That Thursday, he told himself he was going to Alexandria for the fish market. He arrived at the designated tram stop at 4:10 PM, feeling like an idiot. A man sold roasted sweet potatoes from a cart. A woman argued on her phone. At 4:16, the tram hissed to a stop, and a young woman stepped off.

The clock on Omar’s laptop read 2:47 AM. Outside his window, Cairo was holding its breath—the kind of silence that comes just before the first call to prayer. He clicked the bookmark he’d been avoiding for six months: .

He didn’t expect a response. Qiran wasn’t a dating app—everyone knew that. It was something stranger. A rumor that had started in the old souks of Marrakesh and spread through WhatsApp forwards, then TikTok, then whispered conversations in hookah lounges. They said Qiran didn’t match you based on hobbies or photos. It matched you based on the gap in your soul.