Yusuf waited for the khan to speak as the man finished a meal. He had even allowed Moslem butchers to kill goats and sheep in the way they desired and the Mongols did not seem to care how they ate or lived as long as they obeyed. Yusuf could not understand the man who sat across from him, idly picking something from his teeth with a splinter. When the word had come to attend the khan, Tsubodai had taken him by the arm and said to do whatever he was told.
Yusuf hardly needed the warning. This was the man who had slaughtered his people in tens of thousands, more. Yet the dead shah had done the same in his wars and persecutions. Yusuf accepted such things. As long as he survived, he did not care whether the khan succeeded or was left for the crows.
Genghis put aside his plate, but kept a long knife ready on his lap. The warning was not wasted on the young man watching him.
‘You seemed nervous in the market,’ Genghis said. ‘Do they have such a reach then, these Assassins?’
Yusuf took a deep breath. He was still uncomfortable even talking about them, but if he was not safe surrounded by tumans of warriors, then he was already dead.
‘I have heard it said they can reach a man anywhere, master. When they are betrayed, they bring terrible vengeance on those who defied them, relatives, friends, whole villages even.’
Genghis smiled slightly.
‘I have done the same,’ he said. ‘Fear can hold men in chains who would fight to the death otherwise. Tell me about them.’
‘I do not know where they come from,’ Yusuf said quickly. ‘No one knows that.’
‘Someone must,’ Genghis interrupted, his eyes growing cold, ‘or they could not accept the payments for death.’
Yusuf nodded nervously. ‘That is true, master, but they protect their secrets and I am not among those who know. All I have heard are rumours and legends.’
Genghis did not speak and he hurried on, wanting to find something that would satisfy this old devil who played with a knife.
‘They are said to be ruled by the Old Man of the Mountains, master. I believe it is a title more than a name, as it has been the same for many generations. They train young men to kill and send them out in exchange for vast sums of gold. They do not ever stop until the life is taken.’
‘They were stopped this morning,’ Genghis said.
Yusuf hesitated before answering.
‘There will be others, master, always more until the contract is complete.’
‘Do they all carry this mark on their skin?’ Genghis asked. He thought it would not be too hard to guard his family from men who identified themselves in such a way. To his disappointment, Yusuf shook his head.
‘I thought that was part of the legend, master, until I saw it in the market. It is a sin against God for them to mark their bodies in such a way. I was surprised to see it at all. I do not believe they will all carry the mark, especially now you have been seen to discover it. The ones who come now will be young men, their skin untouched.’
‘Like you,’ Genghis said softly.
Yusuf forced a laugh, though it sounded hollow.
‘I have been loyal, master. Ask your generals Tsubodai and Jebe.’ He struck his chest. ‘My allegiance is only to you.’
Genghis snorted at the lie. What else would the young man say, even if he were an Assassin? The notion that any one of the Arabs in his camp might be a killer was worrying. He had wives and young children, as had his brothers. He could guard himself against armies, but not enemies who came in the night and gave their lives to take his.
Genghis recalled the Chin assassin who had come out of Yenking to murder him in his ger. Luck had saved him that night and then only barely. The poisoned knife had caused him more pain and weakness than he had ever known. Even the thought of it brought sweat to his brow as he glared at the young Arab. He considered having Yusuf taken out, away from the women and children. His men would have him telling them anything they wanted to hear in no time at all.
Yusuf squirmed under the fierce gaze, his senses screaming that he was in terrible danger. It was the effort of a lifetime not to dart from the ger and run for his horse. Only the fact that the Mongols could ride down anyone alive held him in place. The cart lurched as the wheels passed over a rut in the ground and Yusuf almost cried out.
‘I will ask, master. I promise you. If anyone who knows how to find them crosses my path, I will send them to you.’ Anything to make him more valuable to the khan alive, he thought to himself. He did not care if the Mongols destroyed the Assassins, only that Yusuf Alghani was standing when the killing stopped. They were Ismailis, after all, a Shia sect and not even true Moslems. He had no loyalty to them.
Genghis grunted, toying with the knife in his hands.
‘Very well, Yusuf. Do that and report anything you hear to me. I will search in different ways.’
The young man heard the dismissal in his words and left quickly. Alone, Genghis cursed under his breath. He threw the knife so that it struck the central post of the ger and stayed there, quivering. He could destroy cities that sat where he could see them. He could break armies and nations, both. The thought of insane killers lunging for him in the night made him want to lash out. How could he protect his family against such people? How could he keep Ogedai safe to inherit? There was only one way. Genghis reached for the knife and worked it free. He would have to find them and burn them out, wherever they hid. If they moved as his own people did, he would find them. If they had a home, he would destroy it. The conquest of cities would have to wait.
He sent for his generals and they came to his ger before the sun set.
‘These are my orders,’ Genghis told them. ‘I will remain with one tuman to protect the families. If they come for me here, I will be ready for them. You will go out in all directions. Find me anything about these Assassins and come back. Rich men can hire them, so you will have to break wealthy towns and cities to get at those men. Take no prisoners except the ones who claim to know something. I want the location.’
