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Until the Sun Falls

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by Cecelia Holland




  Until the Sun Falls

  Cecelia Holland

  Copyright © 1968 by Cecelia Holland

  Published by E-Reads. All rights reserved.

  www.ereads.com

  FOR EDWARD CRANZ,

  WILLIAM MEREDITH

  AND PETER SENG

  All for different reasons

  “If Heaven grants a way, you will embark on wars beyond the sea…. Beyond the mountain rocks you will launch campaigns…. Send back news on wings.”

  —Temujin, Genghis Khan

  “Hence fear and trembling have risen among us, owing to the fury of these impetuous invaders.”

  —The Emperor Frederick II

  Note

  Temujin, Genghis Khan, died in 1227, and his empire, which stretched from the Volga to the Yellow Sea, was divided among his heirs. According to the custom of the Mongols, Tuli, the youngest of Temujin’s four sons by his first wife Bortai, received the heartlands of the Mongol people: the territory around the Onan and Kerulan rivers; this was the core of the empire, the Mongols’ home graze, the stronghold of the tribe. To the third son, Ogodai, fell the land immediately west of Tuli’s portion, and the Great Kuriltai, the assembly of all the notables of the Mongols, elected Ogodai the Kha-Khan—overlord of all the world. This was according to Temujin’s wish. The second son, Jagatai, received the Transoxiana—modern Uzbek and Kazakh.

  The eldest of the four sons, Juji, was dead. Bortai had spent the nine months preceding his birth as a prisoner in an enemy camp, so his paternity was in dispute, and although Temujin officially acknowledged him as his son, relations between them had been strained at best. Yet Juji’s, his second son Batu, got a full share of the inheritance: the land from the Aral Sea to the Volga “and as far as Mongol horsemen had trod.”

  Although each khan was master within his own domain, the Kha-Khan was supreme over them all in what we would call foreign policy. When Batu struck west across the Volga, he did so as the servant of Ogodai Kha-Khan, and the Kha-Khan sent his great general Sabotai to serve as Batu’s chief aide. Mongol tradition had awarded to Tuli the great majority of the Mongol army, and Batu recruited his troops mainly from conquered peoples. To swell their numbers, and probably to raise the general standard of discipline and talent, Batu appealed to all his relatives to come and bring their personal troops.

  At this time the Mongol armies were without peer. Not for twenty years was Mongol cavalry to suffer a major defeat anywhere in the world. They were nomads, bred to the natural violence of the steppes, trained since babyhood to shoot and ride, and they considered war the chief occupation of men. They used compound bows with a pull of around one hundred sixty pounds and a killing range of up to three hundred yards. Their horses were as hardy as the men themselves, and just as highly trained. The basic unit of the army was the tuman, or column of ten thousand, subdivided into thousands, hundreds and tens. Each man was equipped with two bows and a string of led horses that he could switch to when his own mount tired.

  They were tremendously mobile; often armies unused to fighting Mongols thought that they were battling several columns, when actually they were faced with only one, operating at great speed. In the European war, one Mongol tuman covered two hundred and seventy miles in three days. Speed is a hallmark of the nomad army; discipline is not. The Mongols were disciplined to drill-like precision. In an age when most commanders thought it a feat of organization if a majority of their troops arrived on the battlefield in time to fight, the Mongol generals consistently coordinated the movements of separated columns down to the last detail. Just how widely separated the columns could be Sabotai proved when he managed the European invasion with an army in Poland and another in Hungary communicating almost flawlessly across a rugged mountain range, in the winter. Nor were their communications less effective with the Kha-Khan, six thousand miles away in Karakorum. Mongol couriers, riding from waystation to waystation, sometimes averaged two hundred miles a day.

  The army that stood poised on the Volga River in our year 1237 contained a full fifteen tumans of the finest Mongol horsemen—one hundred and fifty thousand men. In Sabotai it possessed the greatest living Mongol general, veteran of the two Khwaresm wars, of the Chinese wars, co-leader with Jebe Noyon of the great raid across the Caucasus in 1221. It also contained a number of the Altun Uruk, the Golden Clan, descended of Temujin and bred to rule the World-Empire.

