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Therewith
Nuzhat al-Fuad rejoiced and said, "Indeed, this is an excellent
device." Then Abu al-Hasan stretched himself out forthright and she shut his
eyes and tied his feet and covered him with the napkin and did whatso her lord
had bidden her. After which she tare her gear and bared her head and letting
down her hair, went in to the Lady Zubaydah, crying out and weeping. When the
Princess saw her in this state, she cried: "What plight is this? What is
thy story, and what maketh thee weep?" And Nuzhatal-Fuad answered, weeping
and loud-wailing the while: "O my lady, may thy head live and mayst thou
survive Abu al-Hasan al-Khali'a, for he is dead!" The Lady Zubaydah
mourned for him and said, "Alas, poor Abu al-Hasan the wag!" and she
shed tears for him awhile. Then she bade her treasuress give Nuzhat al-Fuad a
hundred dinars and a piece of silk and said to her, "O Nuzhat al-Fuad, go,
lay him out and carry him forth."
So
she took the hundred dinars and the piece of silk and returned to her dwelling,
rejoicing, and went in to her spouse and acquainted him what had befallen,
whereupon he arose and rejoiced and girdled his middle and danced and took the
hundred dinars and the piece of silk and laid them up. Then he laid out Nuzhat
al-Fuad and did with her as she had done with him, after which he rent his
raiment and plucked out his beard and disordered his turban and ran out, nor
ceased running till he came in to the Caliph, who was sitting in the judgment
hall, and he in this plight, beating his breast. The Caliph asked him,
"What aileth thee, O Abu al-Hasan?" and he wept and answered,
"Would Heaven thy cup companion had never been, and would his hour had never
come!" Quoth the Caliph, "Tell me thy case," and quoth Abu
al-Hasan, "O my lord, may thy head outlive Nuzhat al-Fuad!" The
Caliph exclaimed, "There is no god but God," and smote hand upon
hand. Then he comforted Abu al-Hasan and said to him, "Grieve not, for we
will bestow upon thee a bedfellow other than she." And he ordered the
treasurer to give him a hundred dinars and a piece of silk. Accordingly the
treasurer did what the Caliph bade him, and Al-Rashid said to him, "Go,
lay her out and carry her forth and make her a handsome funeral."
So
Abu al-Hasan took that which he had given him and returning to his house,
rejoicing, went in to Nuzhat al-Fuad and said to her, "Arise, for our
wish" is won." Hereat she arose and he laid before her the hundred
ducats and the piece of silk, whereat she rejoiced, and they added the gold to
the gold and the silk to the silk and sat talking and laughing each to other.
Meanwhile,
when Abu al-Hasan fared forth the presence of the Caliph and went to lay out
Nuzhat al-Fuad, the Commander of the Faithful mourned for her, and dismissing
the Divan, arose and betook himself, leaning upon Masrur, the Sworder of his
vengeance, to the Lady Zubaydah, that he might condole with her for her
handmaid. He found her sitting weeping and awaiting his coming, so she might
condole with him for his boon companion Abu al-Hasan the wag. So he said to
her, "May thy head outlive thy slave girl Nuzhat al-Fuad!" and said
she: "O my lord, Allah preserve my slave girl! Mayst thou live and long
survive thy boon companion Abu al-Hasan al-Khali'a, for he is dead." The
Caliph smiled and said to his eunuch: "O Masrur, verily women are little
of wit. Allah upon thee, say, was not Abu al-Hasan with me but now?" Quoth
the Lady Zubaydah, laughing from a heart full of wrath: "Wilt thou not
leave thy jesting? Sufficeth thee not that Abu al-Hasan is dead, but thou must
put to death my slave girl also and bereave us of the twain, and style me
little of wit?" The Caliph answered, "Indeed, 'tis Nuzhat al-Fuad who
is dead." And the Lady Zubaydah said: "Indeed he hath not been with
thee, nor hast thou seen him, and none was with me but now save Nuzhat al-Fuad,
and she sorrowful, weeping, with her clothes torn to tatters. I exhorted her to
patience and gave her a hundred dinars and a piece of silk, and indeed I was
awaiting thy coming, so I might console thee for thy cup companion Abu al-Hasan
al-Khali'a, and was about to send for thee." The Caliph laughed and said,
"None is dead save Nuzhat al-Fuad," and she, "No, no, good my
lord; none is dead but Abu al-Hasan the wag."
With
this the Caliph waxed wroth, and the hashimi vein started out from between his
eyes and throbbed, and he cried out to Masrur and said to him, "Fare thee
forth to the house of Abu al-Hasan the wag, and see which of them is
dead." So Masrur went out, running, and the Caliph said to the Lady
Zubaydah, "Wilt thou lay me a wager?" And said she, "Yes, I will
wager, and I say that Abu al-Hasan is dead." Rejoined the Caliph: "And
I wager and say that none is dead save Nuzhat al-Fuad, and the stake between me
and thee shall be the Garden of Pleasaunce against thy palace and the Pavilion
of Pictures." So they agreed upon this and sat awaiting Masrur's return
with the news.