‘News of a bribe will spread as fast as we can ride,’ Tsubodai said. ‘We have cartloads of gold and jade and this could be a use for it. With your permission, lord, I will also promise some great sum to anyone who can tell us where the Assassins train. We have enough to tempt even princes.’
Genghis waved a hand, accepting the idea.
‘Offer to spare cities that bring us the information if you want. I do not care how it is done, just get the information I need. And take the Arabs in the camp with you. I don’t want them anywhere close until we have met and destroyed this threat. Nothing else matters until then. The shah is dead, Tsubodai. This is the only threat we face.’
Jelaudin felt the crowd surge as if he held their hearts in his hand. He had them hanging on his words and the feeling was as intoxicating as it was new. In his father’s army, he had dealt with men already sworn to obedience. He had never had to recruit them, or persuade them to his cause. To find he had that skill, that he had a genius for it, had surprised him almost as much as his brothers.
He had begun by visiting mosques in the Afghan towns, small places with just a few hundred of the devout. He had spoken to the imams of those places and relished the horror they showed when he told them of Mongol atrocities. He had learned what worked then and the tales grew wilder with each telling. He had come away from the very first village with forty strong men of the Pathan tribe. Until he had arrived in their midst, they had not even known the infidels had invaded Arab lands, never mind that they had killed the Shah of Khwarezm. Their righteous anger had surprised Jelaudin at first, until he saw it echoed in every village and town he visited. The numbers of loyal men had grown and more than two thousand sat outside in the dust, waiting for the charismatic leader they had vowed to follow.
‘With my own eyes,’ he said, ‘I saw the Mongols destroy a mosque. The holy men raised empty hands to stop them, but they were killed and tossed aside, their bodies left to rot.’
The crowd murmured angrily, the larg
est he had addressed since coming south. Most of them were young men and there were many boys with them, their heads bare of the turbans the older men wore. Jelaudin had found the young were the ones he reached first, though they brought experienced warriors in from the hills to hear him speak. If his father had lived, Jelaudin thought the shah might have tried the same, but his death was the perfect event to have strong men taking up their swords. He spoke with passion of the foreigners who laughed at the faith and despoiled the holy places. They drank in his words. Jelaudin raised his hands to quieten them and they fell silent, gazing on him with perfect attention. He had them.
‘I saw our women and children killed and taken by their warriors, torn from the hands of their husbands. Those who wore veils were stripped and abused in public. In Bukhara, they killed an imam on the steps of the blue mosque and their young men urinated on the body. I would tear out my eyes for what they have seen, if I did not need them for Allah’s vengeance!’
Many in the crowd surged to their feet, overcome with rage and excitement. They raised their swords and jabbed them into the air, chanting holy words of war. Jelaudin turned to exchange a glance with his brothers and found them already on their feet and roaring with the rest. He blinked at that, hardly expecting them to be so affected by his words. Yet they too drew swords and their eyes were bright with anger. They had seen all that Jelaudin had seen, but still the words, the hot, lifeless air, the need fired their blood. Even Tamar began to chant with the warriors of Islam, intoning the words of the prophet. Jelaudin’s heart swelled as the noise crashed over him. Had his father known of this? He felt as if he was balancing a sword. If it slipped, he would lose everything, but the weight of their belief brought reality to his dreams. Already men were coming to him as word spread throughout the region. He had called for a holy war on the Mongol aggressor and his words and promises had set the land alight. Imams preached in mosques he had never seen that he was a warrior of God. His task was merely to feed that fire and then send it north.
Jelaudin smiled down at the crowd who had gathered that night, knowing they would leave with him to the next town and the next. He would arrive at Kabul as the spiritual leader of an army and he thought that city would swell his numbers more than anything he had seen. Perhaps the hand of God truly guided him in this, he did not know. He was a poor vessel for Allah, but how else did God work if not through the hands of men? Perhaps he was the instrument of vengeance. Allah was truly good to give him a second chance.
The Mongol tumans rode hundreds of miles in all directions, an explosion of men and horses that attacked every place where there were people to make afraid. The word of their quest spread almost as fast and rumours of great treasures in return for information seemed to have wings. By the tenth day, Jebe found a man who said he knew the mountains where the Assassins had their base. Jelme found two more who claimed to be related to a family serving them in their fortress. In each case, the destruction of their cities stopped on the instant and that brought even more to talk to the Mongol generals, desperate to save themselves. Twice Mongol scouts returned from a fruitless ride, with no sign of a city of Assassins. The men who had misled them were fools or liars, but they were killed and the tumans moved on.
Chagatai had ridden north with Tsubodai, almost in the track the general had ridden to hunt the shah. In the foothills of steep mountains, they found a village and burned it to the ground, then moved on to another. There they were met by a group of senior men pleading for a private audience. Tsubodai arranged it and, when he heard what they had to say, one of the men did not return to his home. Instead, he travelled with the Mongol general, riding as fast as possible back to Genghis. By the time they reached the khan, three others were there to claim the gold, each with a different location for the Assassins.
