Then another thought occurred to me. How could the lamp in his hand keep burning despite the mighty
wind and the heavy rain? And as soon as this question crossed my mind, I felt a shiver down my spine.
I remembered the rumors about Shams. He so excelled in black magic, people said, that he could turn
anyone into a braying donkey or a blind bat by simply tying a piece of string from that person’s clothes
and uttering his evil incantations. Though I had never believed in such nonsense and wasn’t going to start
doing so now, as I stood watching the flame of Shams’s lamp flicker under the heavy rain, I couldn’t stay
still, I was trembling so.
“Years ago I had a master in Tabriz,” Shams said as he put the lamp on the ground, thus taking it out of
my eyesight. “He is the one who taught me there was a time for everything. It is one of the last rules.”
What rules was he talking about? What cryptic talk was this? I had to decide quickly whether I should
come out of the bush now or wait until he turned his back to me—except he never did. If he knew I was
here, there was no point in hiding. In case he didn’t, though, I had to measure well when to come out.
But then, as if to deepen my confusion, I noticed the silhouettes of the three men waiting under a
covering outside the garden wall shift restlessly. They must have been wondering why I hadn’t moved to
kill the dervish.
“It is Rule Number Thirty-seven,” Shams continued.
“God is a meticulous clockmaker. So precise is
His order that everything on earth happens in its own time. Neither a minute late nor a minute early.
And for everyone without exception, the clock works accurately. For each there is a time to love and a
time to die.”
In that moment I understood that he was talking to me. He knew I was here. He had known it even
before he stepped out into the courtyard. My heart started to race. I felt as if all around me the air were
being sucked away. There was no use in hiding anymore. And just like that,
I stood up and walked out
from behind the bush. The rain stopped as abruptly as it had started, plunging everything into silence. We
stood face-to-face, the killer and the victim, and despite the strangeness of the situation everything seemed
natural, almost peaceful.
I pulled out my sword and swung it with all my might. The dervish dodged the blow with a swiftness I
did not expect from a man of his size. I was about to swing again when suddenly a rush of movement
swirled in the darkness and six men appeared out of nowhere, attacking the dervish with clubs and spears.
Apparently the three young men had brought friends. The ensuing battle was so intense that they all
toppled to the ground, rolling around, regaining footing, and falling again, breaking spear after spear into
splinters.
I stood watching, shocked and furious. Never before had I been reduced to playing witness to a murder
I was paid to commit. I was so angry at the three young men for their insolence that I could easily have let
the dervish go and fought them instead.
But before long, one of the men started to yell hysterically. “Help! Help us, Jackal Head! He is going to
kill us.”
Fast as lightning I threw my sword aside, pulled my dagger out of my belt, and dashed forward. The
seven of us knocked the dervish to the ground, and in one swift move I stabbed him in the heart. A single
hoarse cry came out of his mouth, his voice breaking at its peak. He didn’t stir again, nor did he breathe.
Together we lifted his body, which was strangely light, and dumped him into the well. Gasping loudly
for air, we each then took a step back and waited to hear the sound of his body hitting the water.
It never came.
“What the hell is going on?” said one of the men. “Didn’t he fall in?”
“Of course he did,” another said. “How could he not?”
They were panicking. So was I.
“Maybe he got caught on a hook on the wall,” the third man suggested.
The suggestion made sense. It took the burden of finding an
explanation off our shoulders, and we
gladly embraced it, though we all knew there were no hooks on the walls of wells.
I don’t know how long we waited there, avoiding one another’s eyes.
A cool breeze crossed the
courtyard, sprinkling thin, brown willow leaves around our feet. High in the sky above, the dark blue of
the morning was just beginning to break into violet. We might have stayed there until long into the day had
the back door of the house not opened and a man walked out. I recognized him instantly. It was Mawlana.
“Where are you?” he yelled, his voice heavy with concern. “Are you there, Shams?”
At the mention of his name, all seven of us took to our heels. The six men jumped over the garden walls
and disappeared into the night. I remained behind, searching for my dagger, which I found under a bush,
covered with mud. I knew I should not linger there, not even a second, but I couldn’t resist the temptation
of looking back.
And when I did, I saw Rumi stagger into the courtyard and then suddenly lurch to his left, toward the
well, as if guided by an intuition. He leaned forward, peered down, and stood like that for a moment, his
eyes adjusting to the semidarkness inside the well. Then he pulled back, fell to his knees, pounded his
chest, and let out a terrifying scream.
“They killed him! They killed my Shams!”
I jumped over the wall and, leaving behind the dagger with the blood of the dervish on it, ran as I had
never run before.