The boy
spent a sleepless night. Two hours before dawn, he awoke one of the boys who
slept in his tent, and asked him to show him where Fatima lived. They went to
her tent, and the boy gave his friend enough gold to buy a sheep.
Then he asked his friend to go to into the tent where
Fatima was sleeping, and to awaken her and tell her that he was waiting outside.
The young Arab did as he was asked, and was given enough gold to buy yet another
sheep.
"Now
leave us alone," said the boy to the young Arab. The Arab returned to his tent
to sleep, proud to have helped the counselor of the oasis, and happy at having
enough money to buy himself some sheep.
Fatima
appeared at the entrance to the tent. The two walked out among the palms. The
boy knew that it was a violation of the Tradition, but that didn't matter to him
now.
"I'm going away," he said. "And I want you to know that
I'm coming back. I love you because…"
"Don't say anything," Fatima interrupted. "One is loved
because one is loved. No reason is needed for loving."
But the
boy continued, "I had a dream, and I met with a king. I sold crystal and crossed
the desert. And, because the tribes declared war, I went to the well, seeking
the alchemist. So, I love you because the entire universe conspired to help me
find you."
The two
embraced. It was the first time either had touched the other.
"I'll be
back," the boy said.
"Before this, I always looked to the desert with
longing," said Fatima. "Now it will be with hope. My father went away one day,
but he returned to my mother, and he has always come back since then."
They said nothing else. They walked a bit farther among
the palms, and then the boy left her at the entrance to her tent.
"I'll
return, just as your father came back to your mother," he said.
He saw
that Fatima's eyes were filled with tears.
"You're
crying?"
"I'm a
woman of the desert," she said, averting her face. "But above all, I'm a woman."
Fatima went back to her tent, and, when daylight came, she went out
to do the chores she had done for years. But everything had changed. The boy was
no longer at the oasis, and the oasis would never again have the same meaning it
had had only yesterday. It would no longer be a place with fifty thousand palm
trees and three hundred wells, where the pilgrims arrived, relieved at the end
of their long journeys. From that day on, the oasis would be an empty place for
her.