Genghis greeted Tsubodai as he rode in, his expression weary.
‘Another one, Tsubodai?’
The general’s excitement dropped away.
‘There are more?’ he said.
Genghis nodded.
‘Either they are thieves who believe I will give carts of gold for lies, or the Assassins have whispered different locations in a dozen places. If they are as ancient as your Yusuf claims, I think it is the last.’
‘I have one man who claims to know, lord. I do not think he is a fool or a thief like the rest.’
Genghis raised his eyebrows, knowing Tsubodai’s judgement was sound.
‘Bring him to my ger when he has been searched for weapons,’ he replied.
Tsubodai brought Yusuf to interpret, still dusty from the long ride back to the camp. The village elder was painfully nervous as he faced the khan. Sweat poured off him and he smelled strongly of excrement and garlic in that small space. Genghis breathed shallowly as he came close.
‘Well? You told my general you knew something,’ he snapped, tired of the men who had come with gold in their eyes. He waited impatiently as Yusuf turned his words into gibberish and the stranger nodded, already terrified. Three dead men lay in a shallow pit outside. Genghis had made sure this one saw their upturned faces as he passed into the khan’s ger. It explained the sour smell that hung around him like a mist.
‘My sister lives in a village in the mountains, master, perhaps two days north from where I found your men.’ He swallowed nervously as Yusuf interpreted and Genghis tossed him a skin of airag to clear his throat. The man drank and choked, having thought it was water. Red in the face, he had to be thumped on his back before he could continue.
‘I am sorry, master. Strong spirits are forbidden to me,’ he gasped. Yusuf grinned as he relayed the words.
‘Tell him that is not a strong spirit,’ Genghis growled. ‘And tell him to speak before I have him thrown in the pit and covered over while he still breathes.’
By the time Yusuf finished speaking, the little man was pale and already babbling.
‘My sister says that men live in the mountains and take food and servants from the village. They answer to no man, master, but she said they sometimes carry quarry stones on carts up into the high peaks.’
As Genghis listened to Yusuf, he grew more irritable.
‘Ask him if that is all he knows. It is not enough.’
The Arab paled still further and shook his head.
‘She told me two young men of the village followed the carts once, three, perhaps four years ago. They did not come back, master. They were found dead when their families went to search for them, with their throats cut.’
Genghis stared as he heard the last part of the translation. It was not confirmation, but it was the most promising of all the wild tales that had come in.
‘It is possible, Tsubodai. You were right to bring him to me. Give him a cart of gold with two oxen to pull it.’ He thought for a moment. ‘You and I are going north, Tsubodai. He will accompany us as far as this village of his sister. If we find what we need, he can take the gold. If not, his life is forfeit.’
The little man listened to Yusuf and fell to his knees in relief.
‘Thank you, master,’ he called as Genghis left the ger, his mind already busy with plans for an attack.
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
Genghis forced himself to be patient as he prepared to fight an enemy unlike any other he had faced. He moved the families back to the shelter around Samarkand, leaving Jelme and Kachiun with them for protection. Jelme came to thank him personally for the posting, which left Genghis blinking in surprise, quickly masked. It had not occurred to him that the general would prefer to spend time with his father in the city rather than hunting the Assassins who threatened them.
For that task, he took his own tuman, as well as Tsubodai’s. The best part of twenty thousand men were still a force that awed him when he remembered his first raiding bands of a few dozen. With them, he could bring mountains down if he had to. Even so many could cross sixty to eighty miles a day if they travelled light, but Genghis had no idea what lay ahead of them. The artisans of Samarkand were there to b
e used and he had them construct siege equipment and new carts, piling on just about anything he thought they might need and tying them down with canvas and rope. The khan was a whirlwind of energy as he planned for the attack and none of his men were left in doubt as to how seriously he took the threat. Of all men in the tribes, Genghis understood the danger of assassins, and he looked forward to the assault to come.
The new carts had the stronger spoked wheels Tsubodai had brought back from Russia, but they groaned and creaked as the two tumans moved off at last. Even after a month of preparation, Jochi had not returned to the camp. It was possible he still sought out information on the Assassins, but events had moved on. Genghis sent two warriors riding east after him, then two more after Khasar, freeing their hands. The region was fat with wealthy cities and while he sought out the Assassins, Genghis knew Khasar and Jochi would enjoy taking them at their leisure.
Chagatai had asked to assist his father in the search for the mountain stronghold, but Genghis had refused him. Nothing he knew of the Assassins spoke of large numbers. Their strength lay in secrecy and, once that was broken, Genghis expected to dig them out like sticking a knife into a termite hill. Chagatai was still under a cloud with his father and Genghis could hardly look at him without feeling anger and dashed hopes surface. He had not made the decision to raise Ogedai lightly. Thoughts of his legacy had been troubling the khan for many months, but he had planned for Chagatai to inherit for far longer. It was not that he regretted it, at all. The decision was made. Genghis knew his temper well, however. He knew that if Chagatai showed the slightest resentment, there was a chance he would kill him.
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