  Their first task was to subjugate the tribes north of the Caspian—the Kipchaks, the Alans, the Old Bulgars and the Old Magyars. This they accomplished in the year before this story opens. In the attack on Russia and the invasion of Europe, I’ve followed the accepted timetable as closely as possible; the most important exception is that I’ve skipped the year between the fall of Kozelsk and the attack on South Russia, during which the Mongols rested and chased rebellious Kipchaks.

  Psin and his family are my invention. The other major characters are taken from history. The only one of the Altun Uruk to whom I may have done a great disservice is Mongke, who was ten years older and probably a good deal more like his father Tuli than I’ve made him.

  With some misgivings, I’ve used modern place-names almost exclusively: the references run from Korea to Vienna and sometimes it’s better to be understood than right. I’ve tried to use the most familiar forms of the various Mongol words and proper names: thus the Turkish “Yasa” instead of the more correct “Jasagh” and “Genghis” instead of “Chingis,” which I am informed is the only way to spell it in English.

  Finally, the quotations, with the exception of the one from the letters of Frederick II, are from the Secret History of the Mongols. An official history of the dynasty begun during the reign of Kubulai Khan, in the 13th century, it was translated from the original Mongol into Chinese, from the Chinese into Russian, from the Russian into French, and from the French into English. Nonetheless it retains its fresh and vigorous spirit, the zeitgeist of a warrior people.

  Cecelia Holland

  Note to the 2012 edition

  Much research has been done on the Mongols since I wrote this book but the story seems intact. I’ve often thought it’s as much about Americans as it is about Mongols. I’ve made a few minor wording changes but nothing anybody will notice.

  CH

  PART ONE

  QUYUK

  _

  Temujin said, “It would be seemly to get drunk only three times a month. It would be preferable, clearly, to make it only twice or even only once. It would be perfect never to get drunk at all. But where is the man who could observe such a rule of conduct?”

  Ye Lui himself met Psin at the door and walked behind him into the anteroom. Psin looked around at the shimmer of the silk hangings and the gold filigree and sat down. “I’m hungry.”

  “As the Khan wishes.” Ye Lui snapped his fingers at the slaves prostrated behind him. “Would the Khan prefer rice wine or kumiss?”

  “Kumiss.” Rice wine was a drink for effeminate Chinese. Psin glared at Ye Lui for suggesting it. The slaves pattered away, keeping their eyes averted. Psin undid the laces of his coat and threw it off. He thought of asking Ye Lui why he had been summoned, but Ye Lui would only say that he didn’t know. He probably did know. The slaves returned with a dish of meat, and Psin took it and dipped his fingers into it.

  “Did you ride far?” Ye Lui said.

  Psin chewed and swallowed. “I came by post horse—three days riding.” Let him figure out for himself how far Psin had come. He fixed Ye Lui with another glare and stuffed his mouth with meat.

  The door from the corridor opened and a great hulk of a man walked in. Psin’s hand paused halfway to his mouth, and he stared.

  “Sabotai.” He looked at the meat in his fingers and put it in his
mouth.

  Sabotai settled himself down on cushions. He wore silk clothes, and his hair and thin grey beard were neatly combed. “I came as soon as I heard you were here,” he said.

  Psin tossed the empty bowl to one side. A slave scurried after it. “Everyone knows why I am summoned but me.” Sabotai had been with Batu Khan, fighting Alans and Bulgars and other, nameless tribes. “How does the fighting go, in the west?”

  Sabotai smiled. “We have some Kipchaks yet to run down.”

  Ye Lui poured kumiss into two bowls. Slaves brought one to Psin and the other to Sabotai. Sabotai looked into his as if he expected to find a bug swimming there.

  “I suppose they mean to send me on campaign,” Psin said.

  Sabotai smiled at his kumiss. “I shall leave the pleasure of telling you to the Kha-Khan.”

  “I have been the Khan of my clan for more than thirty years. In all that while I’ve taken my people to winter pasture only four times. This was the fifth. Would have been the fifth. You could have let an old man—”

  Sabotai smiled. “You know the Yasa—if your clan needed you you could have refused to come.”

  Psin hissed through his clenched teeth.

