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Back To: Moroccan Short Stories
Castle Incense
The noisy buzz of the carriage spices up the dark road while you sit
far apart from each other: You, the bridegroom, look back to avoid
seeing her. He, your best man, looks in front of him to avoid
looking at you, though the carriage is empty except for both of you.
You feel blurred, so bored, so strange…
A cold question shakes your breathing before you can forget about it
in the long journey:
-“Where are they driving their dark caravans?”
The smoke of your golden-filter cigarette swirls up leaving you in
such an ecstasy.
Why did you not ask your mother?
Do not ask yourself. Do not bother to ask
anyone either. Probably the castle, Saint Bouya Omar’s shrine, is at
the end of the road. There, Grace and Salvation are surely waiting.
Saint Bouya Omar, lying within his shrine in his dark and heavy box
across clouds of incense and odours of human sweat, expects,
everyday at dawn, the women yearning to have their children come
back to their wits.
Will you prove your virility under Saint Bouya Omar’s iron chains to
declare yourself man enough in your conjugal life?
There comes that question again:
-“Where are they driving you?”
You breathe smoke with ecstasy and suppress
your joy.
The women were in the first carriage celebrating their journey:
clapping, dancing and singing. You, the bridegroom and your best man
are not at the front. Frogs croaking along the passage outside the
carriage.
The buzz of the engine stops. Then, everyone flows through the
door-like crack in the darkness to find yourselves in a
marble-decorated hall where you shall spend the night eating,
joking, dancing and sleeping… leaving the remaining part of the
night for incense to dance in the space of the shrine.
You have to hurry to the end of the dream to find your bride waiting
for you, lying in bed in her bridal dress while your mother receives
guests and urges maids to serve drinks, food, and fragrance…
You are shy when that heat overwhelms you. You desire her when she
is asleep. You make love to her without waking her up and you run
away, as if afraid of an arrow chasing your imagination. You yearn
to play, quite proud of your virility…
-“But for whom is that celebration?”
Dust draws its circling arches in Abkar
River, demon’s river. The croaking of frogs reigns over the
universe.
-“Are you scared or does that blurred vision makes you look scared?”
Between the women, your bride gets lost and terrified. Cool water
coolly and bodies lie like living arrows near the stream. There is a
smell of virility refreshing the air…
-“O Virility! How long shall you endure
this torture?”
Tents are put up around you. Horses gallop; women mumble their
wishes while you are armed with all the wounds of the world. Sharp
swords stab you and you protest having to wait such a long time.
-“Where is my bride?”
The old women in the shrine comment:
-“The bridegroom is bewitched.”
Your mother crosses herself and brings a flaming brazier. You
started taking off your clothes in the midst of the hazy incense
peering at the faces of women around you.
Now, nobody doubts in your madness. Everybody crosses themselves and
your mother bursts out crying. She used to dream of seeing you in
your wedding ceremony with a big turban on your head, wearing a
chastity djellabah like the one you are wearing now. She used to
dream of women circling around you on your wedding day, while she
receives gifts and congratulations like she experienced in her own
wedding ceremony.
She grieves for you but you leave her to the gossiping tongues in
the shrine and you go out across the clouds of incense, across the
bang on drums and the sound of flute…
You invade your bride’s bedroom and you lie in bed opposite her with
your feet next to her face. Both of you sleep while the guests
outside spend the night awake, waiting for you to sign your virility
on her virginity.
* * * *
-“Who can be that beauty?”
Terrified from this endless smoke, you ask
your mother, your father, your grandmother… running ahead, scared of
your own visions.
* * * *
-“Was she dead?!”
Braziers proliferate and women grow certain
of the scandal. You flush with wrath within a world of chains
hanging from Saint Bouya Omar’s roofs and lunatics crossed to the
walls or chained throughout the corners of the shrine under the
sounds of clubbing and lashing behind the clouds of incense.
(………..)
* * * *
(………..)
What remains of you after the long journey
of whiteness, incense and dust?
***********
*
Mohamed Zitoune is a Moroccan short-story writer, born in Beni
Mellal, Morocco.
*Mohamed Saïd Raïhani is a
Moroccan translator, scholar & short-story writer, born on December
23rd 1968 in Ksar El Kébir. His works in Arabic include "The Will of
Singularity" (A Semiotic Study on First-names) 2001, "Waiting For
the Morning" (Short stories) 2003, "Thus Spoke Santa Lugar-Verde"
(Short stories) 2005, "The Season Of Migration to Anywhere" (Short
stories) 2006. He will soon publish: "Beyond Writing & Reading “,
(Testimonies) and "Kais & Juliet" (An E-Love Novel).
* “Castle Incense” is the
fourteenth narrative text in the "The Moroccan Dream", An Anthology
of Moroccan new short story directed by Mohamed Saïd Raïhani.
***********
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