(Those who are coming to this serialized story for the first time, you can read the complete opus to date by clicking here.)
The light of dawn began to fill the bedroom while I slept. Curled
on one side, I woke to the sensation of a male body settling onto the bed
behind me.
I’d read that if a jinn
spirit approached you from the rear it was always malefic. I could have
dispatched this one with my little Arabic prayer, but I wanted to let the visit
play out a bit. I suppose I was curious. This would be my last encounter of the
jinn kind, because I was leaving
Morocco.
He sensed my consent, and I heard his deep voice laugh
softly in my ear. I didn’t have the feeling, from his tone, that he was going
to be trouble.
“What’s your name?” I asked.
His reply came in accentless American, yet it was unintelligible,
a rapid spate of words that added up to nonsense.
I ordered him to come around in front of me where I could
see him. He obeyed, his mass dissolving as he prepared to relocate. I wondered if this spirit was the first jinn, my very handsome almost-husband, come to say goodbye.
As in the very first visit, ten months ago, my lips didn’t
move; our conversation was silent, telepathic. My eyes were closed, yet I could see the room
– the bed I lay on, the wall, the chair in the corner, my half-packed luggage
on the floor – everything bathed in a faintly pink tone as I gazed through the
scrim of my eyelids.
The entity reassembled, facing me with his head on the
pillow, inches from mine. But this one didn’t have a face, or had too many. His
face kept changing, one rapidly dissolving into another – a pig, a scowling woman
with glasses, an ugly middle-aged man – as if mocking me: “I can take any form.
Take your pick.”
I’d already had enough teasing, tired of this crap. I
recited the prayer, Bismillah rah’man rah’heem, in the name of Allah, the
merciful, the compassionate. The jinn
faded.
Snapping my eyes open, I saw a shadow disappearing through
the door into the study.
A few days later, on the plane back to the States, I pondered
what I’d learned from my year of living dangerously.
My grandfather, before he became a ghost, had been a human being with a name, identifying traits, and specific personality. When he died, he transferred to a spirit world I thought of as adjacent to ours: the Other Side. In Morocco, I’d encountered the Lower World, home to sketchy spirits and demons that may never have been human yet eagerly attached themselves to living people. They could assume any form or gender, could play with languages, and had no identity as we define it. (I recalled asking one for his name, which made him laugh. “We don’t have names where I come from,” he said.) The last jinn had shown me: bodies and faces were illusions, words were laughable and meaningless, but he would play that game to entice me into playing his.
My grandfather, before he became a ghost, had been a human being with a name, identifying traits, and specific personality. When he died, he transferred to a spirit world I thought of as adjacent to ours: the Other Side. In Morocco, I’d encountered the Lower World, home to sketchy spirits and demons that may never have been human yet eagerly attached themselves to living people. They could assume any form or gender, could play with languages, and had no identity as we define it. (I recalled asking one for his name, which made him laugh. “We don’t have names where I come from,” he said.) The last jinn had shown me: bodies and faces were illusions, words were laughable and meaningless, but he would play that game to entice me into playing his.
The jinnoon were
also distinctly local. Their supernatural society mirrored Moroccan society.
They had originated in Berber animism but, after the Mohammedan invasion
converted the Berbers to Islam, pagan spirits also became subject to Muslim
customs and laws. Thus they were compelled by my little Islamic prayer, just as
Western demons were expected to quail before the cross.
I conjectured that Moroccan spirits were so, well, Moroccan because
it was the local culture that gave them life. The people’s belief animated them; they were too weak to manifest without it.
The energy of human superstition added fuel to the low fire of vagrant spirits:
as a jinn might say to a believing
human, “You complete me.”
In the beginning, I hadn’t believed. Nevertheless, in a
moment of playfulness, I’d extended an invitation. Like the vampire who is
powerless to cross your threshold unless you ask him to come in, my jinn had to wait for the summons before
he could roar to life. I was the hand rubbing the lamp, without which the genie
could not appear.
After nearly twenty encounters with the jinnoon, I left knowing that there was more to the ethereal realm
than ghosts of dead people. In Morocco I’d traveled to the Other Side’s other
side of the tracks, the slums, the mean streets, the back alleys of the medina where
energy-impoverished demons swarmed the tourist, begging for a human handout. In
the oceanic infinity of the Beyond, these were the bottom feeders.
Now my adventure was over. I was on a plane back to America
and homegrown safety.
Except I wasn’t headed there. My trip to the States would
last no more than a three-hour layover in Miami. From there I was going to
Haiti.