umbrage at his scathing remarks. Always the nice boy, he was the darling
of the family and the
neighborhood, my father’s favorite son.
Exactly forty days after my father and the dervish had cloistered themselves in the library, something
strange happened. I was crouched at the door again, eavesdropping on a thicker silence than usual, when
all of a sudden I heard the dervish speak up.
“It has been forty days since we retreated here. Every day we discussed another of The Forty Rules of
the Religion of Love. Now that we are done, I think we’d better go out. Your absence might have upset
your family.”
My father objected. “Don’t worry. My wife and sons are mature enough to understand that I might need
to spend some time away from them.”
“Well, I don’t know anything about your wife, but your two boys are
as different as night and day,”
Shams responded. “The older one walks in your footsteps, but the younger one, I am afraid, marches to a
different drummer altogether. His heart is darkened with resentment and envy.”
My cheeks burned with anger. How could he say such awful things about me when we hadn’t even met?
“He thinks I don’t know him, but I do,” said the dervish a little while later. “While he was crouching
with his ear to the door, watching me through peepholes, I was watching him, too.”
I felt a sudden chill pass across me as every hair on my arms stood on end. Without giving it another
thought, I thrust the door open and stomped into the room. My father’s eyes widened with
incomprehension, but it didn’t take long for his shock to be replaced by anger.
“Aladdin, have you lost your mind? How dare you disturb us like this!” my father thundered.
Ignoring that question, I pointed at Shams and exclaimed, “Why don’t you first ask him how he dares to
talk about me like that?”
My father didn’t say a word. He just looked at me and drew in a deep breath, as if my presence were a
heavy burden on his shoulders.
“Please, Father, Kerra misses you. And so do your students. How can you turn your back on all your
loved ones for a lousy dervish?”
As soon as those words came out of my mouth, I regretted them, but it was too late. My father stared at
me with disappointment in his eyes. I had never seen him like this before.
“Aladdin, do yourself a favor. Get out of here—this minute,” my father said. “Go into a quiet place and
think about what you did. Do not talk to me until you have looked inside and recognized your mistake.”
“But, Father—”
“Just get out!” my father repeated, turning away from me.
With a sinking heart, I left the room, my palms wet, my knees trembling.
At that moment it dawned upon me that in some incomprehensible
way our lives had changed, and
nothing would be the same again. Since the death of my mother eight years ago, this was the second time I
had felt abandoned by a parent.