Episode One
The mosque courtyard pulsed with energy that Thursday evening. The last notes of the muezzin’s call to prayer still lingered in the air, carried gently across the city as the sun melted into streaks of gold and lavender. Beneath the old stone arches, long wooden tables stretched across the courtyard, draped in baskets of food, stacks of clothes, and neat rows of books.
Children zigzagged between the tables, clutching small donation boxes shaped like mosques, their laughter echoing like birdsong. Elderly men leaned on canes, trading warm salaams, while young women in abayas rushed about with clipboards, ensuring every list was checked twice. It was the annual charity drive, and the neighborhood had turned out in full force.
At the far end of the courtyard, Amina Khalid adjusted the final stack of Qur’ans on the women’s table. Twenty-eight years old, she carried herself with the quiet assurance of someone older. Her navy-blue abaya was plain but graceful, and her soft-grey hijab framed features that radiated calm composure.
Order mattered to her. Not out of fussiness, but because she believed that beauty was a form of worship. Even in service, details carried weight.
“Teacher Amina?” a young volunteer hurried over, holding a box of children’s books. “Should we place these with the Qur’ans?”
Amina considered, then shook her head gently. “No, give the children their own section. They’ll feel more included that way.”
The girl beamed and ran off. Amina smiled faintly. These small exchanges reminded her why she loved volunteering—not just to distribute things, but to nurture hearts.
She was ticking off items on her clipboard when a smooth, unfamiliar voice cut through her concentration.
“Excuse me.”
She turned. And paused.
The man before her looked out of place. He was tall, broad-shouldered, dressed in a tailored navy suit that gleamed under the courtyard lights. His hair was styled with precision, his leather shoes shone like glass. In a sea of simple volunteers, he was the only one who looked as if he’d stepped straight out of a boardroom.
“You’re in charge here?” he asked, slipping his phone into his pocket.
“Not in charge,” Amina replied evenly. “But I’m coordinating tonight.”
He extended a hand. “Good. I’m Zayd Rahman. My company—RahmanTech—sponsored this event.”
Amina glanced at his hand for a second, then kept hers clasped at her waist. He caught the hint, withdrew with a sheepish smile.
She nodded politely. “Wa alaykum as-salaam, Mr. Zayd. We’re grateful for your support. May Allah reward you.”
“Reward?” His chuckle was low, casual. “I don’t know about that. Good PR is reward enough.”
Her fingers stilled on the Qur’ans. She turned fully to face him, her dark eyes steady, voice soft yet cutting in its calm.
“Some of us believe good deeds carry more weight in the Hereafter than in the headlines.”
For the first time in a long while, Zayd felt disarmed. Most people either flattered him or tiptoed around him. This woman hadn’t raised her voice, yet she had unsettled him in seconds.
Before he could respond, a tug on his sleeve distracted him.
“Uncle, will you buy a book for the orphans?” a little girl asked, her small hands clutching a worn stack of storybooks.
Zayd crouched, his polished façade slipping into something warmer. “Of course, habibti.” He pulled out a generous bill, pressing it into her palm. “Keep some for yourself too. And remember me in your du‘a.”
Her face lit up as she dashed away.
Amina had watched quietly. For the first time that evening, a smile curved her lips—not wide, but genuine.
“Not everything is about PR, then?” she murmured.
Zayd glanced at her, startled. Her tone wasn’t mocking, only amused. For a moment, he had no comeback. He only found himself wondering how someone could make him feel seen with so few words.
“Maybe not everything,” he admitted.
A pause stretched between them. The buzz of the courtyard dimmed into background noise—the children’s chatter, the rustle of baskets, the clink of tea cups. For one long breath, it was just the two of them.
Then an older volunteer called Amina’s name. She turned instantly, moving toward her duty without another word, leaving Zayd standing at the book table, oddly unsettled.
---
The evening unfolded. Volunteers handed out hot bread and stew, young men carried crates of water, children sang nasheeds under the mosque steps.
Zayd moved through the crowd, his usual charm on full display. He greeted the imam, shook hands with businessmen, posed for photos. But his mind wasn’t where it should have been. Again and again, he caught himself glancing toward the woman in the grey hijab, her calm presence drawing his thoughts back like a magnet.
Meanwhile, Amina was instructing a group of teenagers when one of her students whispered, “Teacher Amina, who is that man? Everyone keeps watching him.”
Amina pressed her lips together. “He’s one of the sponsors. That’s all.”
The girl tilted her head. “He doesn’t look like the mosque type.”
Amina almost smiled. “Not everyone who supports good work looks the same, Huda. Sometimes Allah guides people in ways we least expect.”
She had meant it as a lesson for her student. But the words lingered inside her too.
---
Later, as the courtyard began to empty and families carried their baskets home, Amina stood at the mosque gate, giving final instructions to her volunteers.
Behind her, a familiar voice sounded. “So, Teacher Amina…”
She turned, surprised. Zayd stood a few steps away, hands in his pockets, his smile tilted in that half-playful, half-serious way.
“Yes?” she asked, polite but guarded.
“Do you talk to everyone like that, or just me?”
Her brow furrowed. “Like what?”
“Like you’re giving me homework.”
The words caught her off guard. To her surprise, she laughed—a soft, unplanned sound that escaped before she could hold it back. “Maybe you needed it.”
Zayd grinned. “Maybe I did.”
Their eyes met again, the sharpness between them easing into something lighter. For the first time that night, the tension shifted. It wasn’t hostility anymore—it was curiosity.
But Amina turned away quickly, resuming her instructions to the volunteers. Zayd lingered a moment longer, then began walking out of the courtyard.
He should have left satisfied. The banners bore his company’s logo, his name was on every announcement, his presence noted by all the right people. But as he stepped into the Istanbul night, only one thought followed him:
“Good deeds carry more weight in the Hereafter than in the headlines.”
And for reasons he couldn’t explain, he wanted to hear her say it again.