Now Old Man was walking along, and far off he saw many wolves; and when he
came closer, he saw there the chief of the wolves, a very old one, and sitting
around him were all his children.
Old Man said, "Pity me, Wolf Chief; make me into a
wolf, that I may live your way and catch deer and everything that runs
fast."
"Come near then," said the Wolf Chief,
"that I may rub your body with my hands, so that hair will cover you."
"Hold," said Old Man; "do not cover my
body with hair. On my head, arms, and legs only, put hair."
When the Chief Wolf had done so, he said to Old Man:
"You shall have three companions to help you, one is a very swift runner,
another a good runner, and the last is not very fast. Take them with you now,
and others of my younger children who are learning to hunt, but do not go where
the wind blows; keep in the shelter, or the young ones will freeze to
death." Then they went hunting, and Old Man led them on the high buttes,
where it was very cold.
At night, they lay down to sleep, and Old Man nearly
froze; and he said to the wolves, "Cover me with your tails." So all
the wolves lay down around him, and covered his body with their tails, and he
soon got warm and slept. Before long he awoke and said angrily, "Take off
those tails," and the wolves moved away; but after a little time he again
became cold, and cried out, "Oh my young brothers, cover me with your tails
or I shall freeze." So they lay down by him again and covered his body with
their tails.
When it was daylight, they all rose and hunted. They
saw some moose, and, chasing them, killed three. Now, when they were about to
eat, the Chief Wolf came along with many of his children, and one wolf said,
"Let us make pemmican of those moose"; and every one was glad. Then
said the one who made pemmican, "No one must look, everybody shut his eyes,
while I make the pemmican"; but Old Man looked, and the pemmican-maker
threw a round bone and hit him on the nose, and it hurt. Then Old Man said,
"Let me make the pemmican." So all the wolves shut their eyes, and Old
Man took the round bone and killed the wolf who had hit him. Then the Chief Wolf
was angry, and he said, "Why did you kill your brother?" "I
didn't mean to," replied Old Man. "He looked and I threw the round
bone at him, but I only meant to hurt him a little." Then said the Chief
Wolf: "You cannot live with us any longer. Take one of your companions, and
go off by yourselves and hunt." So Old Man took the swift runner, and they
went and lived by themselves a long time; and they killed all the elk, and deer,
and antelope, and moose they wanted.
One morning they awoke, and Old Man said: "Oh my
young brother, I have had a bad dream. Hereafter, when you chase anything, if it
jumps a stream, you must not follow it. Even a little spring you must not
jump." And the wolf promised not to jump over water.
Now one day the wolf was chasing a moose, and it ran on
to an island. The stream about it was very small; so the wolf thought:
"This is such a little stream that I must jump it. That moose is very
tired, and I don't think it will leave the island." So he jumped on to the
island, and as soon as he entered the brush, a bear caught him, for the island
was the home of the Chief Bear and his two brothers. Old Man waited a long time
for the wolf to come back, and then went to look for him. He asked all the birds
he met if they had seen him, but they all said they had not.
At last he saw a kingfisher, who was sitting on a limb
overhanging the water. "Why do you sit there, my young brother?" said
Old Man. "Because," replied the kingfisher, "the Chief Bear and
his brothers have killed your wolf; they have eaten the meat and thrown the fat
into the river, and whenever I see a piece come floating along, I fly down and
get it." Then said Old Man, "Do the Bear Chief and his brothers often
come out? and where do they live?" "They come out every morning to
play," said the kingfisher; "and they live upon that island."
Old Man went up there and saw their tracks on the sand,
where they had been playing, and he turned himself into a rotten tree. By and by
the bears came out, and when they saw the tree, the Chief Bear said: "Look
at that rotten tree. It is Old Man. Go, brothers, and see if it is not." So
the two brothers went over to the tree, and clawed it; and they said, "No,
brother, it is only a tree." Then the Chief Bear went over and clawed and
bit the tree, and although it hurt Old Man, he never moved. Then the Bear Chief
was sure it was only a tree, and he began to play with his brothers. Now while
they were playing, and all were on their backs, Old Man leaned over and shot an
arrow into each one of them; and they cried out loudly and ran back on the
island. Then Old Man changed into himself, and walked down along the river.
Pretty soon he saw a frog jumping along, and every time it jumped it would say,
"Ni'-nah O-kyai'-yu!" And sometimes it would stop and sing:
"Ni'-nah O-kyai'-yu! Ni'-nah O-kyai'-yu! Chief
Bear! Chief Bear! Nap'-i I-nit'-si-wah Ni'-nah O-kyai'-yu!" Old Man kill
him Chief Bear! "What do you say?" cried Old Man. The frog repeated
what he had said.
"Ah!" exclaimed Old Man, "tell me all
about it."
"The Chief Bear and his brothers," replied
the frog, "were playing on the sand, when Old Man shot arrows into them.
They are not dead, but the arrows are very near their hearts; if you should
shove ever so little on them, the points would cut their hearts. I am going
after medicine now to cure them."
Then Old Man killed the frog and skinned her, and put
the hide on himself and swam back to the island, and hopped up toward the bears,
crying at every step, "Ni'-nah O-kyai'-yu!" just as the frog had done.
"Hurry," cried the Chief Bear.
"Yes," replied Old Man, and he went up and
shoved the arrow into his heart.
"I cured him; he is asleep now," he cried,
and he went up and shoved the arrow into the biggest brother's heart. "I
cured them; they are asleep now"; and he went up and shoved the arrow into
the other bear's heart. Then he built a big fire and skinned the bears, and
tried out the fat and poured it into a hollow in the ground; and he called all
the animals to come and roll in it, that they might be fat. And all the animals
came and rolled in it. The bears came first and rolled in it, that is the reason
they get so fat. Last of all came the rabbits, and the grease was almost all
gone; but they filled their paws with it and rubbed it on their backs and
between their hind legs. That is the reason why rabbits have two such large
layers of fat on their backs, and that is what makes them so fat between the
hind legs.
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