Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 1.djvu/45

27 upon it with covetous eyes and took counsel together to kill me and to take my goods, saying, “Let us kill our brother, and all will be ours.” And Satan made this to seem good in their eyes. So they took me sleeping beside my wife and lifted us both up and threw us into the sea. When my wife awoke, she shook herself and becoming an Afriteh, took me up and carried me to an island, where she left me for awhile. In the morning, she returned and said to me, “I have paid thee my debt, for it is I who bore thee up out of the sea and saved thee from death, by permission of God the Most High. Know that I am of the Jinn who believe in God and His Apostle (whom God bless and preserve!) and I saw thee and loved thee for God’s sake. So I came to thee in the plight thou knowest of and thou didst marry me, and now I have saved thee from drowning. But I am wroth with thy brothers, and needs must I kill them.” When I heard her words, I wondered and thanked her for what she had done and begged her not to kill my brothers. Then I told her all that had passed between us, and she said, “This very night will I fly to them and sink their ship and make an end of them.” “God on thee,” answered I, “do not do this, for the proverb says, ‘O thou who dost good to those who do evil, let his deeds suffice the evil doer!’ After all, they are my brothers.” Quoth she, “By Allah, I must kill them.” And I besought her till she lifted me up and flying away with me, set me down on the roof of my own house, where she left me. I went down and unlocked the doors and brought out what I had hidden under the earth and opened my shop, after I had saluted the folk and bought goods. At nightfall, I returned home and found these two dogs tied up in the courtyard: and when they