In the grandfathers' time, when few yet living had been born, the People
worshipped the horse, and served him, and took the gifts that he gave
them: his meat, his hide, the milk of his mares. But he had not yet
granted to men the greatest gift of all: the gift of riding on his back,
and racing the wind.
Sparrow is a shaman's daughter in a tribe that forbids women to be
kings, to be shamans, to be anything but silent and tractable servants
to the all-powerful men. They may not ever ride the horses that are the
life and soul of the tribe, or even approach them, for fear of angering
the gods.
But Sparrow knows another story, a story of the woman who first rode a
horse, and her brother who took both the horse and the glory away from
her. Sparrow sees visions and dreams dreams - and her brother the shaman
takes them from her and presents them as his own.
Then the most sacred of all horses, the embodiment of Horse Goddess
herself, claims Sparrow for her servant, and sends her on a journey that
will change Sparrow and her people forever.