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 whispered to the dark: "I have been waiting for a sign that this work matters. But just now, I heard the cistern child—Ayman—speak. He said one word. He said my name. And I realized: I am not the scribe. I am the first name in Jild-3 ." majalis ul muntazreen-jild-2
"This is the Library of Unwritten Fatwas," he said, gesturing to shelves filled with blank books. "Each book is a verdict I should have written instead of the one I did write. They have no words because the words have not yet been earned. To earn them, we must re-litigate the past." She threw the key into the well
She unrolled a map of the city. But it was not a map of streets. It was a map of missed opportunities —every place where a prayer had been answered a second too late, where a mercy had arrived after the death, where a letter had been delivered the day after the forgiveness was needed. Then it screamed
"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."
Lina finally understood. She turned to the assembly.
One by one, the Awaiting Ones descended into the cistern. They did not speak. They simply listened. Rashid heard the names of the thirty-seven men he had executed. Zaynab heard the name of her son—not as a ghost, but as a present tense: "Yusuf. Yusuf. Yusuf." She wept, but the tears evaporated before they hit the stone floor.