A baby's cry split the freezing wind on Alborz Mountain while Sam's command still echoed below. Wrapped in cloth and left among sharp stones, Zal kicked against the cold as moonlight flashed on his white hair. Would his father's fear bury him before dawn, or would the mountain answer first?
In the age when kings rode beneath open skies and the old stories still breathed through firelit halls, Sistan stood between harsh desert and high mountain. Its people valued courage, lineage, and signs from the unseen world. In that land, Sam was praised as a warrior whose sword held borders firm and whose judgment rarely failed. Yet the wish he carried most stubbornly had nothing to do with battle. He wanted a son to inherit his name, guard his people, and prove that his house would endure after him.
When Sam's wife finally bore him a son, relief flooded the household. Then the midwives saw the child's hair, white as winter snow, and the room fell still. What should have been a night of drums and blessings turned into whispering. Courtiers muttered that such a child signaled misfortune.
Servants lowered their eyes. Sam looked at the healthy baby in his arms and saw, for a moment, only the fear of public shame and divine warning. He let other people's superstition speak louder than the truth before him.
By dawn he had ordered the infant abandoned on the slopes of Alborz. The men who carried out the command set the child down among rock and scrub where the air bit like iron. They left quickly, unable to bear the sound of his crying. Zal lay alone beneath the turning stars, too small to understand why warmth and milk had vanished. The mountain, vast and pitiless, seemed ready to swallow him.
But the world had not forsaken him. High above those ridges lived the Simurgh, the great bird of Persian legend, ancient as memory and wise in the ways of earth and sky. She heard the child's cry while crossing the moonlit peaks. Circling lower, she saw the abandoned infant, the white hair shining against dark stone, and pity stirred in her old, watchful heart. She folded her broad wings and descended.
The Simurgh lifted Zal with a gentleness no human had shown him that night and carried him to her nest high in the mountains. There the wind sang through cedar and stone, and clouds curled below like pale rivers. She fed him, guarded him, and wrapped him in the safety of her vast body when storms struck the cliffs. What began as rescue slowly became kinship.
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Zal grew beneath the Simurgh's care, surrounded not by palace walls but by crags, hawks, snowmelt, and moonrise. She taught him to watch before acting, to hear change in the wind, and to understand that strength without wisdom destroys what it claims to protect. He learned where goats moved when winter came early, how streams carved stone through patience rather than force, and why even the fiercest creature survived by balance with the world around it.
He also learned tenderness. The Simurgh was powerful enough to shatter bone, yet she handled eggs, feathers, and wounded creatures with calm precision. From her, Zal understood that mercy was not weakness. It was another form of courage, harder than pride and steadier than anger.
As the years passed, Zal became a tall young man, striking and self-possessed, with white hair flowing down his back and the stillness of the mountains in his bearing. Yet even in the safety of the nest, he felt a pull toward the world below. He wondered about the people whose blood ran in him, about the father who had cast him out, and about the roads and courts he had never seen. The Simurgh recognized that longing before he spoke it aloud.
When the time came, she told him the truth. She explained his birth, Sam's fear, and the superstition that had turned a father cruel. Zal listened in silence, grief and anger mixing in him like storm clouds. The Simurgh did not ask him to forget the wound.
She asked him to see it clearly. Men, she said, often harmed what frightened them. Wisdom began when a person refused to let that fear rule him in turn.
Before Zal left, the Simurgh gave him three feathers from her own wing. Each burned with hidden power. "If danger closes around you," she told him, "cast a feather into fire, and I will come." Zal bowed his head against her breast in farewell. Then he began the long descent from the mountain that had been both cradle and school.
When he entered Sistan, people stared before they spoke. His white hair startled them, but so did his poise. He moved like someone who feared no court and owed no lie to anyone. Word spread quickly.
Sam, older now and eaten by years of regret, rode out to meet the son he had condemned. When they finally stood face to face, the warrior who had never bent in battle knelt in the dust.
Sam confessed what fear had made him do. He did not defend himself. He asked only for a chance to be forgiven. Zal could have answered with bitterness and been justified. Instead, he remembered the Simurgh's lessons.
He lifted his father to his feet and embraced him. The years lost between them could not be restored, but the hatred that might have ruled the rest of their lives was refused in that single act.
Zal's return changed Sistan. The people had expected an omen and found a ruler in waiting. He listened before speaking, judged without haste, and held both noble and commoner to the same measure. Sam, humbled by his son's grace, trusted him more each season.
Under Zal's influence, the court grew less cruel and more deliberate, because he had learned in the mountains that order lasted only when it served life rather than vanity.
In time Zal met Rudabeh, daughter of Mehrab, ruler of Kabul. Their first meetings stirred immediate admiration, but love deepened because each recognized strength in the other. Rudabeh was not merely beautiful. She was intelligent, direct, and unwilling to be treated as a prize passed from one household to another. Zal, who had been shaped by exile and wonder, valued that strength.


















