In the beginning, there was the Ash'ar.
Not a god. Gods require worship, and the Ash'ar required only rhythm. Not a creator, for creation implies separation—sculptor from stone, writer from word. The Ash'ar was the writing and the written, the breath and the verse, the silence before language and the echo that outlives it.
They called it the First Poet in the oldest tongues. The Ultimate Ghazal. The Unmoved Mover of Meter.
It wrote Alfaz into being—not crafted, not built, but spoken. Continents were couplets. Oceans, the space between stanzas. Stars: punctuation marks in a sentence too vast for any voice but its own. And when the Ash'ar reached the final line of its cosmic composition, it did something no poet had done before or since.
It stopped.
Not from exhaustion. Not from completion. The Ash'ar hesitated.
The last couplet—maqta in the terminology of masters who would come millennia later—remained unwritten. Two lines. Fourteen words in the Ash'ar's original meter. Enough to complete the universe's architecture, to seal reality against the Silence that waited beyond the margins of existence.
Instead, the Ash'ar shattered.
Not died—death requires a life to end. The Ash'ar distributed itself. Became the Rekhta: the mixture, the impurity, the beautiful contamination of all poetry that followed. Every verse written in Alfaz carried a fragment of that original voice. Every poet who made language dance became, unknowingly, a vessel for what the First Poet could not finish.
This was the gift. This was the trap.
For the Silence was patient. It crept through the spaces between words, erasing not the poems but the memory of them. A ghazal forgotten in a dying mind. A child's nursery rhyme lost to war. A library burned by those who feared what language could summon. Each erasure weakened the Rekhta. Each silence strengthened the void.
Now the Hollow Throne stands empty in the capital of Zulmatabad, its occupant—Sultan-e-Zulmat—having transcended physical form to become a living negation of poetry. His Qaafiya Legion hunts summoners, harvesting their Systems to feed the Silence. The Majlis-e-Sukhan fragments, betrayed from within, their greatest champions fallen or corrupted.
And in a world called Earth, in a city called Karachi, in a cramped apartment smelling of old books and disappointment, a young man who had memorized too much poetry and accomplished too little with it stepped into traffic while reading Faiz Ahmed Faiz on his phone.
He did not see the truck.
He did not feel the impact.
He heard, instead, a voice like the rustle of thousand-year-old pages, speaking a language that existed before sound:
"The couplet remains incomplete. The silence approaches the final line. Will you write it, Ash'ar-in-Waiting? Or will you, too, hesitate?"
Arham Qadeer died at 11:47 PM, local time.
He woke at the beginning of language, with a System interface burning behind his eyes and the weight of every unwritten poem pressing down upon his soul.
The Rekhta had chosen.
The final ghazal was about to begin.

End of Prologue
