Late in the evening, I showed Desert Rose the bed where she would sleep. And when she fell asleep
immediately, I returned to the main room, where I found Rumi and Shams talking.
“You should come to our performance,” Shams said when he saw me coming.
“What performance?” I asked.
“A spiritual dance, Kerra, the likes of which you have never seen.”
I looked at my husband in astonishment. What was going on? What dance were they talking about?
“Mawlana, you are a respected scholar, not an entertainer. What will people think of you?” I asked,
feeling my face growing hot.
“Don’t you worry,” Rumi said. “Shams and I have been talking about this for a long time. We want to
introduce the dance of the whirling dervishes. It is called the
sema
. Whoever yearns for Divine Love is
more than welcome to join us.”
My head started to ache madly, but the pain was slight compared to the torment in my heart.
“What if people don’t like it? Not everyone thinks highly of dance,” I said to Shams, hoping this would
have the effect of stopping whatever he was about to say next. “At least consider postponing this
performance.”
“Not everyone thinks highly of God,” Shams said without missing a beat. “Are we going to postpone
believing in Him, too?”
And that was the end of the argument. There
were no more words to exchange, and the sound of the
wind filled the house, bursting through the slats in the walls and pounding in my ears.