  “As for being an old man,” Sabotai said; he stroked his grey beard. “Have more kumiss.”

  “On your father’s grave,” Psin said. He lifted the cup. While he drank he did not look at Sabotai.

  When he set the cup down Sabotai said, “Insulting me won’t get you out of this. Whom did you leave with your people?”

  “Tshant.” Psin wiped his mustaches on the back of his hand. “He’s been the true Khan since he was old enough to walk around a yurt—his father always off on the Kha-Khan’s errands.”

  “Well. You’ll have to send for him, the Kha-Khan wants him, too.

  Psin squinted at him, thinking. It had to be the western campaign. He wondered how Tshant would like that. “Where am I going?”

  Sabotai shrugged.

  “Why?”

  “Who are we to question the Kha-Khan?”

  “Khans ourselves.”

  “You are.” Sabotai smiled. “I am not. You tried that argument with this one’s father; do you think it will work any better with the son?”

  “Ogodai is no Temujin.” He watched a slave pouring him more kumiss. He had run foul of Temujin more than any other man who survived it; he suspected that he had amused Temujin. “You have a minor horde of the Altun with you, don’t you?”

  Sabotai leaned back. The silk coat rustled over his chest, and against it his vast, gnarled hands seemed rough as old wood. “Several, yes. Quyuk, Kadan, Buri, Baidar, Mongke—”

  Psin winced.

  “And two or three others.”

  “Your councils must be the awe of the west.”

  Ye Lui came in from the inner chamber. Sabotai glanced at him, turned back to Psin, and said, “I spend most of my time keeping them from killing one another.” He rose.

  “The Universal Khan awaits you,” Ye Lui said, and bowed. Sabotai bowed; Psin only nodded. Ye Lui led them in.

  The Kha-Khan’s chamber was huge and round, cushioned in silk and hung with cloth-of-gold, carpeted to muffle all sound. Psin refused to be impressed, but it was hard work. In the middle of it, beneath a yellow canopy, the Kha-Khan sat on his gilt-trimmed dais. Jagatai sat behind him and to one side. They wore the fancy blue coats of the Yek Mongols and the gold collars of the children of Temujin; they both had their father’s green eyes.

  Music filtered dimly into the chamber, but Psin could see no musicians. When he and Sabotai bowed the gold of the dais reflected their feet. When they prostrated themselves the gold reflected their faces. Sabotai rose, but Psin only rocked back to sit on his heels.

  Beside the Kha-Khan stood a table carved of alabaster, so thin the shadow of Ogodai’s hand showed through when he reached for the cup there. He lifted the cup and drank, unsteadily.

  “Psin Khan looks rebellious,” he said to his brother.

  Jagatai nodded. “So he does. Rebellion is foul, especially when the rebel is a miserable Merkit. What was it that my father used to say when Psin Khan grew rebellious?”

  Ogodai laughed, hiccoughed, and reached for the cup again. “He said, ‘Psin Khan, once they called you Psin the Honest. Now they call you Psin the Stubborn. Dead Psin, they may call you, soon enough.’“

  Jagatai nodded. “That was it. That was it exactly. What would be an amusing way of—”

  “Enough,” Sabotai said. “You break the Yasa, growing drunken.”

  Jagatai blushed vividly. He turned his face away. Ogodai blinked a few times, rapidly, and said, “The Yasa is mine. I can do what—”

  “The Yasa is ours,” Psin said. “It belongs to your people. You are the Kha-Khan. It’s not right for you to act before us like an upland chief on a drunk.” He looked at Jagatai. “Nor you.”

  Jagatai’s head turned. Of all Temujin’s children he looked the most like his father. His green eyes were dull; he held his chin too high, so that he seemed to look into the ceiling. “I am the greatest of my father’s drunken sons. So great am I that I even know when a subchief of the sniveling unhappy Merkits is telling me the truth.”

  Psin made a gesture with his right hand; his wrist rested on his knee and he did not move it. He smiled. Jagatai saw and swiftly made another gesture.

  Sabotai was furious. He said, “Stop casting spells on each other. We’re getting farther and farther from the reason for all this. All the way from the Volga River I came, just to sit and listen to you behave like drunken oxen.”

