you were testing me.”
“But that would be playing God. It is not up to us to judge and measure each other’s devoutness,”
Shams answered.
I looked around in despair, not knowing what to make of his words, my mind pounded like dumpling
dough.
Shams went on: “You say you want to travel the path, but you don’t want to sacrifice anything to that
end. Money, fame, power, lavishness, or carnal pleasure—whatever it is that one holds most dear in life,
one should dispose of that first.”
Patting his horse, Shams concluded with an air of finality, “I think you ought to stay in Baghdad with
your family. Find an honest tradesman and become his apprentice. I have a feeling you might make a good
merchant someday. But don’t be a greedy one! Now, with your permission, I need to get going.”
With that, he saluted me one last time, kicked his horse, and galloped away, the world sliding under its
thundering hoofs. I hopped onto my horse and chased him toward
the outskirts of Baghdad, but the
distance between us got greater and greater until he was no more than a dark spot in the distance. Even
long after that spot had disappeared on the horizon, I could feel the weight of Shams’s stare on me.