by HowlingHooves » Fri Sep 22, 2017 12:40 pm
Username: HowlingHooves
Show Name: Solas Ama
Call Name: Réaltra
Gender: Stallion
Discipline: Endurance [Amateur]
Creation:
The Stallion of the Void
In the beginning there was the vast, cold emptiness. Dark and without sound, without warmth or comfort, a simple void without end. But slowly, the vastness grew to hold bright and beautiful flashes of heat, some more intense than others; they all had a purpose as time moved forward, however, and that purpose was to bring to life a wondrous and wise mind. To offer warmth that could be spread, stars that could be seen speckling the vast blackness of the void.
And with that offering of warmth and beauty a creature was granted form and life, heart beating as the stars formed and died, legs strong but delicate on hooves as hard as the strongest of rocks that the galaxies threw across to one another. But silent the creature was, eyes dim even in life, no interest garnered as he was bade to traverse the no longer void. Alone, that was what the creature felt. Stars to act as guides, their warmth familiar but leaving him wanting more, wishing for touch as the creature could touch, for breath as the creature could breath, a heart beating as firmly as what was inside the being.
And so, folding legs beneath body, the creature of starlight and warm galaxies fell into slumber. Eyes that were dull remained closed for eons, and as the eons passed by, the being of leg and body, of heart and dull eyes changed while slumber still held tight. The stars became brighter, planets formed, and finally, the creature awoke to foreign feeling within.
Soon it recognized the differences within itself; no longer was it a creature, no longer did he feel as though he were simply starlight gathered and given life; he was a male, a great being with the power to bend things to his will! Someone who could move across galaxies and gather the stars together! Take them and leave them as he wished!
His eyes were so bright, but with the arrogance of youth he had not felt before sleeping. His heart pumped with a fervor and a want to find others, to create others even! And he did just that. He pulled stardust together, warmth and color, gave it life from his own heart of hearts. And the creatures he created were set down on planets in the vastness of the void, some with others, some with their own similar creations.
And the male watches, gleefully, as they grew and evolved and became more. As they raised young of their own. But he heard some calling to him, voices praising him as a god when he would touch down on the planets they thrived on, others angry or sad when they spotted him. One in particular, however, left I’m with nothing but rage pumping through his veins, his multitude of colors growing hot white and red and gold and orange like the fires of the stars.
And when he lashed his hooves against the surface of the planet, it cracked through to its core. Another lash and another crack, his voice bellowed and the winds howled, his tail slashed the air and the seas of the planet raged. And after his anger faded, his rage settled, it had been several years that the planet had suffered. And it was no more.
With eyes looking out over the devastation, his body slumped as he wailed, a father now facing the first realization of mistakes he could never take back. Tears welled up and over, his eyes cooling in his sorrow from the raging inferno of red, becoming the coldest of purples and blues, following after the galaxies that whispered to him from the farthest of reaches.
Falling to the torn and scorched ground, he did the only thing he could do with the sorrow that clutches at his heart; once more he slept.
And again he awoke, sadness pulling less harshly at him; all around the planet was in a state of regrowth. He was in awe this time, and though he hadn’t slept as long as his first descent into the quiet of his mind, this time he felt joy flooding his body at the sight around him.
And a cacophony of voices rose in his mind, each begging for attention and leaving him worried, eyes shifting through color after color as he listened to the cries of his creations. Most of all that he heard, a name reached his mind.
Solas Ama.
As he listened, eyes closing as information came to him with each voice and mind, knowledge fell into place during his slumber he had missed. Brighter of life, of light and warmth, traveler of the stars, stallion of galaxies, king of the void and time… Solas Ama, Light of Time.
One voice tugged at him sharper than the rest, and he was compelled to find them. So Solas Ama traveled the galaxies that had given him life, moving from planet to planet, amongst the stars as he sought out his own creation. And when he found them, his heart broke as he saw a woman weeping over earth freshly disturbed, a stone with writing he did not recognize… her words seemed to cause confusion to some around her, but his ears could make out each syllable without trouble.
“Oh please, Solas Ama, give back my son! Return my son! Please, Solas Ama!”
Descending to the planet, hooves touching softly along the grasses covering its surface, he stood at the back of the group. He watched as they slowly dispersed until only the weeping woman remained. The sunlight above had begun to bleed into the darkness of his home, stars flickering faintly in the dying light. Eventually the woman rose to her feet, face wet from her tears and looking as forlorn as Solas Ama had felt upon seeing the destruction he had wrought on his own children.
