Moonlight seeped through cypress boughs, the scent of jasmine heavy in the garden as a silver-haired stranger paused beneath the palace wall, his breath fogging the chill air. Two hearts waited in that stillness—one bright with hope, the other shadowed with fear—because the love they dared to claim would clash with lineage, honor, and the fury of fathers.
The Birth of Zal
In the mountainous reaches of ancient Iran, there stood a warrior named Sam, ruler of Zabulistan. His victories in battle were many, yet no triumph could heal the sorrow that settled over his heart when his firstborn was revealed to the world. The infant Zal arrived with hair as white as the first winter snow and a face that caught the light like polished moonstone. This singular appearance unsettled Sam, who feared it marked a curse rather than a blessing.
In a decision born of fear, Sam abandoned his son on the wind-swept slopes of the Alborz Mountains, leaving Zal to the mercy of the elements. Fate, however, took another course. The great Simurgh—an enormous bird of myth and sagacity—heard the infant’s cry and carried him to her nest high among crag and cloud. There, cradled against feathers warm as hearth embers and wrapped in the bird’s uncanny wisdom, Zal grew. He learned of herbs and stars, of languages carried by mountain winds, and of compassion in a world quick to judge difference.
Years later, Sam was plagued by dreams and remorse. In one vision, he saw Zal standing serene and luminous on a ridge, a figure the soul immediately recognized. Overcome with repentance, Sam climbed the rocky paths to the Simurgh’s domain and found the son he had left behind. Zal, now grown and tempered by wilderness and wonder, forgave his father without bitterness. Sam brought Zal back to Zabulistan and presented him to the court, where the people recognized in him a noble heart and a destined leader.
The Meeting of Zal and Rudaba
Word of Zal’s wisdom and his unusual silver hair spread across valleys and cities. In Kabul lived Rudaba, daughter of Mehrab, a princess whose beauty was matched by a gentle intelligence. Despite being descended from Zahhak—an ancestor whose name carried suspicion—Rudaba’s kindness was known beyond her father’s lineage. Her hair fell like a night river down her back, and her eyes held the calm sparkle of distant stars.
Curiosity and fate conspired. One evening, Zal passed near the gardens of Kabul and slipped into the moonlit grove where Rudaba came to breathe the cool night air. The garden was alive with fragrance: orange blossom, rose, and a low hum of night insects. When their eyes met across the shaded pathways, the world narrowed to two figures standing shyly in scent and silver light. Conversation followed, soft and earnest, as if each line of speech wove a bridge between two souls who recognized one another at once.
They spoke until dawn, sharing stories of upbringing and longing, of the odd comfort Zal had found in the Simurgh’s teachings and the quiet constraint of Rudaba’s life in a court shadowed by ancestral stain. Their vows then were unspoken commitments: to protect one another, to defy unjust opinion, and to hold fast to love when it would be tested.
The Obstacle of Fate
News of their meetings could not remain hidden. Sam and Mehrab learned of the budding romance and reacted with alarm and anger. Sam feared the stain—he worried that Rudaba’s lineage would tarnish his house. Mehrab, mindful of his people’s memory and cautioning against provoking old hostilities, feared for his daughter’s safety and the stability of his rule. Politic and pride tightened around the lovers like a band of iron.
Zal refused to relent. He sought the counsel of Simurgh once more, climbing the mountain paths until the air grew thin and the world below was small. The bird, keeper of uncanny remedies and counsel, gave Zal a single golden feather and guidance: present your case to King Manuchehr of Persia, whose judgment could bind both realms. With the feather’s quiet blessing, Zal left the mountain.
At Manuchehr’s court, Zal spoke plainly. He told of his upbringing under the Simurgh, his love for Rudaba, and the honest courage that had led him to demand neither secrecy nor surrender. The king, moved by Zal’s candor and the Simurgh’s reputed favor, summoned Mehrab. Under royal authority, Mehrab could not easily refuse. Reluctantly, but compelled by the king’s decree, Mehrab consented to the marriage—though unease lingered like a shadow at the edge of celebration.
The Wedding of Zal and Rudaba
Their wedding was a tapestry of color and music. Robes embroidered in gold and silver shimmered beneath lamps as musicians played lyres and drums. Friends and nobles gathered under vaulted halls hung with silks. Rudaba let down her magnificent hair, a dark cascade that contrasted with Zal’s luminous locks. He crowned her with jewels, and for a fleeting span the clamor of politics stilled; two people bound themselves in joy, and the realm witnessed love’s gentle triumph.
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Yet joy did not erase every worry. Old suspicions and the memory of Zahhak’s shadowed legacy left some guests whispering in corners. Even amid music and feasting, the couple knew their peace was hard-won and delicate.
The Birth of Rostam
Rudaba’s pregnancy was a time of wonder laced with peril. As months passed, signs showed that birth would be fraught. Complications arose, and the couple turned to the one presence who had guided Zal since his earliest cry—the Simurgh. In the hush of the mountain eaves, the bird taught Zal a method unknown to many: a careful, life-saving operation now remembered in legend.
Guided by wisdom rather than triumph, Zal followed the instructions. The procedure—performed with trembling hands and a steady heart—brought forth a son, Rostam, whose strength and size became the stuff of future songs. Mothers and fathers crowded to visit, and the palace walls echoed with a child’s first cries—an answer to prayers given in midnight gardens and mountain nests.
The Trials of Life
Zal and Rudaba’s story did not end with birth and blessing. Their lives, like all royal lives, were threaded through with duties and dangers. Rostam grew quickly into a boy marked by courage and prowess.
Yet rulers face enemies, grief, and separations. Battles would call, loyalties would strain, and the couple would be tested by events both small and epic. Throughout, they sustained one another—Zal with the quiet steadiness of a mountain-raised man, Rudaba with the grace of a woman who had once crossed a garden to claim a love deemed impossible.
Through seasons of triumph and trial, the love that had grounded them in a moonlit grove continued to be their refuge. They remained not only partners in marriage but stewards of a lineage that would shape Iran’s heroic traditions.


















