Once upon a time there was a
great fight between two tribes of Indians. It was so fierce that the
river ran red with blood, and the war-cries were so loud and angry
that the animals of the forest ran away in terror. The warriors
fought all day long, and when it began to grow dark, all the men on
one side had been killed but two warriors, one of whom was known as
Turtle. In those days there were no such animals as turtles in the
ponds and rivers, and no one knew why he was called by that name. At
last Turtle's friend was struck by an arrow and fell to the ground.
"Now yield!" cried the enemies.
"Friend," said Turtle, "are you dead?"
"No," said his friend.
"Then I will fight on," said Turtle, and he called out, "Give life
again to the warriors whom you have killed with your wicked arrows,
and then I will yield, but never before. Come on, cowards that you
are! You are afraid of me. You do not dare to come!"
Then his enemies said, "We will all shoot our arrows at once, and
some one of them will be sure to kill him." They made ready to fire,
but Turtle, too, made ready. He had two thick shields, and he put
one over his back and one over his breast. Then he called to his
fierce enemies, "Are you not ready? Come on, fierce warriors! Shoot
your arrows through my breast if you can."
The warriors all shot, but not an arrow struck Turtle, for the two
shields covered his breast and his back, and whenever an arrow
buzzed through the air, he drew in his head and his arms between the
shields, and so he was not harmed. "Why do you not aim at me?" he
cried. "Are you shooting at the mountain, or at the sun and the
moon? Good fighters you are, indeed! Try again."
His enemies shot once more, and this time an arrow killed the
wounded friend as he lay on the ground. When Turtle cried, "Friend,
are you living?" there was no answer.
"My friend is dead," said Turtle. "I will fight no more."
"He has yielded," cried his enemies.
"He has not," said Turtle, and with one great leap he sprang into
the river. His enemies did not dare to spring after him.
"Those long arms of his would pull us to the bottom," they said;
"but we will watch till he comes up, and then we shall be sure of
him."
They were not so sure as they thought, for he did not come up, and
all that they could see in the water was a strange creature unlike
anything that had been there before.
"It has arms and a head," said one.
"And it pulls them out of sight just as Turtle did," said another.
"It has a shield over its back and one over its breast, as Turtle
had," said the first. Then all the warriors were so eager to watch
the strange animal that they no longer remembered the fight. They
crowded up to the shore of the river.
"It is not Turtle," cried one.
"It is Turtle," declared another.
"It is so like him that I do not care to go into the water as long
as it is in sight," said still another.
"But if this is not Turtle, where is he?" they all asked, and not
one of the wise men of their tribe could answer.