Empire of the Moghul: Brothers at War

BOOK: Empire of the Moghul: Brothers at War
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Empire of the Moghul: Brothers at War
 
 
ALEX RUTHERFORD
 
 
headline
 
Copyright © 2010 Alex Rutherford
 
The right of Alex Rutherford to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted by Alex Rutherford in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
 
First published as an Ebook by Headline Publishing Group in 2011.
 
Apart from any use permitted under UK copyright law, this publication may only be reproduced, stored, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, with prior permission in writing of the publishers or, in the case of reprographic production, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency.
 
All characters in this publication – other than the obvious historical figures – are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
 
Cataloguing in Publication Data is available from the British Library
 
eISBN : 978 0 7553 8326 9
 
This Ebook produced by Jouve Digitalisation des Informations.
 
HEADLINE PUBLISHING GROUP
 
An Hachette Livre UK Company 338 Euston Road London NW1 3BH
 
Table of Contents
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Alex Rutherford lives in London.
Brothers at War
is the second novel in the
Empire of the Moghul
quintet.
Main Characters
Humayun’s family
Babur, Humayun’s father and the first Moghul emperor
Maham, Humayun’s mother and Babur’s favourite wife
Khanzada, Humayun’s aunt, the sister of Babur
Baisanghar, Humayun’s maternal grandfather
Kamran, Humayun’s eldest half-brother
Askari, Humayun’s middle half-brother and full brother of Kamran
Hindal, Humayun’s youngest half-brother
Gulbadan, Humayun’s half-sister and full sister of Hindal
Hamida, Humayun’s wife
Akbar, Humayun’s son
 
 
Humayun’s inner circle
Kasim, Humayun’s vizier
Jauhar, Humayun’s attendant and later his comptroller of the household
Baba Yasaval, Humayun’s master-of-horse
Ahmed Khan, Humayun’s chief scout and later governor of Agra
Sharaf, Humayun’s astrologer
Zahid Beg, a senior commander
Salima, Humayun’s favourite concubine
Suleiman Mirza, Humayun’s cousin and general of his cavalry
Maham Anga, Akbar’s wet-nurse
Adham Khan, Akbar’s milk-brother
Nadim Khwaja, one of Humayun’s commanders and Maham
Anga’s husband
 
 
Others
Gulrukh, Babur’s wife and mother of Kamran and Askari
Dildar, Babur’s wife and mother of Hindal and Gulbadan
Nizam, a water-carrier
Zainab, Hamida’s waiting woman
Sultana, Moghul concubine of Raja Maldeo
Wazim Pathan, a retired soldier rewarded by Humayun for his courage
Shaikh Ali Akbar, Hindal’s vizier and father of Hamida
Darya, son of Nasir, commander of Humayun’s garrison in Kabul
Mustapha Ergun, Turkish cavalry officer
 
 
Hindustan
Sultan Bahadur Shah, ruler of Gujarat
Tartar Khan, member of the previous ruling dynasty, the Lodi, defeated by Humayun’s father Babur, and a claimant to the throne of Hindustan
Sher Shah, an ambitious ruler of humble origins in Bengal
Islam Shah, Sher Shah’s son
Mirza Husain, Sultan of Sind
Raja Maldeo, ruler of Marwar
Tariq Khan, ruler of Ferozepur and vassal of Sher Shah
Adil Shah, Islam Shah’s brother-in-law and a claimant to the throne of Hindustan
Sekunder Shah, cousin of Islam Shah and claimant to the throne of Hindustan
 
 
Persians
Shah Tahmasp
Rustum Beg, elderly general and cousin of Shah Tahmasp
Bairam Khan, nobleman, military commander and later Humayun’s
khan-i-khanan
, commander-in-chief
 
