The Hunter and the Uksu'hï
He listened quietly to the warning, but all they said only made him the more anxious to see such a monster, so, without saying anything of his intention, he left the settlement and took his way directly up the mountain toward the north. Soon he came to the fallen tree and climbed upon the trunk, and there, sure enough, on the other side was the great uksu'hï stretched out in the grass, with its head raised, but looking the other way. It was about so large [making a circle of a foot in diameter with his hands].
The frightened hunter got down again at once and started to run, but the snake had heard the noise and turned quickly and was after him. Up the ridge the hunter ran, the snake close behind him, and then down the other side toward the river. With all his running, the uksu'hi gained rapidly and, just as he reached the low ground, it caught up with him and wrapped around him, pinning one arm down by his side but leaving the other free.
Now it gave him a terrible squeeze that almost broke his ribs and then began to drag him along toward the water. With his free hand the hunter clutched at the bushes as they passed, but the snake turned its head and blew its sickening breath into his face until he had to let go his hold. Again and again this happened, and all the time they were getting nearer to a deep hole in the river when, almost at the last moment, a lucky thought came into the hunter's mind.
He was sweating all over from his hard run across the mountain, and suddenly remembered to have heard that snakes can not bear the smell of perspiration. Putting his free hand into his bosom he worked it around under his armpit until it was covered with perspiration. Then withdrawing it he grasped at a bush until the snake turned its head, when he quickly slapped his sweaty hand on its nose. The uksu'hi cave one gasp almost as if it had been wounded, loosened its coil, and glided swiftly away through the bushes, leaving the hunter, bruised but not disabled, to make his way home to Hickory-Log.
Next: The Ustû'tlï
(500 words)