I wasn’t supposed to get that close. The setup crew had taped a line of red duct tape on the stone floor—”do not cross,” it said in permanent marker—but the left corner of the banner had come loose again, flapping in the sulfur wind, and no one else was going to fix it. I stepped over the tape. The White Tiger was fifteen feet away, standing on a platform made of bones—femurs, humeri, or something like it, lashed together with leather cords that creaked every time it shifted its weight. Its fur wasn’t white. It was silver with a blue undertone, like moonlight on frost, and its stripes were darker, almost black, with a faint iridescent sheen that caught the ghost-horses’ cold fire. I reached up to re-tie the banner’s cord. The tiger exhaled. I felt its breath on the back of my neck—not warm, not cold, just there. The smell was strange: wet stones and old pennies, and something sweet underneath, like overripe fruit starting to ferment. I didn’t turn around. I tied the cord, pulled it tight, and stepped back across the tape line. The tiger’s tail swept slowly behind it, brushing against a human skull—resin, not real—and knocked it off the platform. The skull hit the stone floor and cracked. No one picked it up.
Strange Danish folklore ghosts circle the platform as hell horses
Here’s something I learned after the wedding: in Danish folklore, there’s a creature called the helhest—literally “hell horse”—that appears as a three-legged ghost horse, believed to be the spirit of a horse sacrificed when a new cemetery was consecrated. Seeing it was considered a bad omen. The ghost-horses circling the platform that night each had four legs, nothing obviously wrong, but their hooves didn’t touch the ground. They floated slightly above the cracked stone, and where they passed, the gray dust on the floor swirled in small eddies. Their manes glowed faintly blue-white, and their eyes were empty, like the space behind them went on forever. I watched them circle the platform repeatedly. On one pass, one of them turned its head and looked at me. I stepped back anyway.
Frost from the ghost horse’s breath formed on the red banner and disappeared
The ghost-horse’s breath left condensation on the banner. Not ice—just a thin layer of moisture that beaded up on the blood-red fabric and then evaporated a few seconds later. I touched it. My fingertip came away wet. The banner was a cotton-linen blend, lightweight and draping nicely. The frost had made the fibers stiff briefly before they relaxed again. I wiped my finger on my jeans. The wet spot left a dark mark that looked like blood but wasn’t.
Tiger’s claw marks carved deep grooves in the bone platform like a signature
I crouched to inspect the platform’s edge. The bones—real or realistic replicas—were arranged in a herringbone pattern. The tiger’s claw marks were deep grooves, freshly torn into the topmost bone of the platform’s left corner. I felt the ridges where the claw had caught and pulled. The tiger had done this recently, deliberately, like a signature. I stood up. The tiger tracked my movement with its unblinking eyes.
The red banner reflected different lights in strange and shifting ways
The banner’s fabric was a deep red, catching different lights: the ghost-horses’ blue glow, the warm orange from flame decorations, and the dim red from a floating angel figure. The banner seemed to hold the light for a moment before fading back to dark. I stood there, watching the lights shift. The tiger watched me back. We didn’t speak.
Objects near the platform revealed human interaction with mystical creatures
A dented foam soccer ball lay by the platform, painted black and red for the World Cup-themed wedding. A small smiley face had been drawn on it by a child. The groom’s brother interacted with the banner and then returned to the soccer ball. The tiger didn’t move it, nor did it acknowledge it.
Nearby, a rotting pumpkin carved with a spiral pattern emitted a faint orange glow—no flame or battery inside, just an eerie, dim light. Its weight was lighter than expected. The groom’s mother later carried it home, remarking on the persistent smell.
White Tiger’s paw rested on a skull releasing faint blue mist of mystery
The White Tiger’s left paw rested on a resin skull, its claw curved and yellow-white. Its paw pads were dry, cracked, with fine dust matching the floor. Each exhale released a faint blue mist. I reached halfway to touch it, stopped as its blue eyes met mine, and pulled back. The grooves in the bone remained sharp the next morning, a silent reminder of the tiger’s presence.












Originally reprinted from: Vow & Void Studio - https://frpaper.top/archives/8709