As he stood strong she turned, and she was startled to see him. But after another moment she was on the ground, babbling to him in a rush he was unable to make out. But he understood her meaning, and his heart squeezed tight as he moved to her. He bade her to ris, and she did with fear and worry emanating from her. Her eyes kept shifting to his coat, vibrant in silvers and blacks with his own worry, before he settled his emotions, his coat following as it became a sunrise of purple and pink, stars scattered all about him like the void above.
It took only a look before he turned, the woman soon climbing atop his back; he could not bring back what had perished, but he could ease this woman’s heartache by granting her the gift he himself had been granted eons before. Taking off into the void quickly, the woman startled before she settled, both dashed among the stars, fears drifting and sorrow fading, companionship steadfast between them.
Eventually though, the woman grew weary of traveling with Solas Ama. And, unknown to the male, she soon began forming a being of her own. Doing what he could not, creating a monster out of the stardust and the pieces of the galaxy she could sneak without notice. And when she had finished, when she had thought she could finally bring back the son she had lost, Solas Ama was faced with an abomination standing over the mother now gone from his grasp.
It turned to him, eyes full of a heated hunger for destruction, body shimmering with the power stolen from the void. Only one thing entered his mind, and Solas Ama acted on the thought with worry for the entirely of his creations in mind.
For days the galaxies and stars were brightened by the raging battle between the abomination and the stallion of the void, flashes of fire and booming impacts as they fought from one galaxy to another leaving the inhabitants of the planets watching in awe or fear. And when they finally ceased, so long after the death of the woman he had brought to the void with him, Solas Ama fell to the earth of the closest planet.
When he rose there was a crowd gathered, a susurrus of noise assaulting him before he rose onto shaking legs. Never before had he felt so tired, nor so pained in his physical body. Turning his head on his neck, the stallion of the void saw the colors that had been bleached from his coat, leaving nothing behind but a stark white in its place. But he was too tired to care that the galaxy that once draped over his body was no longer whole, too agonized to find himself bothered by the unchanging colors of what did remain of his neck, legs and underside.
Eyes looking away from himself and to those around him, Solas Ama dipped his head when they all remained, frozen in their places as they grew silent. “Move aside! Help him up from there!” Someone shouted out quickly, and suddenly Solas Ama felt the hands of his creations atop his coat, their touch not sharp against the bleached scars of his coat, nor painful or burning as the abominations had felt. They were warm, but gentle in the firmness they offered as they guided him out of the indentation he had left beneath him.
And they were unafraid when they stood around him on solid ground, one even offering a bucket full of water to him. Never before had he needed to consume anything, but as he looked at it his throat was as parched as the sands of the desert. Solas Ama drank deeply until he drained the bucket, dipping his head in thanks before he looked up to the bright sky above. But it did not call to him, the stars and the galaxies above silent, the voices of his creations still within his mind when he closed his eyes.
And the realization came to him like a hammer against stone.
His voice was sharp as he called to the stars, denial of the situation falling over him heavily. But as his strength returned in the coming days, his voice rising each night and each morning, Solas Ama soon wept as he ran across the ground below him, never tiring but never able to leave its solidity behind him. The abomination had taken a piece of him in their battle, had left him stranded on this planet with his creations. And the loss of connection he felt to the void was a terrible weight upon his shoulders.
“But mama! What happened to him?” A child whined from where he sat up in his bed, wide eyes staring after his mother as she rose and flipped the light off, returning to kiss her son and tuck him in for the night.
“Well, I don’t really know what happened to him. Some people say he just travels the planet, some say he isolated himself somewhere in those mountains you see when you head off to school. I’ve never seen him, though. You’d have to ask your grandfather when you see him next.”
The child pouted, clearly displeased with the answer he was given, but parent and child bid each other a goodnight. But laying in bed, staring at the stars outside his window, the boy wondered until his eyes drooped what became of Solas Ama. Was there truth to the legend of the stallion of the void, did Solas Ama really exist somewhere? And if he did, would he appear to people as he did in the end of the story, with the stars broken from his coat by the battle with the abomination?
Just as the boy fell to his dreams, he smiled as he promised the stars he would try to find their friend.
1967 words

Thiedall © HowlingHooves