Fuladh Al Haami File
The battle was not a slaughter, but a chess match. Fuladh feinted left, charged right, and for one brilliant hour, he nearly broke Tughril’s flank. He personally killed a Seljuk standard-bearer with a thrown javelin—a throw so perfect that later poets would call it "the needle threading the silk of heaven." But then Tughril sent in his heavy cavalry, the ghulams , armored men on armored horses. Fuladh’s lightly armed horse archers could not stop the iron tide.
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Fuladh is the primary point of contact for the "Harbiyah" branch of the story, where he directs Basim to uncover the Order's influence within the city's port and prisons. Mentor Figure: The battle was not a slaughter, but a chess match
In the shadows of the Abbasid Caliphate, few names carry as much weight within the Hidden Ones as Fuladh Al Haami Fuladh’s lightly armed horse archers could not stop
One dawn, the Ghuzz turned on their Buyid masters. They did not fight like Arabs or Persians, with massed ranks and banners. They fought like the steppe: feigned retreats, horse archers who could shoot backward at full gallop, and a terrifying silence before the charge. Commander Fuladh led a column straight into Isfahan’s main market, his warhorse trampling the saffron stalls. The city fell in three days.