  Ogodai and Jagatai stared at him, making their eyes round in mock surprise. Sabotai drew himself up very straight, frowning. Ogodai shrieked with laughter and fell over backward. Grinning, Jagatai glanced at him and said, “Sabotai. You amuse your Kha-Khan greatly.”

  “I am sick over it,” Sabotai said, with massive dignity.

  Ogodai sat up again. “You sit in the wrong place to see how funny the world is. Yes, I know. Psin Khan, we instruct you to ride with Sabotai to the camp of our nephew Batu and there to serve in the campaign against—” He waved a hand. “Whatever lies west. Wherever you find rebels.”

  Jagatai nudged him, and Ogodai shouted, “I remember.” He glared at Jagatai and swung back to Psin. “You are to take Tshant Bahadur with you.”

  Psin shrugged one shoulder. “You know that Mongke Khan is with Batu, my Khan.”

  Jagatai reached across Ogodai’s lap for the silver jug of wine. Over his brother’s arm Ogodai said, “Mongke and Tshant were both with you in Korea, Merkit. You handled them there. Do it again.” He took a deep breath, and his face darkened. “In the name of God, why do you all whine so much about tending to a pack of brats? Are you not both married and fathers?”

  Psin pretended to wipe his mustaches so that he could hide his smile. “Why did you send them all to Batu, my Khan?”

  “I have better things to do,” Ogodai said. “I am the Lord of the Earth and childish pranks and quarrels only annoy me.”

  Jagatai said, “Do you have someone to rule over your clan while you are gone, Psin Khan?”

  Psin nodded. “My son Sidacai.”

  Ogodai was contemplating the ceiling. Jagatai said, “Sidacai is in the Kha-Khan’s guard. He will be released from duty.”

  “You will serve Batu as you would serve us,” Ogodai said to the ceiling.

  “As you would have served my father,” Jagatai said. He smiled faintly, his eyes on Psin. “As you did serve him will suffice.”

  Ogodai stared upward. For a while no one said anything, until Sabotai asked, “Are we dismissed?”

  “Oh. Yes. Go.” Ogodai never looked from the ceiling.

  Psin and Sabotai prostrated themselves again, got up, and walked out. In the antechamber, Sabotai heaved an enormous sigh.

  “Things are not as they were.”

  Psin laughed. “No. Things are somewhat better, I think.”

  “Wretched.”

  “Oh? Even drunk
they are both cleverer than Temujin was. Not so fierce, maybe. Not so haughty.”

  “Temujin was—”

  “Less subtle than these.”

  Sabotai swelled up. Psin gathered his hat and gloves. “When he lived you said as much, often enough—you and Jebe. Does dying improve a man’s mind?” He put one hand on Sabotai’s shoulder and pushed. “Come along. I must find Sidacai and see how much he remembers of his own people.”

  Sabotai preceded him out the door. “Batu at least is—”

  Psin waited for him to finish, but Sabotai did not, and at last Psin said, “What do you wish of me, in the west?”

  “Reconnaissance.”

  They walked along the wide corridor that led to the courtyard. Two men in Turkish clothes passed them; Sabotai glanced after them disinterestedly. The smooth boards of the floor resounded under Psin’s boots. Carrying bowls of fruit buried in snow, two slaves ran by, bowing in midstep. At the door, Sabotai stepped to one side and let Psin go first. They passed into the bright sunlight of the courtyard. Psin blinked; it was cold, and he hooked up his coat.

  “Batu must have made some reconnaissance.”

  The courtyard was half-empty. Three camels lay beside the gate. Sabotai stared at them. “Batu doesn’t understand such things. I’m suspicious of his findings.”

  “You flatter me.”

  Sabotai started down the wide, shallow steps. He glanced over his shoulder at Psin. “You are the master of reconnaissance. No one ever admits it because you are a Merkit, but everybody knows it.”

  “They don’t trust me.”

  Sabotai lifted one arm, and across the courtyard a groom answered with a wave. “They trusted you enough to send you to Korea. You came by post horse? “

  “Yes.”

  “Was it bothersome?”

  “Better than under Temujin.” The groom was bringing two horses on lead ropes. “I don’t want to fight in this war, Sabotai.”

 

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