As
for the eunuch, he ceased not running till he came to the by-street wherein was
the stead of Abu al-Hasan al-Khali'a. Now the wag was comfortably seated and
leaning back against the lattice, and chancing to look round, saw Masrur
running along the street and said to Nuzhat al-Fuad, "Meseemeth the
Caliph, when I went forth from him, dismissed the Divan and went in to the Lady
Zubaydah to condole with her, whereupon she arose and condoled with him,
saying, 'Allah increase thy recompense for the loss of Abu al-Hasan
al-Khali'a!' And he said to her, 'None is dead save Nuzhat al-Fuad, may thy
head outlive her!' Quoth she, ''Tis not she who is dead, but Abu al-Hasan
al-Khali'a, thy boon companion.' And quoth he, 'None is dead save Nuzhat
al-Fuad.' And they waxed so obstinate that the Caliph became wroth and they
laid a wager, and he hath sent Masrur the Sworder to see who is dead. Now,
therefore, 'twere best that thou lie down, so he may sight thee and go and
acquaint the Caliph and confirm my saying."
So
Nuzhat al-Fuad stretched herself out and Abu al-Hasan covered her with her
mantilla and sat weeping at her head. Presently, Masrur, the eunuch, suddenly
came in to him and saluted him, and seeing Nuzhat al-Fuad stretched out,
uncovered her face and said: "There is no god but God! Our sister Nuzhat
al-Fuad is dead indeed. How sudden was the stroke of Destiny! Allah have ruth
on thee and acquit thee of all charge!" Then he returned and related what
had passed before the Caliph and the Lady Zubaydah, and he laughing as he
spoke. "O accursed one," cried the Caliph: "this is no time for
laughter! Tell us which is dead of them." Masrur replied: "By Allah,
O my lord, Abu al-Hasan is well, and none is dead but Nuzhat al-Fuad."
Quoth the Caliph to Zubaydah, "Thou hast lost thy pavilion in thy
play," and he jeered at her. and said, "O Masrur, tell her what thou
sawest."
Quoth
the eunuch: "Verily, O my lady, I ran without ceasing till I came in to
Abu al-Hasan in his house, and found Nuzhat al-Fuad lying dead and Abu al-Hasan
sitting tearful at her head. I saluted him and condoled with him and sat down
by his side and uncovered the face of Nuzhat al-Fuad and saw her dead and her
face swollen. So I said to him, 'Carry her out forthwith, so we may pray over
her.' He replied, ''Tis well,' and I left him to lay her out and came hither,
that I might tell you the news." The Prince of True Believers laughed and
said, "Tell it again and again to thy lady Little-wits." When the
Lady Zubaydah heard Masrur's words and those of the Caliph she was wroth and
said, "None is little of wit save he who believeth a black slave."
And she abused Masrur, whilst the Commander of the Faithful laughed; and the
eunuch, vexed at this, said to the Caliph, "He spake sooth who said,
'Women are little of wits and lack religion."'
Then
said the Lady Zubaydah to the Caliph: "O Commander of the Faithful, thou
sportest and jestest with me, and this slave hoodwinketh me, the better to
please thee. But I will send and see which of them be dead." And he
answered, saying, "Send one who shall see which of them is dead." So
the Lady Zubaydah cried out to an old duenna, and said to her: "Hie thee
to the house of Nuzhat al-Fuad in haste and see who is dead, and loiter
not." And she used hard words to her. So the old woman went out running,
whilst the Prince of True Believers and Masrur laughed, and she ceased not
running till she came into the street. Abu al-Hasan saw her, and knowing her,
said to his wife: "O Nuzhat al-Fuad, meseemeth the Lady Zubaydah hath sent
to us to see who is dead and hath not given credit to Masrur's report of thy
death. Accordingly she hath dispatched the old crone, her duenna, to discover
the truth. So it behooveth me to be dead in my turn for the sake of thy credit
with the Lady Zubaydah."
Hereat
he lay down and stretched himself out, and she covered him and bound his eyes
and feet and sat in tears at his head. Presently the old woman came in to her
and saw her sitting at Abu al-Hasan's head, weeping and recounting his fine
qualities; and when she saw the old trot, she cried out and said to her:
"See what hath befallen me! Indeed Abu al-Hasan is dead and hath left me
lone and lorn!" Then she shrieked out and rent her raiment and said to the
crone, "O my mother, how very good he was to me!" Quoth the other, "Indeed
thou art excused, for thou wast used to him and he to thee."
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