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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 – The Night They Killed My Father

My father died before the poison finished its work.

He was still breathing when they declared him dead.

Still standing when they chose his replacement.

Still Khan when they erased his name.

I was nine years old when I learned something the steppe never forgives—

Weakness is not a mistake.

It is an invitation.

The feast was loud.

Too loud.

Men laughed harder than they should have. Cups of fermented mare's milk kept refilling. Torches burned bright against the endless dark of the Mongol steppe.

My father, Yesugei, did not laugh.

He rarely did.

He sat at the center, broad shoulders wrapped in wolf fur, eyes sharp even as he drank.

I stood beside him.

Silent.

Watching.

Waiting.

Because even at nine, I understood something—

Men do not smile that much unless they are hiding knives.

He collapsed before midnight.

No warning.

No battle cry.

No enemy charging through the camp.

Just a sudden cough.

A tremor.

A cup slipping from his hand.

The sound it made when it hit the ground was small.

Too small for the end of a Khan.

Mother screamed first.

Not loudly.

But sharply.

Like someone who already knew.

The elders gathered fast.

Too fast.

They did not shout for healers.

They did not call for warriors.

They did not search for the guilty.

They watched.

And waited.

I knelt beside my father.

His breathing was uneven.

His hand gripped my wrist with surprising strength.

"Temujin…" he whispered.

His eyes were not afraid.

They were furious.

Not at death.

At betrayal.

"Trust no—"

He coughed blood.

The rest of the words drowned in it.

His hand fell.

The Khan of our clan was gone.

Silence did not last long.

It never does when power is empty.

Within moments, the whispers began.

"He drank too much."

"His health was failing."

"It was fate."

Fate.

The most convenient lie ever invented.

By dawn, they had chosen a new leader.

Without consulting my mother.

Without speaking to me.

Without even burying my father.

I stood at the edge of the gathering, snow biting into my bare hands.

One of the elders looked at me with something close to pity.

"You are too young," he said.

Too young to lead.

Too young to matter.

Too young to survive.

That same afternoon, they left us.

Not with swords drawn.

Not with fire.

Worse.

They rode away.

Our allies.

Our protectors.

Our clan.

They took the herds.

They took the weapons.

They took the safety.

And they left a widow and her children alone on the open steppe.

The wind that day was colder than any winter.

Mother did not cry.

Not in front of them.

She stood straight as their horses disappeared into the distance.

Only when the last rider vanished did her shoulders shake.

I had never seen her small before.

I hated that feeling.

More than hunger.

More than fear.

More than death.

That night, wolves howled close to our camp.

Too close.

My younger brothers huddled near the dying fire.

Mother sharpened a knife in silence.

I walked beyond the edge of the camp and stared into the darkness.

They thought we would die.

They thought abandoning us was mercy.

They thought a boy could not rise.

The steppe was wide.

Merciless.

Empty.

But it remembered strength.

And I made a promise to it that night.

Not spoken.

Not witnessed.

Not blessed by elders.

A promise carved into bone.

One day—

They would regret leaving me alive.

The wind howled louder.

As if answering.

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