Story Notes
1) There's really not any smut in this. Sorry!
2) Sha'ir and Rawi are taken from the actual Arabic poetic tradition. A Sha'ir is more of a composer and a Rawi memorizes and conveys
"Vengeance sees the future clearly and mythologizes the past, though it dwells there." Abdul ibn Malik
Faisal gripped the pommel of his saddle and waited to hear the sound of distraction on the other side of the oasis. On cue, his cousin's men rode their horses by, thundering past the palms with torches brandished. The sleepy town hidden behind the low walls sprang to life, and defenders made their way to the only gate large enough for horses to pass easily. Faisal and his brother, Ahmed, slid off their horses and tied them along with the third to a nearby palm, then scaled the low wall easily, landing in the packed earth of the street below.
They emerged on a moonlit street that led to the house of the trader, Hakim and the dwelling of his love Jahane. The thought of her stirred his breast. Jahane with her eyes as large and luminescent as the moon which lit their path, her hair as dark as a raven's wing and lustrous as a pearl. Her eyes the color of coffee, and her skin the same as if sweetened with milk. Her voice smoldered like the coals of a newly banked fire. Her curves were as lush and as bountiful as the green lands beyond the desert. How often had the thought of the pleasures that he might prize from her full lips.
At Twenty-three, a man of the world, he was no virgin. He knew her though, to be one. She was a woman only a year now, just eighteen, and her virtue and purity would refresh him as a mountain spring. His love for her was boundless, and she was promised to another. Tonight, he would rescue her from being chained to some old man. Tonight, they would run, and in three months' time when her tribe had not yet reclaimed her the old ways would make her his wife.
"I still don't know why you didn't just ask the man for her hand" his brother grumbled as they made their way down the street. "you're a seasoned warrior and a renowned Sha'ir, the youngest to be considered a true talent. Your herd is sizable, and our family is old and respectable"
It was true, as a notable Sha'ir, or poet, he had status far beyond his years and currency with which to ply even these soft oasis dwellers. "Because it suits me to steal her, in the manner our grandfather stole our grandmother. Also, it suits her. The notion of it lit her face with a smile bright as the noon sun. "
For his part, his brother replied only with a long-suffering look, followed by a hand on Faisal's arm and another pointing at the house "Some guards there, I believe. Why are they not at the gates?"
The brothers crept closer. Accomplished raiders and horse thieves they were expert at making themselves one with the night. As they approached, Faisal's nervousness gave way to anger. His hand dropped to the hilt of his scimitar and he hissed "Mahmoud Ibn Ali, you dog. What brings your wretched hide here?"
Standing in front of two horses was a single man, unarmored though armed with a scimitar as was Faisal. Tall, handsome, and possessing a spectacular beard was Mahmoud. His rival, at least in his own head. Mahmoud was also a poet, a horse thief, a trader and a leader of the men of the tribe of Nahaz. "I heard that vagabonds were here to steal the virtue of young Jahane, and so I came to spirit her away"
"Insolence! Stand aside. The girl loves me and I her"
"I fear I cannot, I've come for a second wife and she is as beautiful as the night and her hips are wide enough to birth me another set of fine strong sons."
"You dare discuss her hips you villain?"
"I dare much, pup." Mahmoud's voice was low and calm, and his hand slid his blade from its sheath. "You are a youth of much promise, and I will regret killing you... but you are yet a youth and I a man. Abandon your foolishness before I paint the packed earth of this street with your blood"
At that Faisal and Ahmed drew and advanced. In a blur Mahmoud disarmed Ahmed, sending his blade spinning into the darkness with a clang. He smashed his hilt into the side of Ahmed's head, downing him. Swiftly, the larger, older man spun to face Faisal, his approach less aggressive with the more capable swordsman. Mahmoud shifted his feet, moving so Faisal could see the tied-up form of his lady love slumped over a saddle.
'He must have an accomplice at the gate' the thought rose in his mind and made him seethe. In that moment of distracted anger, however, all was lost. Mahmoud lashed out with the hilt of his blade, cracking it against Faisal's elbow and forcing him to drop his sword from nerveless fingers. Mahmoud sprang away and grinned, spitting out a couplet in Old Qurayshi, and Faisal could not help but take a moment to translate
Your arm hangs limp and useless
Flaccid as an old man's cock.
"Churl" Faisal spat and approached the other tribesman, who tossed a handful of sand in his eyes to cover his escape. In parting, a shouted verse again in old Qurayshi leapt from the lips of Mahmoud
The young ram's horn
Stands ofter too attention
But the old ram's strikes deeper, longer
Into the young ewe.
Mahmoud's mocking laughter was swiftly covered by the sound his horses' hooves beating a retreat to the other gate, away from the horses of Faisal's tribesmen. As Faisal bent to retrieve his sword, the townsmen came running to investigate the sound of the departing villain. Faisal drew up his blade but swiftly was surrounded by townsmen with spears and crossbows. He raised his hands "Mahmoud Ibn Ali came to steal away your priceless treasure. I tried to stop him but it was of no avail."