Your Name: Lichenfeather
Horse's Name: Called Erämaa (desert) by The People of the tribes but Kufikiria (Imagine) is her true name
Height: 16.1h
Gender: Mare
Legend/Myth: “Grandmother, I saw one! I saw one!” Balru, son of the chieftain screamed as he sprinted through the camp to the old woman’s hut. “What is this child?” The old lady was sitting in a small chair draped with skins of some animal, her wispy hair white with age. “Are you claiming to have seen a dream, a desert spirit?” The boy nodded rapidly. “Yes, yes! I only saw it for a moment but it had a white mane and tail, and a coat the colour of sand and a big white splash across its bum. It kind of looked like a horse!” The boy was jumping up and down in gleeful excitement. The old lady glared at Balru. “Impossible!” she snapped. “That horse, among all the ghosts, does NOT exist.” She continued to glare until his lip began to tremble. “S-s-s-sorry Grandmother. I just thought… because you always told me stories about them that you would want to know.” His voice hit a high note and took on a whiny edge. “Now child. Do you know the story of the impossible spirit, the impossible one?” Balru shook his head. “Well” croaked the ancient voice “Everyone must know the story of Erämaa, the desert spirit.” Balru sat quietly on a purple pillow.
“When the world was young and the whole desert was an oasis the people and the desert spirits lived in harmony. One year, long before my time, a great shaman was born. For many years he brought great goodness and unity throughout the warring tribes.” Balru’s eyes widened. “What other tribes?”
“We know not of the others any more Balru. It is no part of this story.” Balru sank down into the plump purple cushion as the old lady continued in her rhythmic way. “Until one day he went too far. He wanted tribes to bow before him, to pledge servitude and their lives for his experiments. He asked the desert spirits to do the same, but—“ She was interrupted by Balru. “The spirits could talk?!” he asked, awe in his voice.
“They were not so reclusive back then.” She replied. “But yes, so they say. The spirits were deeply by this request and refused contact with the shaman. He was enraged, for, now he had the tribes under his power, he wanted the creatures of our home to bow before him, but they refused. He had a plan to make his part of the great oasis better than the others, but he needed a desert spirit to do so. When they refused to comply he ordered the tribes to organize a hunt, a hunt for the king of the desert spirits. The tribes, poisoned by his words hunted for two moon cycles. At last, unable to capture the king they took his moon coloured daughter. Her coat was whiter than the stars, flecked with pale darkness, so they say. The shaman took the spirit and placed her in a chamber, made of melted sand. What he did not know was that she would fight as he attempted to suck her life away. Instead of using her life force to make his land more fruitful, he took the life from the land and put it into the spirit. The spirit’s coat turned the colour of the sand but was strangely splashed with the white of her former life. She was the desert now, and the people never saw her again. They found the shaman though, a few days later, killed by a snake. This is the story of Erämaa, the one we call the desert. So, my by, you see why it is impossible to have seen such a spirit, any spirit at all. Because they left us long ago. Went back to their own world I suppose. When The People stole her away.” Balru smiled as the old lady closed her eye, but inside he was sure he had seen Erämaa, absolutely sure.
A ways from the camp the mare called Erämaa by The People and Kufikiria by her own kind, smiled, wondering if she would ever see the dark haired human again. She turned away and melted into the desert.
I'm sorry it's so long. I made it semi-fantasy because it is a myth that has been passed down by speaking for many generations, so it has become fantastical. Kufikiria is a desendant of the original horse that the story tells about, but The People don't know about that.