Dawn smeared copper across the Mongolian steppe, smoking from gers and the soft throat of a morin khuur; grass glittered like coin. In the Unfading Valley, where laughter seems to settle like morning, Jangar felt a chill at the ribs of the world — a forewarning that the valley’s youth might be bartered away.
The sun rose like a copper coin over the steppe, its edge pressed thin by distance and wind. Light unrolled across river and grass, catching on the freckles of sheep, the lacquered curve of a morin khuur and the smoke ribboning from felt gers as if hearths themselves were exhaling. Beyond the drum-echo of hooves and the whistle of cranes lay a hidden hollow the wind pronounced as a blessing: Yesön-Örgöö, the Ninefold Enclosure, the Unfading Valley.
There youth moved like a companion—slow, steady, ungrabbed. The grass stayed green, milk remained sweet, children’s laughter kept its season. At the valley’s heart stood the Tree of Dawn, its trunk like polished bone and its leaves holding morning as if a hand refused to let go of warmth.
In the first spring after a thaw that never fully arrived, a boy rose on his toes at the valley’s rim to see over the low ridge of his future. He had fashioned a bow of river-bronze hammered thin by a patient blacksmith and strung it with horsehair he had combed himself. The elder who had cut his cord said his name would mean speaker of oaths, breaker of lies, the bright thread between fledgling and falcon. They called him Jangar.
He was not tall, but he stood as if already appointed to represent something larger than himself. The elders noticed; the horses felt it; the wolves on the valley’s rim judged him with a narrow acceptance. That morning, as the sun minted every blade of grass in gold, the shamaness tapped her drum and sang of a trouble not yet shaped like a face—a shadow learning the valley’s name. She warned that eternal things are not maintained by accident but by devotion: choice after difficult choice. Everyone listened until their tea cooled.
Jangar listened until the future, which had stepped onto the ridge beside him, breathed against his cheek and did not leave.
The Unfading Valley and the Child with the Bronze Bow
Toward the year’s turn, a cold arrived that did not belong to the weather. Grass rippled the wrong way in the wind. Cranes flew with their reflections lagging behind them, as if delayed in time. The elders noticed black snow—ash that fell like winter and smelled of old sorrow—dusting the shoulders of their gers. One night a rider came to the ridge, tall on a horse that cast no breath.
His mask was a goat skull lacquered until it shone, and upon his back rode a shadow crowned with feathers like knives. He dismounted without snow-squeak, without stirrup-jingle. When he spoke, his voice carried the hush of gullies.
“The Vulture King, Khar Jargal, makes a simple offer,” the envoy said. “He will keep your valley in glass, untouched by time, if you will give him the seed at the heart of the Tree of Dawn.”
The elders were not fools. They knew that a thing frozen looks youthful only because it is dead. Jangar stepped forward before any elder could speak. “Tell your king,” he said, “that our youth is not a coin for trade.” The envoy’s smile collected like frost in the hollows of his mask.
“Youth is hunger,” he said. “Hunger remembers where the feast is laid.” When the rider left, the black snow thickened. The Tree of Dawn whispered, and for the first time in a hundred years one leaf fell.
At council, Ekh Tengeriin Uugan, the shamaness with shoulders like a hawk’s perch, beat her drum softly and poured mare’s milk onto the fire. The flames took it and burned sweeter. She sang the oldest answer: youth returns because it is invited, and eternal things cannot survive a bargain with fear. “If Khar Jargal cannot crease us with age,” she said, “he will attempt to freeze us into beauty. Beauty without breath is a lid on a jar.
” The elders looked to Jangar and his band. They were not the tallest, nor the most heavily armed—Tömör’s steel lay mostly in his gaze—but they were threaded to the valley’s breath like string to a kite.
The shamaness named two tasks. “To keep our river moving,” she said, “you must bring back the Sun Arrow from the Sky-Well above Khairkhan Mountain. To wake our courage when frost speaks honeyed words, you must raise the Sleeping Drum from the Red Dunes. Go lightly. Return with weight.
” When she spoke of weight, Jangar felt his bow re-balance as if a new, invisible string tuned to a pitch only the brave could hear.
They left with little ceremony; the valley sent bread, a wineskin of airag, and a few jokes Naran offered unasked. Saruul, a caravan child with a braid too long for his patience, trailed them from a distance like a curious foal. His father had traded felt for iron with the valley for years and believed in the Tree of Dawn the way some men believe in salt. After the second campfire Saruul stepped into the light like a truth too honest to stay hidden. “I don’t want to watch from the mountain when the valley freezes,” he said.
Jangar handed him a spare quiver. “Stay behind Alag, and stay ahead of your fear.”
They rode with wind-snapped banners, following the loping line of wolves that often accompany those on necessary quests. They passed ovoo cairns where they tied blue khadag scarves for luck. Above them the sky stretched like a good bowstring—taut, honest, singing.
The land shifted like a sleeping animal adjusting to a dream. Mossless stone replaced grass. They entered the throat of the Whistling Gorge, where every step rang brighter and every call returned wearing a stranger’s coat. At night the stars rooted themselves so deeply they felt like posts hammered into the firmament. Od counted them as if they were arrows, losing track only when a meteor fell.
By the fourth day frost ghosted their breath even at noon, though the sun burned with the steadiness of a vow. On the ridge above the gorge they saw Khairkhan’s shoulder, blue with age, and, carved into its bone-white crown, the Sky-Well that held the pooled light of morning. The well was less a place than a listening—a cupped hand waiting for the first note of a song. Jangar tightened his glove, felt the bow’s grain beneath his thumb, and thought of the single leaf that had fallen while the valley watched. He made no loud promises; some oaths are steadier when spoken to tendon and heart.


















