Ka figure

Ka figures, also known as spirit statues, were a variety of funerary statuettes that the people of Sokkar would place inside the tombs of their deceased. They were believed by the Sokkarans to hold the deads' ka (soul) once their physical remains were properly mummified and interned.

Description
The details and features of ka figures varied greatly, with the rich and powerful of Sokkar having more intricate and opulent ones. They were made to depict the person whose ka they were meant to hold. In the more elaborate tombs of Sokkar, one could find multiple vaults depicting servants sacrificed to serve in the afterlife, including concubines, dancers, guards, musicians, porters, slaves, wives, and even pets.

History
When Edimu, a beloved horse from Jazirat al-Sayyad, passed from the world a mausoleum was constructed for him in Sokkar. Placed within this mausoleum was a life-sized ka figure made of alabaster. It was adorned with a golden bit and bridle, encrusted in diamonds and sapphires, and inscribed with Chun runes that bore his name and wishes for a long, happy afterlife. However, ghouls later looted the chambers and stole Edimu's bit and bridle, breaking his ka figure in the process, and thus untethering his spirit from the afterlife.

In 1367 DR, a group of adventurers came to Sokkar and Edimu's spirit pleaded with them to retrieve his bit and bridle from the ghouls, showing them to his mausoleum and the smashed ka figure within. The adventurers would go on to retrieve the bit and bridle, which Edimu's spirit would lay in his empty sarcophagus, but Edimu then gestured over to his broken ka figure to indicate that his spirit could not rest unless they repaired it. When they eventually do so, the spirit nuzzles them before stepping into the ka figure and vanishing.