EMPIRE OF ASH AND BLOOD Book I of The Timurid TrilogyA Son Must Prove He Is More Than the Blood He Inherited. An Empire Must Be More Than the Conquest That Built It.From the mountains of Central Asia to the plains of Hindustan, a new empire is being forged—not merely by the sword, but by the soul of a reluctant prince.The Making of Humayun. The Legacy of Babur. The Dawn of a New Empire.At sixteen, Prince Humayun stands at a precipice his father never prepared him for. Babur, the warrior-king who conquered Hindustan and founded the Mughal Empire, has built his realm through blood and indomitable will. But when rebellion threatens Kabul and the Uzbek hordes mass beyond the passes, Babur does not ride to crush the threat himself. Instead, he gives his eldest son command of ten thousand men—and an ultimatum that will define a dynasty: Return victorious, or do not return at all.Humayun is no natural conqueror. He is thoughtful where his father is decisive, hesitant where Babur is bold, and haunted by a question his Timurid blood cannot answer: What does it mean to rule when killing becomes mathematics? Into this crucible steps Bairam Khan, a young general of devastating tactical brilliance who wields matchlock firearms with revolutionary precision—and who binds himself to Humayun with an oath that transcends loyalty into something darker and more absolute.As winter closes the mountain passes, Humayun must transform Bairam Khan's experimental cavalry tactics into battlefield doctrine, navigate the treacherous politics of a court where brothers are rivals and uncles are rebels, and confront the terrifying possibility that he may inherit his father's empire without inheriting his father's certainty. From the frost-limestone walls of Herat to the siege camps of Kabul, from the smoke of matchlock volleys to the silence of a captive prince awaiting execution, Empire of Ash and Blood traces the birth of a ruler who would one day pass the greatest empire in India to his son Akbar—and whose own survival was never guaranteed.For readers of:Wolf Hall (Hilary Mantel) – the intimate psychology of powerShogun (James Clavell) – the clash of cultures and military innovationThe Last Kingdom (Bernard Cornwell) – the forging of dynasties through fire and icePachinko (Min Jin Lee) – the weight of inheritance across generationsPraise for the Trilogy: "e;A deeply human portrait of a dynasty built on contradictions—where Persian refinement meets Mongol ferocity, where piety coexists with wine, and where a boy who fears war must become its master to survive it."e;