in a quarter of the land of the Roum, even as I said
to thee.” The Castrato thanked him and
blessed him and mounting, returned upon his road,
following the trail, whilst the knight rode with him
to a certain highway, when he said to him, “This
is where we left him.” Then he took leave
of him and returned to his own city, whilst the Eunuch
fared on along the road, enquiring in every village
he entered of the youth, by the description which
the rider had given him, and he ceased not thus to
do till he came to the village wherein was young Malik
Shah. So he entered, and dismounting, made enquiry
after the Prince, but none gave him news of him; whereat
he abode perplexed concerning his affair and made
ready to depart. Accordingly he mounted his horse;
but, as he passed through the village, he saw a cow
bound with a rope and a youth asleep by her side,
hending the halter in hand; so he looked at him and
passed on and heeded him not in his heart; but presently
he halted and said to himself, “An the youth
whom I am questing have become the like of this sleeping
youth whom I passed but now, how shall I know him?
Alas, the length of my travail and travel! How
shall I go about in search of a somebody I know not,
one whom, if I saw him face to face I should not know?”
So saying he turned back, musing anent that sleeping
youth, and coming to him, he still sleeping, dismounted
from his mare and sat down by his side. He fixed
his eyes upon his face and considered him awhile and
said in himself, “For aught I wot, this youth
may be Malik Shah;” then he began hemming and
saying, “Harkye, O youth!” Whereupon the
sleeper awoke and sat up; and the Eunuch asked him,
“Who be thy father in this village and where
be thy dwelling?” The youth sighed and replied,
“I am a stranger;” and quoth the Castrato,
“From what land art thou and who is thy sire?”
Quoth the other, “I am from such a land,”
and the Eunuch ceased not to question him and he to
answer his queries, till he was certified of him and
knew him. So he rose and embraced him and kissed
him and wept over his case: he also told him
that he was wandering about in search of him and informed
him that he was come privily from the king, his mother’s
husband, and that his mother would be satisfied to
weet that he was alive and well, though she saw him
not. Then he re-entered the village and buying
the Prince a horse, mounted him and they ceased not
going till they came to the frontier of their own
country, where there fell robbers upon them by the
way and took all that was with them and pinioned them;
after which they threw them in a pit hard by the road
and went their ways and left them to die there; and
indeed they had cast many folk into that pit and they
had perished. The Eunuch fell a-weeping in the
pit and the youth said to him, “What is this
weeping and what shall it profit here?” Quoth
the Castrato, “I weep not for fear of death,
but of ruth for thee and the cursedness of thy case
and because of thy mother’s heart and for that

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