He strode to his horse, mounted it and looked down at Ali.
“Ali, I would like you to go to the Royal Garden and tell the queen I am going off to visit my poor old father. Tell her I shall return tomorrow for lunch. Tell her I shall arrive at noon and I want her to prepare a meal. You shall join us at the table.”
Ali bowed to the king. “I am your willing messenger,” he said.
“Off with you, then,” the king said, and so Ali set off for the garden, leaving the king and the crowd behind.
As soon as Ali was out of sight, the king dismounted and burst out laughing. “I shall not go visiting anyone today,” he announced to all who had gathered. “Soon Ali will tell a lie to the queen. He will tell her I have gone to see my father, but as you all are my witnesses, I am standing here and shall not leave the palace grounds. Tomorrow at lunch we shall prove that Ali has indeed told a lie.”
Ali arrived at the garden and found the queen tending her roses. Ali bowed and said, “Your highness, the king asked me to tell you he has gone to visit his father. He has asked me to tell you he shall return tomorrow. If you wish, your highness, you may prepare a meal for noon. But you may wish not to. The king may return tomorrow, but he may not.”
The queen stared at Ali, perplexed. “Explain yourself, young man,” she said impatiently. “Will the king be here tomorrow or won’t he? Do not bother me with riddles.”
“These are no riddles,” Ali answered, honestly. “In truth, I cannot say. I saw the king mount his horse, and he said he was going to see his father. But he may not have done so. He may return tomorrow, or he may not. I cannot tell you with any certainty.”
The queen was impressed with the young man’s honesty, though she did not know what would happen. She understood that she must simply be patient and wait and see, just as Ali must.
The next day everyone in the village followed the king as he walked to the garden where, once again, the queen was tending her roses.
“Good queen!” the king called when he saw her. “The young man who people say never lies told you a lie yesterday.”
The crowd let up a cheer, and the king laughed heartily.
“And what was that lie?” asked the queen.
“He told you I went to see my father and that I would return today,” the king replied.
The queen shook her head. “No,” she said. “He repeated your words, but told me only what he knew to be true, dear husband.”
From that day on, the king and queen and all the villagers understood that an honest man speaks only of what he sees with his own eyes.
“TELL ME A STORY 3: Women of Wonder,” the third CD in the audiobook series, is now available. For more information, visit www.mythsandtales.com.
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