He shoved Leyla into the reeds as hooves thundered at the riverbank; moonlight sliced their faces and someone shouted a name that tasted like ruin. Majid dragged her behind a boulder, breath hot, fingers raw with sap, and the cliff answered with a scatter of pebbles.
Leyla's pulse knocked at the seams of her ribs. She tasted iron in the air and the river's cold on her tongue. "Go," Majid hissed, voice a thin rope, but a lantern's swing cut the far bank into a bright, patient dot.
They had no time for plans. The father's step would find them tonight.
In Khoramabad, gossip moved faster than bread. Leyla had learned to step around attention, but that night every face leaned forward like a hand reaching.
Majid remembered the first scrap of verse he left under her window—the way she hid the paper in her palm and looked at him as if the world had shifted. That small exchange became their map: the river at dusk, a thrown pebble, a breath kept between them.
They met in a language without sound. Words would have warned the village and given the watchers something to retell; instead, touch held their contracts. Leyla curled into Majid's shoulder and felt the slow drum of his heart, a human metronome that answered her own fear. In that small code of palms and whispers she discovered the shape of the life they wanted — not a plan written in ink but a stubborn, daily practice of survival and tenderness. The river took what they could not keep, and their silence learned to shape itself around hope.
At the cliff's bend they kept to the shadows: a rule of light and careful footsteps. But shadows can be traced. The baker's boy remembered a borrowed shawl; a woman noted a shepherd's song; suspicion braided itself into the village.
The night the secret broke, Leyla stepped from the house with a wrapped loaf. She went to the river because she could not breathe inside four walls. Her father had spoken that afternoon with cold edges. When she reached the bend, Majid waited.
He offered the paper and set his jaw. The moon hung high. "Tonight," he said. "Before the second rooster. We leave, and no one will pull us back."
Her throat tightened. "If they find us?"
"Then we run until our feet forget the village," Majid answered.
They turned and saw the lantern's glow divide the trees — her father appearing like a stone cut out of the dark. He did not cry or beg. He only spoke her name: "Leyla." The syllable fell heavy.
His hand found her arm and pulled. Men formed behind him, faces set hard. The river's hush broke into a drum of feet. Leyla reached for Majid, but a hand closed over her mouth and dragged her toward the road.
Majid ran until the village lights shrank to ash. He ran into the cold, into tracks that tore at his feet, into cliffs where wind taught him to move by memory. He learned which ridges carried sound and which paths held a whisper.
Days turned to a rough rhythm. Majid sketched paths on bark, sent a friend with a token, and marked a way with subtle signs: a split twig, a stone turned face-down. Leyla followed those marks like a woman stepping back into breath.
The climb bit at their calves and made their hands quick. They threaded goat trails that hugged the cliff like a living seam and eased across ledges dusted with the bones of winter. Majid counted breath and step, teaching Leyla how to keep her weight where the rock would hold it. The pack he carried was small but measured: flatbread wrapped in oilskin, figs dried until sweet and leathery, a blanket that smelled of smoke, a boiled pot, and a small scrap of paper with directions he had written in a hurried hand.
They moved by animal rhythm — pause where the wind speaks, step when the stone grips, breathe with the goat bells far below. When the moon leaned, they climbed a notch too narrow for a steady stride and slipped into a hollow that smelled of crushed herbs and damp stone. Their hands were cut and their fingers learned the language of the mountain: a careful press, a gentle lever, a whispered balance.
At the cave mouth, thorn and brush guarded a dark seam. Majid pushed the branches aside and led Leyla in, finding a shallow shelf where the smoke could breathe out a thin sigh. The rock held a patient warmth, as if the mountain kept a slow memory of summer inside its ribs. Inside was a small hollow with flat places to sleep and a hollowed pocket where a trickle made a clean bead.
They kept the hearth low, feeding it with small twigs so the smoke would not betray them. They learned an economy of comforts: water caught from a drip in a cup, berries plucked from mossy crevices that tasted of sun and stone, the way a blanket could be a shield and a promise. Nights were long and close; they traded stories in low voices, kept counting the small mercies that meant another dawn.
For a time the world narrowed to the cave and to each other. Outside, the wind shaped rumor into a hunt; inside, they tended a single bright ember and the quiet work of belonging.
But the village remembered. Leyla's father hired men, bribed guides, and the hunt crawled across ridges. One morning hooves thundered nearer than before.
Majid stood at the mouth and braced himself like a door against the wind. He would not give Leyla away without placing his body between her and the ropes. Men arrived with ropes and hard faces; their boots chewed the loose gravel and their eyes had the blunt swing of people paid to act.
Leyla pressed her forehead to a cold stone and felt the mountain's damp. She kept her hands empty so that no one could say she had other things hidden. Majid counted the steps of the men: three then four then a shout. Words rose and failed like small fires in a rain.
A low groan moved through the cave, a deep sound that seemed to answer the men. The ceiling gave a small sigh and a hairline crack ran white across the entrance like a fault line. The torches dipped; their light grew thin and ragged as dust breathed down in a gray hush.
Outside, the men reached forward and hammered at the stone with iron. The sound was dull, an animal trying to wake the mountain. For a moment a wild thought passed through Leyla — that the earth itself might decide the dispute.


















