I had never felt so humiliated in my life. I bent down to take my robe, but my hands were trembling so
hard I couldn’t
hold the slippery, delicate fabric. Instead I grabbed my shawl and wrapped it around
myself. Sobbing, gasping, and still half naked, I ran out of the room and away from him, away from this
love that I now understood existed only in my imagination.
I never saw Shams again. After that day I never left my room. I spent all my time lying on my bed, lacking
not so much the energy as the will to go out. A week passed, then another, and then I stopped counting the
days. All strength was drained from my body, ebbing away bit by bit. Only my palms felt alive. They
remembered the feel of Shams’s hands and the warmth of his skin.
I never knew that death had a smell. A strong odor, like pickled
ginger and broken pine needles,
pungent and bitter, but not necessarily bad. I came to know it only when it started to waft around my room,
enveloping me like thick, wet fog. I started running a high fever, slipping into delirium. People came to
see me. Neighbors and friends. Kerra waited by one side of my bed, her eyes swollen, her face ashen.
Gevher stood on the other side, smiling her soft, dimpled smile.
“Goddamn that heretic,” said Safiya. “This poor girl has fallen sick of heartbreak. All because of him!”
I tried to force a sound, but it didn’t make it past my throat.
“How can you say such things? Is he God?” Kerra said, trying to help. “How
can you attribute such
powers to a mortal man?”
But they didn’t listen to Kerra, and I was in no state to convince anyone of anything. In any case, I soon
realized that whatever I said or didn’t say, the outcome would be much the same. People who didn’t like
Shams had found another reason in my illness to hate him, whereas I could not dislike him even if I
wanted to.
Before long I drifted
into a state of nothingness, where all colors melted into white and all sounds
dissolved into a perpetual drone. I could not distinguish people’s faces anymore and could not hear
spoken words beyond a distant hum in the background.
I don’t know if Shams of Tabriz ever came to my room to see me. Perhaps he never did. Perhaps he
wanted to see me but the women in the room would not let him in. Or perhaps he did come after all, and
sat by my bed, played me the
ney for hours, held my hand, and prayed for my soul. I’d like to believe that.
Nonetheless, one way or the other, it didn’t matter anymore. I was neither angry nor cross with him.
How could I be, when I was flowing in a stream of pure awareness?
There was so much kindness and compassion in God and an explanation for everything.
A perfect
system of love behind it all. Ten days after I visited Shams’s room clad in silk and perfumed tulles, ten
days after I fell ill, I plunged into a river of pure nonexistence. There I swam to my heart’s content, finally
sensing that this must be what the deepest reading of the Qur’an feels like—a drop in infinity!
And it was flowing waters that carried me from life to death.