Beside a white lake, beneath a large
grown willow tree, sat Iktomi on the bare ground.
The heap of smouldering ashes told of a recent open
fire. With ankles crossed together around a pot
of soup, Iktomi bent over some delicious boiled fish.
Fast he dipped his black horn spoon
into the soup, for he was ravenous. Iktomi had
no regular meal times. Often when he was hungry
he went without food.
Well hid between the lake and the
wild rice, he looked nowhere save into the pot of
fish. Not knowing when the next meal would be,
he meant to eat enough now to last some time.
“How, how, my friend!”
said a voice out of the wild rice. Iktomi started.
He almost choked with his soup. He peered through
the long reeds from where he sat with his long horn
spoon in mid-air.
“How, my friend!” said
the voice again, this time close at his side.
Iktomi turned and there stood a dripping muskrat who
had just come out of the lake.
“Oh, it is my friend who startled
me. I wondered if among the wild rice some spirit
voice was talking. How, how, my friend!”
said Iktomi. The muskrat stood smiling.
On his lips hung a ready “Yes, my friend,”
when Iktomi would ask, “My friend, will you
sit down beside me and share my food?”
That was the custom of the plains
people. Yet Iktomi sat silent. He hummed
an old dance-song and beat gently on the edge of the
pot with his buffalo-horn spoon. The muskrat
began to feel awkward before such lack of hospitality
and wished himself under water.
After many heart throbs Iktomi stopped
drumming with his horn ladle, and looking upward into
the muskrat’s face, he said:
“My friend, let us run a race
to see who shall win this pot of fish. If I win,
I shall not need to share it with you. If you
win, you shall have half of it.” Springing
to his feet, Iktomi began at once to tighten the belt
about his waist.
“My friend Ikto, I cannot run
a race with you! I am not a swift runner, and
you are nimble as a deer. We shall not run any
race together,” answered the hungry muskrat.
For a moment Iktomi stood with a hand
on his long protruding chin. His eyes were fixed
upon something in the air. The muskrat looked
out of the corners of his eyes without moving his
head. He watched the wily Iktomi concocting a
plot.
“Yes, yes,” said Iktomi,
suddenly turning his gaze upon the unwelcome visitor;
“I shall carry a large stone on my back.
That will slacken my usual speed; and the race will
be a fair one.”
Saying this he laid a firm hand upon
the muskrat’s shoulder and started off along
the edge of the lake. When they reached the opposite
side Iktomi pried about in search of a heavy stone.
He found one half-buried in the shallow
water. Pulling it out upon dry land, he wrapped
it in his blanket.
“Now, my friend, you shall run
on the left side of the lake, I on the other.
The race is for the boiled fish in yonder kettle!”
said Iktomi.
The muskrat helped to lift the heavy
stone upon Iktomi’s back. Then they parted.
Each took a narrow path through the tall reeds fringing
the shore. Iktomi found his load a heavy one.
Perspiration hung like beads on his brow. His
chest heaved hard and fast.
He looked across the lake to see how
far the muskrat had gone, but nowhere did he see any
sign of him. “Well, he is running low under
the wild rice!” said he. Yet as he scanned
the tall grasses on the lake shore, he saw not one
stir as if to make way for the runner. “Ah,
has he gone so fast ahead that the disturbed grasses
in his trail have quieted again?” exclaimed
Iktomi. With that thought he quickly dropped the
heavy stone. “No more of this!” said
he, patting his chest with both hands.
Off with a springing bound, he ran
swiftly toward the goal. Tufts of reeds and grass
fell flat under his feet. Hardly had they raised
their heads when Iktomi was many paces gone.
Soon he reached the heap of cold ashes.
Iktomi halted stiff as if he had struck an invisible
cliff. His black eyes showed a ring of white about
them as he stared at the empty ground. There was
no pot of boiled fish! There was no water-man
in sight! “Oh, if only I had shared my food
like a real Dakota, I would not have lost it all!
Why did I not know the muskrat would run through the
water? He swims faster than I could ever run!
That is what he has done. He has laughed at me
for carrying a weight on my back while he shot hither
like an arrow!”
Crying thus to himself, Iktomi stepped
to the water’s brink. He stooped forward
with a hand on each bent knee and peeped far into the
deep water.
“There!” he exclaimed,
“I see you, my friend, sitting with your ankles
wound around my little pot of fish! My friend,
I am hungry. Give me a bone!”
“Ha! ha! ha!” laughed
the water-man, the muskrat. The sound did not
rise up out of the lake, for it came down from overhead.
With his hands still on his knees, Iktomi turned his
face upward into the great willow tree. Opening
wide his mouth he begged, “My friend, my friend,
give me a bone to gnaw!”
“Ha! ha!” laughed the
muskrat, and leaning over the limb he sat upon, he
let fall a small sharp bone which dropped right into
Iktomi’s throat. Iktomi almost choked to
death before he could get it out. In the tree
the muskrat sat laughing loud. “Next time,
say to a visiting friend, ’Be seated beside
me, my friend. Let me share with you my food.’”