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Then
he repaired to the audience chamber, and causing Abu Sir to be brought before
him with his elbows pinioned, sent for his sea captain and said to him:
"Take this villian and set him in a sack with two quintals of lime unslaked
and tie its mouth over his head. Then lay him in a cockboat and row out with
him in front of my palace, where thou wilt see me sitting at the lattice. Do
thou say to me, 'Shall I cast him in?' and if I answer, 'Cast him!' throw the
sack into the sea, so the quicklime may be slacked on him to the intent that he
shall die drowned and burnt." "Hearkening and obeying," quoth
the captain, and taking Abu Sir from the presence, carried him to an island
facing the King's palace, where he said to him: "Ho, thou, I once visited
thy hammam and thou entreatedst me with honor and accomplishedst all my needs
and I had great pleasure of thee. Moreover, thou swarest that thou wouldst take
no pay of me, and I love thee with a great love. So tell me how the case
standeth between thee and the King, and what abominable deed thou hast done
with him that he is wroth with thee and hath commanded me that thou shouldst
die this foul death."
Answered
Abu Sir, "I have done nothing, nor weet I of any crime I have committed
against him which merited this!" Rejoined the captain: "Verily, thou
wast high in rank with the King, such as none ever won before thee, and all who
are prosperous are envied. Haply someone was jealous of thy good fortune and
threw out certain hints concerning thee to the King, by reason whereof he is
become enraged against thee with rage so violent. But be of good cheer, no harm
shall befall thee. For even as thou entreatedst me generously, without
acquaintanceship between me and thee, so now I will deliver thee. But an I
release thee, thou must abide with me on this island till some galleon sail
from our city to thy native land, when I will send thee thither therein."
Abu
Sir kissed his hand and thanked him for that, after which the captain fetched
the quicklime and set it in a sack, together with a great stone, the size of a
man, saying, "I put my trust in Allah!" Then he gave the barber a
net, saying: "Cast this net into the sea, so haply thou mayest take
somewhat of fish. For I am bound to supply the King's kitchen with fish every
day, but today I have been distracted from fishing by this calamity which hath
befallen thee, and I fear lest the cook's boys come to me in quest of fish and
find none. So, an thou take aught, they will find it and thou wilt veil my face,
whilst I go and play off my practice in front of the palace and feign to cast
thee into the sea." Answered Abu Sir: "I will fish the while. Go
thou, and God help thee!" So the captain set the sack in the boat and
paddled till it came under the palace, where he saw the King seated at the
lattice and said to him, "O King of the Age, shall I cast him in?"
"Cast him!" cried the King, and signed to him with his hand, when lo
and behold! something flashed like levin and fell into the sea. Now that which
had fallen into the water was the King's seal ring, and the same was enchanted
in such way that when the King was wroth with anyone and was minded to slay
him, he had but to sign to him with his right hand, whereon was the signet
ring, and therefrom issued a flash of lightning, which smote the object, and
thereupon his head fell from between his shoulders. And the troops obeyed him
not, nor did he overcome the men of might, save by means of the ring. So when
it dropped from his finger, he concealed the matter and kept silence, for that
he dared not say, "My ring is fallen into the sea," for fear of the
troops, lest they rise against him and slay him.
On
this wise it befell the King. But as regards Abu Sir, after the captain had
left him on the island he took the net and casting it into the sea, presently
drew it up full of fish, nor did he cease to throw it and pull it up full till
there was a great mound of fish before him. So he said in himself, "By
Allah, this long while I have not eaten fish!" and chose himself a large
fat fish, saying, "When the captain cometh back, I will bid him fry it for
me, so I may dine on it." Then he cut its throat with a knife he had with
him, but the knife stuck in its gills, and there he saw the King's signet ring,
for the fish had swallowed it and Destiny had driven it to that island, where
it had fallen into the net. He took the ring and drew it on his little finger,
not knowing its peculiar properties. Presently up came two of the cook's boys
in quest of fish, and seeing Abu Sir, said to him, "O man, whither is the
captain gone?" "I know not," said he, and signed to them with
his right hand, when, behold, the heads of both underlings dropped off from
between their shoulders. At this Abu Sir was amazed and said, "Would I wot
who slew them!"
And
their case was grievous to him, and he was still pondering it when the captain
suddenly returned, and seeing the mound of fishes and two man lying dead and
the seal ring on Abu Sir's finger, said to him: "O my brother, move not
thy hand whereon is the signet ring, else thou wilt kill me." Abu Sir
wondered at this speech and kept his hand motionless, whereupon the captain
came up to him and said, "Who slew these two men?" "By Allah, O
my brother, I wot not!" "Thou sayest sooth, but tell me, whence hadst
thou that ring?" "I found it in this fish's gills."
"True," said the captain, "for I saw it fall flashing from the
King's palace and disappear in the sea, what time he signed toward thee,
saying, 'Cast him in.' So I cast the sack into the water, and it was then that
the ring slipped from his finger and fell into the sea, where this fish
swallowed it, and Allah drave it to thee, so that thou madest it thy prey, for
this ring was thy lot. But kennest thou its property?"
Said
Abu Sir, "I knew not that it had any properties peculiar to it," and
the captain said: "Learn, then, that the King's troops obey him not save
for fear of this signet ring, because it is spelled, and when he was wroth with
anyone and had a mind to kill he would sign at him therewith and his head would
drop from between his shoulders, for there issued a flash of lightning from the
ring and its ray smote the object of his wrath, who died forthright." At
this, Abu Sir rejoiced with exceeding joy and said to the captain, "Carry
me back to the city," and he said, "That will I, now that I no longer
fear for thee from the King, for wert thou to sip at him with thy hand,
purposing to kill him, his head would fall down between thy hands. And if thou
be minded to slay him and all his host, thou mayst slaughter them without let
or hindrance."
So
saying, he embarked him in the boat and bore him back to the city, so Abu Sir
landed, and going up to the palace, entered the council chamber, where he found
the King seated facing his officers, in sore cark and care by reason of the
seal ring and daring not tell any of his folk anent its loss. When he saw Abu
Sir, he said to him: "Did we not cast thee into the sea? How hast thou
contrived to come forth of it?" Abu Sir replied: "O King of the Age,
whenas thou badest throw me into the sea, thy captain carried me to an island
and asked me of the cause of thy wrath against me, saying, 'What hast thou done
with the King, that he should decree thy death?' I answered, 'By Allah, I know
not that I have wrought him any wrong!' Quoth he: 'Thou wast high in rank with
the King, and haply someone envied thee and threw out certain hints concerning
thee to him, so that he is become incensed against thee. But when I visited
thee in thy hammam, thou entreatedst me honorably, and I will requite thee thy
hospitality to me by setting thee free and sending thee back to thine own
land.' Then he set a great stone in the sack in my stead and cast it into the
seat, but when thou signedst to him to throw me in, thy seal ring dropped from
thy finger into the main, and a fish swallowed it.
"Now
I was on the island a-fishing, and this fish came up in the net with others,
whereupon I took it, intending to broil it. But when I opened its belly, I
found the signet ring therein, so I took it and put it on my finger. Presently
up came two of the servants of the kitchen, questing fish, and I signed to them
with my hand, knowing not the property of the seal ring, and their heads fell
off. Then the captain came back, and seeing the ring on my finger, acquainted
me with its spell. And, behold, I have brought it back to thee, for that thou
dealtest kindly by me and entreatedst me with the utmost honor, nor is that
which thou hast done me of kindness lost upon me. Here is thy ring, take it! But
an I have done with thee aught deserving of death, tell me my crime and slay me
and thou shalt be absolved of sin in shedding my blood."
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