Super hard not keeping this guy.... but here you go, a handsome stally!
To win him write a short story (3 or less paragraphs, 7-9 sentences per paragraph) about him, it can be anything really, i just want you to impress me
End Date: August 12th
Edits: Allowed (whoops I put not allowed originally, but they are allowed sorry about that)
Owner: Bentley
Name: Benny
Gender: Stallion
Age: 8 years
Height: 13.2hh
Story: Gunfire and smoke surrounded Benny as he charged behind the line of soldiers, the packs of bandages nudging his sweat-soaked flanks and shoulders. He had lives to save, injured people that needed his aid, all he had to do was reach them and duck down, out of the way, sometimes letting the dying stroke his mud-caked, filthy mane or tail as they went - a small comfort for them, it seemed, but something he could afford to give. He remembered their faces, too; whole and healthy, not the grime and wound-covered messes that they had been in their last moments; they lived in his memory, and he honored them by guarding the lives of their comrades. A living memorial, he supposed, could do no less for those that he stood for, for those that he fought with, for those that he would see return home to their families, and for those that he would yet see close their eyes and breathe their last.
The young kid that he settled next to... he was a green recruit, barely out of training, and it was plain as the smoke in the sky that he wouldn't see the light of day again; he was already just too far gone, another life nearly snuffed in the flying dust. Benny's fellow hooved solders, they would have cursed themselves for their failures; if they had only been faster, if they had only been more agile and graceful in their leaps over the buried bombs that the enemy had laid behind in their retreat! But there had been no obstacles for Benny; nothing but the flying shrapnel that threatened his own life, and there simply wasn't time for regret as he nudged his nose into the young man's cheek, huffing warm air onto the shivering, cooling skin. It wouldn't be long, he reminded himself; the man's suffering would end, and he'd be free of the battle, of the war and the struggle that he was still mired in. An echo ran through him, the last words of a dead general many years passed: 'Dulce et decorum est,' he'd said, his grumbling, tired old voice fading in strength as he spoke to the large equid he had hand-trained as a foal, 'pro patria mori.' Benny didn't know what it meant, of course, but it seemed appropriate as the eager recruit-turned-mortally-wounded-solider lay at the end of his life before him.
The flicker of light faded in the human's eyes long before the medic gave up trying to revive him, and though Benny stayed through the entire procedure, he sincerely hoped that the boy - for that was truly all he was in the end - was at peace. One more shining face, sandy blonde hair that stuck up in a stubborn cowlick in the back, and two crooked front teeth in the hopeful little grin made its home in Benny's mental gallery memorial, a shining metal plate underneath with the pattern of bars and stars engraved. A soft command from the medic, and he was again on his hooves, racing to the next injured soldier in need - his job was simply never complete.