The wind smelled of dust and rain as twilight bled across the endless steppes; horsehair hissed against leather and distant drums shot a nervous rhythm. Beneath the cold stars, a comet’s tail seared the black sky — a bright omen that carried a warning: destiny was arriving, and danger shadowed every blazing streak.
In the heart of the endless Kazakh steppes, under skies that seemed to go on forever, a hero’s tale took root—born of dust, song, and fierce devotion. They would speak of Er Tostik, a youth shaped by trial and guided by love. His story moves with the cadence of hooves and the hush of ancient winds, echoing among the yurts and the lonely ridgelines where old spirits still speak.
The Beginnings of Destiny
Tostik was the son of Kydyrkhan and Akmaral, a couple beloved in their village for kindness, wisdom, and steady hands. His birth was marked by a comet slicing the night—an omen that travelers and elders would later tell of with reverent voices. Even as a child, Tostik showed uncommon gifts. By five he rode with a courage and balance that surprised seasoned horsemen.
Kydyrkhan taught him to read the land and to hold justice as a blade sharper than steel; Akmaral taught him to listen to the songs of people and earth alike.
From boyhood, Tostik’s companion was Kambar, a steed the elders described as touched by the heavens. Kambar’s mane flashed like burnished silver, and he moved with a patient intelligence that matched Tostik’s own. They ranged the steppes together, learning the weather’s moods, the language of birds, and the old stories the elders recited by firelight.
Then one day, the familiar rhythm of their life faltered. Kydyrkhan, leading a caravan across the wastes, failed to return. Whispered fear named Ajdahar—the serpent king of myth—as the likely captor, a creature said to rule deaths and shadows in a realm beneath stone. The village sank into grief. For Tostik, sorrow hardened into purpose: he vowed to find his father and drag him back from whatever darkness held him.
The Dream and the Call to Adventure
Years passed until one night a vision came that would set Tostik’s fate. He slept under a vault of glittering stars and dreamed of an old man robed in night-sparkle, whose voice carried like wind through a canyon.
“Tostik,” the figure intoned, “your father is alive in Ajdahar’s realm. You alone have the courage and the heart to save him. The road will test your spirit; let courage be your constant companion.”
When dawn came, those words clung to him like dew. He told Akmaral, who wept for the peril and the hope her son carried. With blessings and tears, she helped him prepare. Elders tempered a sword with prayers; neighbors offered cloaks, charms, and dried kumis. When he mounted Kambar and rode away, the village watched—some with dread, most with a fierce pride.
The morning was a hush of breath and farewell; the horizon rippled with promise and threat. Tostik set his face toward the unknown, every nerve taut with resolve.
Crossing the Kara Zhalmau Forest
Tostik’s path led him into the Kara Zhalmau, a woodland said to devour men’s hopes. Shade pooled between trunks as if the light itself feared the shadow. Strange whispers threaded the air; owls watched like silent sentinels. The deeper he rode, the heavier the silence felt.
Then the forest split by a flash of fangs: a wolf the size of a cart, its fur as black as the void and eyes glowing like embers, leapt from the gloom. Its breath steamed in the cool air; its growl rolled like distant thunder. Tostik met the beast with the steadiness Kydyrkhan had taught him—balance in the saddle, sword ready, heart steady. The battle was fierce and swift.
The wolf’s claws whipped at cloak and leather; Tostik used the creature’s weight against it, feinting, striking when its guard faltered. With one decisive blow, the wolf dissolved into the forest’s gloom, a wail trailing back into the trees.
Exiting the forest, the sky opened to wind and hard light. Tostik found a river swollen and wild, its currents angry and cold. On the far bank, a dragon lay coiled, scales like molten metal, breath scalding the grasses. Its eyes were pits of coals, measuring intent.
The clash with that dragon demanded every ounce of skill Tostik had. The beast breathed flames that licked robes and singed hair; Tostik leapt onto its flank, clambered along steaming scales, and sought the small openings between armor-like plates. Steel met scale and sparks flew. The creature’s final roar shook the riverbed; when the dragon fell quiet, Tostik waded through the churned water to the far shore, each step small triumphs over exhaustion and cold.


