 
Humayun’s ancestors
Genghis Khan
Timur, known in the west as Tamburlaine from a corruption of Timur-i-Lang (Timur the Lame)
Ulugh Beg, Timur’s grandson and a famous astronomer
‘If you wish to be king, put brotherly sentiment aside ...
This is no brother! This is Your Majesty’s foe!’
From the
Humayunnama
by Gulbadan, half-sister of Humayun
Part I
Brotherly Love
Chapter 1
Riding the Tiger
T
he wind was chill. If Humayun closed his eyes he could almost imagine himself back among the pastures and mountains of the Kabul of his boyhood, rather than here on the battlements of Agra. But the short winter was ending. In a few weeks the plains of Hindustan would burn with heat and dust.
Drawing his fur-lined scarlet cloak more tightly around him, Humayun walked slowly along the walls. He had ordered his bodyguards to leave him because he wanted to be alone with his thoughts. Raising his head, he gazed up into clear skies that were splashed with stars. Their intense, jewel-like brightness never failed to fascinate him. It often seemed that everything was written there if only you knew where to look and how to interpret the messages . . .
A firm, light footstep from somewhere behind him disturbed him. Humayun turned, wondering which courtier or guard had been rash enough to disobey their emperor’s expressed wish for solitude. His angry gaze fell on a slight, tall figure in purple robes, a thin gauze veil pulled over the lower face, with above it the raisin eyes of his aunt, Khanzada. Humayun’s expression relaxed into a smile.
‘We are waiting for you in the women’s quarters.You said you would eat with us tonight. Your mother complains you spend too much time alone, and I agree with her.’
Khanzada dropped her veil. The tawny light from a torch burning in a sconce fell on a fine-boned face no longer as beautiful as in her youth but one that Humayun had loved and trusted for as many of his twenty-three years as he could remember. As she stepped a little closer he caught the soft fragrance of the sandalwood that burned constantly in jewelled golden saucers in the women’s apartments.
‘I have much to reflect on. I still find it difficult to accept that my father is dead.’
‘I understand, Humayun. I loved him too. Babur was your father, but don’t forget he was also my little brother. He and I went through much together and I never thought to lose him so soon . . . but it was God’s will.’
Humayun looked away, unwilling for even Khanzada to see the tears gleaming in his eyes at the thought that he would never see his father, the first Moghul emperor, again. It seemed incredible that that strong, seasoned warrior, who had led his nomadic horsemen down through the mountain passes from Kabul and across the Indus to found an empire, was dead. Even less real was the thought that only three months ago, with his father’s eagle-hilted sword Alamgir at his waist and the ring of his ancestor Timur on his finger, he himself had been proclaimed Moghul emperor.
‘It’s so strange . . .like a fantasy from which I keep expecting to wake.’
‘It’s the real world and you must accept it. Everything Babur wanted, everything he fought for, had one purpose only – to win an empire and found a dynasty. You know that as well as I – weren’t you fighting at your father’s side when he crushed Sultan Ibrahim Lodi at Panipat to claim Hindustan for the Moghuls?’
Humayun said nothing. Instead he looked up once more at the sky. As he did so, a shooting star sped across the heavens and vanished, leaving not even a trace of its fiery tail. Glancing at Khanzada, he saw that she had seen it too.
‘Perhaps the shooting star was an omen. Perhaps it means my reign will fizzle out ingloriously . . . that no one will remember me . . .’
‘Such self-doubt and hesitancy would anger your father if he were here now. Instead he would have you embrace your destiny. He could have chosen one of your three half-brothers as his heir, but he selected you. Not just because you are the eldest – that has never been the way of our people – but because he thought you were the most worthy, the most able. Our hold on Hindustan is precarious – we have been here only five years and dangers press in from every side. Babur picked you because he trusted not just in your courage, which you had already demonstrated on the battlefield, but also in your inner strength and your self-belief, your sense of our family’s right to rule, which our dynasty must have to survive and prosper here in this new land.’ Khanzada paused.
When Humayun did not reply, she raised her face to the light of the torch and ran her finger down a thin white scar extending from her right eyebrow almost to her chin. ‘Do not forget how I got this, how when I was young and your father had to abandon Samarkand to the Uzbeks I was seized by their chieftain Shaibani Khan and forced to submit to him. He hated all who, like us, have the blood of Timur. It gave him pleasure to humiliate and degrade a princess of our house. I give thanks that I never despaired all the time I was a captive in his
haram
. . . never forgot who I was or that it was my duty to survive. Remember that when another woman attacked me and stole some of my beauty, I wore this scar as a badge of honour – to show that I was still alive and that one day I would be free. After ten long years that day came. I rejoined my brother and rejoiced to see him drink to my return from a vessel made from the skull of Shaibani Khan. You must have the same self-belief, the same strength of character, Humayun, as I had.’
‘Such courage as yours is hard to emulate, but I will not fail my father or our house.’
‘What is it, then? You are young, ambitious . . . you were eager for the throne long before your father fell ill. Babur knew; he spoke to me of it.’
‘His death was so sudden when it came. I left so much unsaid. I didn’t feel ready to be emperor . . . at least not so soon, nor in such a way.’
Humayun let his head drop. It was true. His father’s final moments still haunted him. Summoning the last of his strength, Babur had ordered his attendants to dress him in his royal robes, seat him on his throne and call his nobles to him. Before the entire court, in a weak voice but firm in his resolve, Babur had ordered Humayun to take Timur’s heavy gold ring, engraved with the head of a snarling tiger, from his finger, saying, ‘Wear it with pride, and never forget the duties it imposes on you . . .’ But Babur had been just forty-seven, still in his prime and far too young to hand on his fledgling empire.
‘No man, not even an emperor, can know when he will be called to Paradise and in what manner. None of us can predict or control fully the course of our lives. Learning to live with the great uncertainty of mortality as well as the other vicissitudes of fortune is part of growing to adulthood.’
‘Yes. But I often think there is more we can do to understand the underlying patterns behind our lives. Events that appear random may not be. For example, Aunt, you said just now that my father’s death was God’s will, but you’re wrong. It was my father’s will. He deliberately sacrificed himself for me.’

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