palm. My blood dripped on our bedsheet, leaving dark crimson stains.
“Just give them this sheet. This will shut their mouths, and your name will remain pure and clean, the
way it should be.”
“Wait, please! Don’t go,” Kimya beseeched. She rose to her feet, but, not knowing what to do next, she
repeated once again, “I am your wife now.”
In that moment I understood what a terrible mistake I had made by marrying her. My head throbbing
with pain, I walked out of the room into the night. A man like me should never have gotten married. I
wasn’t designed to perform marital duties. I saw this clearly. What saddened
me was the cost of this
knowledge.
I felt a strong need to run away from everything, not only from this house, this marriage, this town, but
also from this body I had been given. Yet the thought of seeing Rumi the next morning held me anchored
here. I couldn’t abandon him again.
I was trapped.