“Of course, I remember,” he answered, his hazel eyes filled with curiosity.
“That day I promised myself never to get married, so that I could remain your student forever,” I said,
my voice dwindling under the weight of what I was planning to say next. “But perhaps it is possible to get
married and not have to leave this house. I mean, if I get married to someone who lives here …”
“Are you telling me you want to marry Aladdin?” Rumi asked.
“Aladdin?” I repeated in shock. But what made him think I wanted to marry Aladdin? He was like a
brother to me.
Rumi must have detected my surprise. “Some time ago Aladdin came to me and asked for your hand,”
he said.
I gasped. I knew it wasn’t proper for a girl to ask too many questions on such matters, but I was dying
to learn more. “And what did you say, Master?”
“I told him I would have to ask you first,” Rumi said.
“Master …” I said, my voice trailing off. “I came here to tell you I want to marry Shams of Tabriz.”
Rumi gave me a look that bordered on disbelief. “Are you sure about this?”
“It could be good in many ways,” I said, as inside me the need to say more wrestled with the regret of
having said too much. “Shams would be part of our family, and he wouldn’t ever have to leave again.”
“So is that why you want to marry him? To help him stay here?” asked Rumi.
“No,” I said. “I mean, yes, but that’s not all.… I believe Shams is my destiny.”
This was as close as I could get to confessing to anyone that I loved Shams of Tabriz.
The first to hear about the marriage was Kerra. In stunned silence she greeted the news with a broken
smile, but as soon as we were alone in the house, she started to ask me questions. “Are you sure this is
what you want to do? You are not doing this to help Rumi, are you?” she said. “You are so young! Don’t
you think you should marry someone closer to your own age?”
“Shams says in love all boundaries are blurred,” I told her.
Kerra sighed loudly. “My child, I wish things were that simple,” she remarked, tucking a lock of gray
hair into her scarf. “Shams is a wandering dervish, an unruly man. Men like him aren’t used to domestic
life, and they don’t make good husbands.”
“That’s all right, he can change,” I concluded firmly. “I will give him so much love and happiness he
will have to change. He will learn how to be a good husband and a good father.”
That was the end of our talk. Whatever it was that she saw on my face, Kerra had no more objections to
raise.
I
slept peacefully that night, feeling exultant and determined. Little did I know that I was making the
most common and the most painful mistake women have made all throughout the ages: to naïvely think that
with their love they can change the men they love.