Owner: .:Canis Love:.
Equid Name: Romeo
Equid age: 3 years
Story: The chirping of birds fills your ears. As does the scittering of little creatures on the floor. Suddenly, they silence, and in the distance, there is the thundering clop, clop of horse hooves. As the horse nears, you can see now. It is a rare and beautiful Wild Mountain Equid! It ran on, looking determined, eyes narrowed and focused ahead. And soon, you see why. Behind the handsome stallion, a band of normal horses carried the humans on their backs.
The stallion was built for this kind of thing. Running. He never did second-guess his direction, or his turns. He just went with it.
Pretty soon, the Wild Mountain Equid stallion came to a cliff. He skidded to a stop and looked down. It was a good 20 feet or so drop. The stallion was staring down still when they rode up. Surrounded, the stallion reared and bucked. He tried everything to break their forces, but nothing worked. The stallion had nothing else to do, so...
He jumped.
flying through the air gracefully, the Wild Mountain Equid shot down like a rocket. His life in the mountains had prepared him for this, and he landed evenly on all fours. Looking up, he could see a few humans shouting down at him. But to his horror, most of them took off towards a dirt trail the steeply descended into this valley he had gotten into.
So he runs once more.
Sooner than expected, he is back in a forest. But this one was different. Its trees bent their long and sturdy branches towards the ground. The stallion was scraped and brushed by their points and moss. The sounds of his pursuers neared, and he knew he must do something. But nothing came to his mind.
So he ran on.
The stallion stops at a wide lake. He wallowed into its shallows, then jumped back out. The water still had that winter freeze in its depths. The Wild Mountain Equid looks back and there they are. Bursting from the trees, the humans rode their horses. The stallion could do nothing.
So he ran. Right back to the forest.
The humans raise a silver thing into the air, and it shoots. The air all around shattered with the ring, and it echoed all around, from tree to tree. The stallion panics, and runs faster, harder. Soon, the stallion enters a field. All around, beautiful white flowers are blooming. The stallion hates to, but he must. Trampling the flowers and making them leak out their beauty, he thunders on.
The humans neared once more. Their shouts deafening to the stallion.
But the stallion still runs. And the humans still follow. If the stallion swerves left, so do the humans. The hoofprints of the normal horses overtake his. But the stallion still runs. As the humans swirl their ropes around their heads, somehow, it seems the stallion has sensed it. Quickening his pace, his muscles rippling under the dark cremello coat. The humans realize with astonishment what has happened. And soon, they realize that their horses are no match for the Wild Mountain Equid stallion. They gather together and whisper. And as one raises his hand and shouts, the stallion's eyes grow wide.
They were going to win. They were going to take him. But not without a fight.
The humans split, a few over there, a few over there. And one, with the biggest horse and the longest rope, runs alongside of the Wild Mountain Equid until he passes it. When he does, the stallion realizes to his despair that it is another Mountain Equid like himself! She was a beautiful dirty white mare. The stallion nickered, but she didn't stop. Once in front, the human gives a shout, and the others close in. Slowly, the stallion is surrounded, and soon, he feels the brushing of the other horses' flanks against his. They tighten the circle, and pull their horses to a stop.
The stallion is surrounded. They close in, tighter and tighter.
The stallion rears and bucks. He kicks most, and injurs many. But the head human does the unthinkable. He throws his rope around the stallions neck, and ties it to his Wild Mountain Equid mare's saddle. Then, the mare rears, sending the stallion splayed on the ground.
They have won.
The Wild Mountain Equid stallion is forced to stop, and as he does, ropes are throw, and they loop around his neck. One by one, they tighten and pull. Soon, the stallion is walking back with them, still surrounded. And as he looks over, the other Mountain Equid mare is walking, head down, and a tear rolling down her long and graceful snout.
And the stallion is taken. Taken from his home, from his family. But his new life will begin with light. It will begin with a good-hearted owner and a loving one at that.