They had completed their Umrah late morning. Shehnaz, Nazia, Soni, Saji, and Saji's children — Yazen and Saif — had arrived in Makkah in the early hours, just in time for Fajr. After praying, they had immediately proceeded: the tawaf around the Kaaba, two prayers, Zamzam, the sa'i between Safa and Marwa, and finally the cutting of their hair to mark completion.
The entire week leading up to this moment had been a whirlwind — travel, preparations, excitement, anxiety. Rest had been a luxury none of them could afford. They had been moving constantly, minds buzzing with anticipation. But now, finally, they had walked the same paths walked by millions of believers before them. They had circled the House of Allah. They had drunk from the well of Zamzam. They had completed what they came to do.
And it had all happened because Allah had granted them this precious opportunity.
They had approached each stage of Umrah with deep commitment and enthusiasm, despite their fatigue — the spiritual high carrying them through. But once the final ritual was complete, once their hair was cut and they were released from their state of ihram, the exhaustion hit like a wave. They hurried back to the hotel, managed a quick breakfast, and collapsed into their beds barely able to keep their eyes open.