Now, kneeling in the courtyard, she felt foolish. Thousands of pilgrims surged around her, some weeping, some singing, some simply sitting in silent sama . A blind old man next to her was swaying, tears streaming down his face. He wasn’t asking for his sight back. He was thanking the Khwaja for giving him inner light.
Zara had played it on loop for three nights. On the fourth, she booked a train to Ajmer.
The scent of agarbatti and old roses clung to the white marble of the dargah. In the heart of Ajmer Sharif, under a sky bleeding into twilight, a young woman named Zara pressed her forehead to the cool stone floor. She was not a regular visitor. In fact, she had spent years scoffing at what she called "the crutch of faith." Ya Khwaja Ye Hindalwali By Rahat Fateh Ali Khan
And in the distance, as if in answer, a hindalwali began to beat—not from the shrine, but from a wedding procession passing by on the street below. A coincidence. A miracle. Or perhaps just the universe winking.
The qawwali began live from the inner shrine, Rahat Fateh Ali Khan’s recorded voice pouring from old speakers, but tonight it felt personal. The harmonium wheezed like a tired heart. The clapping was the sound of bones dancing. And the chorus— "Data, Data, Sakhi Data" —rose like a million hands reaching for the same rope. Now, kneeling in the courtyard, she felt foolish
Zara’s breath stopped. Kabir had a scar on his left hand—from a childhood burn.
Then her grandmother, Ammi-Jaan, had placed a worn cassette into her hand. "Listen," she’d said. "Not with your ears. With your wound." He wasn’t asking for his sight back
"Baji," he said. "A man gave me this five rupees to find a woman named Zara. He said she would come today. He has blue eyes and a scar on his left hand."