So Zau al-Makan opened his hand to the army,and gave a sumptuous robe of honour to the Wazir Dandan,saying,'Thou continues'in office.Whereupon Dandan kissed the ground before him and wished him long life.Then he bestowed dresses on the Emirs,after which he said to the Chamberlain,'Bring out before me the tribute of Damascus that is with thee.'So he was shown the chests of money and rarities and jewels,when he took them and parted them all amongst the troops,--And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
When it was the Eighty-seventh Night,She said,It hath reached me,O auspicious King,that Zau al-Makan ordered the Chamberlain to bring out before him what he had brought of the tribute of Damascus;and,when he was shown the chests of money and rarities and jewels,he took them and parted them all amongst the troops,till nothing was left.And the Emirs kissed the ground before him and wished him long life,saying,'Never saw we a King,who gave the like of these gifts.'
Then all went away to their tents and when it was morning he gave orders for marching.So they marched for three days,till,on the fourth day,they drew near to Baghdad.When they entered the city,they found it decorated,and Zau al-Makan,the Sultan,went up to his father's palace and sat down on the throne,whilst the Emirs of the army and the Wazir Dandan and the Chamberlain of Damascus stood between his hands.Then he bade his private secretary write a writ to his brother Sharrkan,acquainting him with all that had passed,from first to last,and he concluded,'As soon as thou hast read this letter,make ready thine affair and join us with thine army,that we may turn to Holy War upon the Infidels and take man bote for our father and wipe out the stain upon our honour.'Then he folded the letter and sealed it with his seal ring and said to the Minister Dandan,'None shall carry this letter but thou;and it behoveth thee speak my brother fair and say to him,'If thou have a mind to thy father's kingdom,it is thine,and thy brother shall be Viceroy for thee in Damascus;for to this effect am I instructed by him.''So the Wazir went down from before him and made ready for his march.
Then Zau al-Makan bade set apart a magnificent house for the Fireman and furnished it with the best of furniture and long is the tale of that Fireman.[380]Presently Zau al-Makan went out chasing and hunting and,as he was returning to Baghdad,one of the Emirs presented him with blood horses and with beauteous handmaids whose deion the tongue evades.One of the damsels pleased him:so he went in unto her and knew her that night,and she conceived by him forthright.After a while,the Wazir Dandan returned from his journey,bringing him news of his brother Sharrkan and that he was then on his way to him,and said,'It were fitting thou go forth to meet him.'Zau al- Makan replied,'I hear and I consent;'and riding forth with his Grandees a day's journey from Baghdad,he pitched his pavilions there awaiting his brother.Next morning appeared King Sharrkan amid the army of Syria,a horseman of might,a lion fierce in fight,a prow and doughty knight.As the squadrons drew nigh and the dust clouds came hard by and the troops rode up with banners on high,Zau al-Makan and those with him pushed forward to meet Sharrkan and his men;and when Zau al-Makan saw his brother,he desired to dismount,but Sharrkan conjured him not to do on this wise,and himself footed it,and walked a few paces towards him.[381] As soon as he reached Zau al-Makan,the new Sultan threw himself upon him,and Sharrkan embraced him and wept with great weeping and the twain condoled with each other.Then they mounted and rode onward,they and their troops,till they reached Baghdad,where they alighted and went up to the royal palace and there they passed that night,and when next morning came,Zau al-Makan went forth and bade summon the troops from all parts,and proclaimed a Holy War and a Razzia.[382] They then awaited the coming of the levies from each quarter of the kingdom,and every one who came they entreated with honour and promised him all manner of good;till in so doing a full month had sped,and the fighting men flocked to them in a continuous body.Then Sharrkan said to Zau al-Makan,'O my brother,tell me thy history.'So he told him all that had befallen him from first to last,including the benevolent dealing of the Fireman with him.Asked Sharrkan,'Hast thou requited his kindness?'and he answered,'O my brother!I have not rewarded him as yet,but Inshallah!I will recompense him whenas I return from this raid'--And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.