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Muntazreen-jild-2 — Majalis Ul

He placed the manuscript on a shelf beside a skull and a dried fig. Then he sat in the dark, listening. Somewhere above, the city of Zarqa was crumbling into dust. Somewhere below, the names were stirring.

Faraj nodded. He opened one of the blank books. Inside, instead of paper, there was a mirror. Zaynab looked into it and saw not her reflection, but her son—alive, at the age he would have been, arguing with her about the price of bread. She reached out. Her hand passed through the glass. majalis ul muntazreen-jild-2

She threw the key into the well. They waited. After seven hours, the well began to hum. Then it screamed. And from its depths rose not water, but postponed moments —each one a translucent bubble containing a different "what if." The Awaiting Ones caught them in their cupped hands, swallowed them, and felt their own lives split into branches. He placed the manuscript on a shelf beside

"Here," she pointed to a well in the center of the map. "A girl named Aya fell into this well in the year 1342. Her father heard her cries but could not find a rope in time. He listened to her voice fade. That well is not a well anymore. It is a throat . And if we listen closely, we can still hear her counting the seconds until the rope arrives." Somewhere below, the names were stirring

One of the Awaiting Ones, a former hangman named Rashid, wept. He had executed thirty-seven men. But he had always waited the full three minutes before pulling the lever—out of mercy, he had thought. Now he understood: waiting was not a pause. It was a presence.

"We have been waiting for the end of waiting. But that is like a fetus waiting to be born—it does not know that birth is not an end, but a beginning of a different kind of waiting. The Muntazreen are not the impatient. We are the midwives of the unseen . And the child we are delivering is not a man or an age. It is the ability to hold two truths at once: that everything is late, and that nothing is lost."

For seven nights, they wrote. Zaynab wrote a fatwa declaring that revenge was a slower poison than grief. Rashid wrote a fatwa against capital punishment, then burned it, then wrote it again. Lina wrote nothing. She simply sat with the blank page, waiting for it to speak to her.