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While he was looking across he saw an old man walking about on the
opposite ridge, with a cane that seemed to be made of some bright, shining
rock. The hunter watched and saw that every little while the old man would
point his cane in a certain direction, then draw it back and smell the end
of it. At last he pointed it in the direction of the hunting camp on the
other side of the mountain, and this time when he drew back the staff he
sniffed it several times as if it smelled very good, and then started
along the ridge straight for the camp.
He moved very slowly, with the help of the cane, until he reached the end
of the ridge, when he threw the cane out into the air and it became a
bridge of shining rock stretching across the river. After he had crossed
over upon the bridge it became a cane again, and the old man picked it up
and started over the mountain toward the camp.
The hunter was frightened, and felt sure that it meant mischief, so he
hurried on down the mountain and took the shortest trail back to the camp
to get there before the old man. When he got there and told his story the
medicine-man said the old man was a wicked cannibal monster called
Nun'yunu'wi, "Dressed in Stone," who lived in that part of the country,
and was always going about the mountains looking for some hunter to kill
and eat. It was very hard to escape from him, because his stick guided him
like a dog, and it was nearly as hard to kill him, because his whole body
was covered with a skin of solid rock.
If he came he would kill and eat them all, and there was only one way to
save themselves. He could not bear to look upon a menstrual woman, and if
they could find seven menstrual women to stand in the path as he came
along the sight would kill him.
So they asked among all the women, and found seven who were sick in that
way, and with one of them it had just begun. By the order of the
medicine-man they stripped themselves and stood along the path where the
old man would come. Soon they heard Nun'yunu'wi coming through the woods,
feeling his way with his stone cane.
He came along the trail to where the first woman was standing, and as soon
as he saw her he started and cried out: "Yu! my grandchild; you are in a
very bad state!" He hurried past her, but in a moment he met the next
woman, and cried out again: "Yu! my child; you are in a terrible way," and
hurried past her, but now he was vomiting blood.
He hurried on and met the third and the fourth and the fifth woman, but
with each one that he saw his step grew weaker until when he came to the
last one, with whom the sickness had just begun, the blood poured from his
mouth and he fell down on the trail.
Then the medicine-man drove seven sourwood stakes through his body and
pinned him to the ground, and when night came they piled great logs over
him and set fire to them, and all the people gathered around to see.
Nun'yunu'wi was a great ada'wehï and knew many secrets, and now as the
fire came close to him he began to talk, and told them the medicine for
all kinds of sickness.
At midnight he began to sing, and sang the hunting songs for calling up
the bear and the deer and all the animals of the woods and mountains. As
the blaze grew hotter his voice sank low and lower, until at last when
daylight came, the logs were a heap of white ashes and the voice was
still.
Then the medicine-man told them to rake off the ashes, and where the body
had lain they found only a large lump of red wâ'dï paint and a magic
u'lûñsû'ti stone. He kept the stone for himself, and calling the people
around him he painted them, on face and breast, with the red wâ'dï, and
whatever each person prayed for while the painting was being done-whether
for hunting success, for working skill, or for a long life-that gift was
his.
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