Silence Beyond the Sand ©️

In a room lit by a single lamp, its wick steady against the hush of night, a man sat alone. The smoke of incense hung about him, not rising, not falling, but waiting—like a guest uncertain whether it had been invited. From that still air, the man coaxed a tale, and it came reluctantly, as though it had always been there, yet resisted speech.

There was once a young man of no particular rank, who one morning set his feet upon a road said to be the haunt of djinn. This road was narrow and dark, but it ran straight as an oath, and though it had been laid by no human hand, men could walk it—if they dared. On it, the djinn appeared, not as demons, but as travelers, beggars, maidens, merchants. They had, each of them, the courteous air of one accustomed to striking bargains.

They asked of him little things, things that seemed hardly worth keeping: a memory here, a fragment of joy there, a shadow of desire. Yet each request carried with it a gravity that could not be measured. He might have yielded, had he not carried within himself a counterweight—a kind of inheritance invisible, yet undeniable.

He met their offers with gifts they could not possess. To one, he gave a dawn that had never broken; to another, a sorrow that belonged not to him but to the sea; to the last, he gave her own reflection, which she mistook for his soul. The djinn, who are deft in their dealings, found themselves mocked by what they had taken, for none of it belonged to the world.

At the end of the road rose a palace of salt-white stone. Within it lived a princess whose voice had been stolen, leaving her beauty haunted, as though her silence were not her own but a chain wound around her. Her voice lay sealed in a vessel harder than diamond, heavier than grief. The young man, seeing it, did not strike or plead. He bent low and whispered a truth so perilous it became a key: If she speaks my name, I will endure both damnation and salvation in the same breath.

The vessel broke. The voice returned. She spoke his name, and in that moment the whole of creation seemed to listen, as though time itself paused to hear how a princess might pronounce a marketplace boy.

That night, the kingdom flowered. The gardens rose in riotous bloom, and the air rang with her song. Yet the young man did not rejoice as others did. He had touched a weight that cannot be shrugged off—a burden that is also a crown. He smiled, but it was the smile of one who has outwitted fate only to find he has become its servant.

Black Graphite ©️

The Tale of Hassan and the Treacherous Vizier

Hakim al-Baghdadi

In the bustling city of Baghdad, under the rule of a just but distant Sultan, there lived a young man named Hassan. Hassan was known for his kindness and diligence, working as a humble merchant in the city’s grand bazaar. His life was simple, but his heart yearned for adventure and wealth beyond his modest means.

One day, as Hassan was closing his stall, a mysterious man approached him. This man, cloaked in the finest silk, introduced himself as the Vizier’s emissary. He spoke with honeyed words, praising Hassan’s reputation and offering him a night of unparalleled luxury and pleasure in the Vizier’s palace. Intrigued and tempted by the promise of a night away from his monotonous life, Hassan accepted the invitation.

Hassan was led to the Vizier’s palace, a magnificent edifice adorned with precious stones and fragrant gardens. Inside, he was offered a pipe filled with the finest hashish. Unfamiliar with its effects, Hassan smoked the pipe and soon found himself in a state of blissful euphoria. He was then taken to a room filled with the most beautiful women he had ever seen, their beauty rivaling that of the houris described in holy texts. They attended to his every desire, and Hassan’s night was filled with intoxicating pleasures beyond his wildest dreams.

When the morning sun pierced through the curtains, Hassan awoke not in the opulent palace, but in a squalid room in an unfamiliar town. Confused and disoriented, he was approached by a stern handler who revealed the grim truth. The night of pleasure was orchestrated by the Vizier, who now demanded a favor in return. If Hassan wished to return to the paradise he had experienced, he must assassinate a prominent political leader who opposed the Vizier’s plans.

Hassan, desperate to relive the ecstasy of the previous night, reluctantly agreed. He was given a dagger and precise instructions. His target was a wise and noble man, beloved by the people, who stood as an obstacle to the Vizier’s sinister ambitions.

With a heavy heart, Hassan carried out the assassination. The blood of the innocent man stained his hands, and the weight of his deed pressed upon his soul. As he fulfilled his grim task, the handler appeared once more, promising to take him back to the paradise he had tasted.

However, once the deed was done, the Vizier had no intention of keeping his promise. To ensure there were no loose ends, Hassan was executed by the Vizier’s guards, his life snuffed out as swiftly as it had been entangled in the Vizier’s web of deceit.