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A man was
walking through the marketplace one afternoon when, just as the
muezzin began the call to prayer, his eye fell on a woman’s
back. She was strangely attractive, though dressed in fulsome
black, a veil over head and face, and she now turned to him as
if somehow conscious of his over-lingering regard, and gave him
a slight but meaningful nod before she rounded the corner into
the lane of silk sellers. As if struck by a bolt from heaven,
the man was at once drawn, his heart a prisoner of that look,
forever. In vain he struggled with his heart, offering it one
sound reason after another to go his way—wasn’t it time to
pray?—but it was finished: there was nothing but to follow.
He hastened after her, turning into the market of silks,
breathing from the exertion of catching up with the woman, who
had unexpectedly outpaced him and even now lingered for an
instant at the far end of the market, many shops ahead. She
turned toward him, and he thought he could see a flash of a
mischievous smile from beneath the black muslin of her veil, as
she—was it his imagination?—beckoned to him again.
The poor man was beside himself. Who was she? The daughter of a
wealthy family? What did she want? He requickened his steps and
turned into the lane where she had disappeared. And so she led
him, always beyond reach, always tantalizingly ahead, now
through the weapons market, now the oil merchants’, now the
leather sellers’; farther and farther from where they began.
The feeling within him grew rather than decreased. Was she mad?
On and on she led, to the very edge of town.
The sun declined and set, and there she was, before him as
ever. Now they were come, of all places, to the City of Tombs.
Had he been in his normal senses, he would have been afraid,
but indeed, he now reflected, stranger places than this had
seen a lovers’ tryst.
There were scarcely twenty cubits between them when he saw her
look back, and, giving a little start, she skipped down the
steps and through the great bronze door of what seemed to be a
very old sepulcher. A soberer moment might have seen the man
pause, but in his present state, there was no turning back, and
he went down the steps and slid in after her.
Inside, as his eyes saw after a moment, there were two flights
of steps that led down to a second door, from whence a light
shone, and which he equally passed through. He found himself in
a large room, somehow unsuspected by the outside world, lit
with candles upon its walls. There sat the woman, opposite the
door on a pallet of rich stuff in her full black dress, still
veiled, reclining on a pillow against the far wall. To the
right of the pallet, the man noticed a well set in the floor.
“Lock the door behind you,” she said in a low, husky voice that
was almost a whisper, “and bring the key.”
He did as he was told.
She gestured carelessly at the well. “Throw it in.”
A ray of sense seemed to penetrate for a moment the clouds over
his understanding, and a bystander, had there been one, might
have detected the slightest of pauses.
“Go on,” she said laughingly, “You didn’t hesitate to miss the
prayer as you followed me here, did you?”
He said nothing.
“The time for sunset prayer has almost finished as well,” she
said with gentle mockery. “Why worry? Go on, throw it in. You
want to please me, don’t you?”
He extended his hand over the mouth of the well, and watched as
he let the key drop. An uncanny feeling rose from the pit of
his stomach as moments passed but no sound came. He felt
wonder, then horror, then comprehension.
“It is time to see me,” she said, and she lifted her veil to
reveal not the face of a fresh young girl, but of a hideous old
crone, all darkness and vice, not a particle of light anywhere
in its eldritch lines.
“See me well,” she said. “My name is Dunya, This World. I am
your beloved. You spent your time running after me, and now you
have caught up with me. In your grave. Welcome, welcome.”
At this she laughed and laughed, until she shook herself into a
small mound of fine dust, whose fitful shadows, as the candles
went out, returned to the darkness one by one.
by Nuh Ha Mim Keller
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