“So what is
your specialty?” Baybars asked after he guzzled his second beer. “Don’t
you girls each
have a talent? Can you belly dance?”
I told him I didn’t have such talents and whatever gift I had in the past was gone now, as I was suffering
from an unknown illness. The boss would have killed me if she heard me say such things to a client, but I
didn’t care. The truth was, I secretly hoped Baybars would spend the night with another girl.
But, to my disappointment, Baybars shrugged and said he didn’t care. Then he took out his pouch,
spilled a reddish brown substance from it into his palm, and popped it into his mouth, chewing slowly.
“Do you want some?” he asked.
I shook my head. I knew what it was.
“You don’t know what you are missing.” He grinned as he reclined on the bed, drifting away from his
own body into a stupor of cannabis.
That evening, high on beer and cannabis, Baybars bragged about the terrible things he had seen on the
battlefields. Even though Genghis Khan was dead and his flesh decomposed, his ghost still accompanied
the Mongol armies, Baybars said. Egged on by the ghost, the Mongol
army was attacking caravans,
plundering villages, and massacring women and men alike. He told me about the veil of silence, as soft
and peaceful as a blanket on a cold winter night, that descended upon a battlefield after hundreds had been
killed and wounded, and dozens more were about to give up their last breath.
“The silence that follows a massive disaster is the most peaceful sound you can hear on the surface of
the world,” he said, his voice slurring.
“It sounds so sad,” I murmured.
Suddenly he had no more words inside him. There was nothing else to talk about. Grabbing my arm, he
pushed me onto the bed and pulled off my robe. His eyes were bloodshot, his voice hoarse, and his smell
was a repugnant mixture of cannabis, sweat, and hunger. He entered me in one harsh, abrasive thrust. I
tried to move aside and relax my thighs to lessen the pain, but he pressed both hands on my bosom with
such force that it was impossible to budge. He kept rocking back and forth even long after he came inside
me, like a string puppet that was manipulated by unseen hands and could not possibly stop. Clearly
dissatisfied, he kept moving with such roughness that I feared
he was going to get hard again, but then
suddenly it all came to an end. Still on top of me, he looked at my face with pure hatred, as if the body that
had aroused him a moment ago now disgusted him.
“Put something on,” he ordered as he rolled aside.
I put on my robe, watching out of the corner of my eye as he popped more cannabis into his mouth.
“From now on, I want you to be my mistress,” he said with his jaw jutting out.
It wasn’t all that uncommon for clients to come up with such demands. I knew how to handle these
delicate
situations, giving the client the false impression that I would love to be his mistress and serve
solely him, but for that to happen he had to spend a lot of money and make the patron happy first. But
today I didn’t feel like pretending.
“I can’t be your mistress,” I said. “I am going to leave this place very soon.”
Baybars guffawed as if this were the funniest thing he had ever heard. “You can’t do that,” he said with
certainty.
I knew I shouldn’t be quarreling with him, but I couldn’t help it. “You and I are not that different. We
both have done things in the past that we deeply regret. But you have been made a security guard, thanks to
your uncle’s position. I have no uncle backing me, you see.”
Baybars’s face became wooden, and his eyes,
cold and distant up till now, suddenly widened with
fury. Dashing forward, he grabbed me by the hair. “I was nice to you, wasn’t I?” he growled. “Who do
you think you are?”
I opened my mouth to say something, but a sharp stab of pain silenced me. Baybars punched me in the
face and pushed me against the wall.
It wasn’t the first time. I had been beaten by clients before but never this badly.
I fell on the floor, and then Baybars started to kick me hard in the ribs and legs while hurling insults at me.
It was then and there that I had the strangest experience. As I cringed in pain, my body crushed under the
weight of each blow, my soul—or what felt like it—separated from my body, turning itself into a kite,
light and free.
Soon I was floating in the ether. As if thrown into a peaceful vacuum where there was nothing to resist
and nowhere to go, I simply hovered. I passed over recently harvested wheat fields,
where the wind
fluttered the head scarves of peasant girls and at night, fireflies glinted here and there like fairy lights. It
felt like falling, except falling upward into the bottomless sky.
Was I dying? If this was what death was like, it wasn’t terrifying at all. My worries diminished. I had
tumbled into a place of absolute lightness and purity, a magic zone where nothing could pull me down.
And suddenly I realized I was living my fear and, to my surprise, it wasn’t frightful. Wasn’t it because of
the fear of being harmed that I had been scared to leave the brothel all this time? If I could manage not to
be scared of death, I realized with an expanding heart, I could leave this rat hole.
Shams of Tabriz was right. The only filth was the filth inside. I shut my eyes and imagined this other
me, pristine and penitent and looking much younger, walking out of the brothel and into a new life.
Glowing with youth and confidence, this was what my face would have looked like if only I’d
experienced security and love in my life. The vision was so alluring and so very real, despite the blood
before my eyes and the throbbing in my ribs, that I couldn’t help smiling.