A man in buckskins sat upon the top
of a little hillock. The setting sun shone bright
upon a strong bow in his hand. His face was turned
toward the round camp ground at the foot of the hill.
He had walked a long journey hither. He was waiting
for the chieftain’s men to spy him.
Soon four strong men ran forth from
the center wigwam toward the hillock, where sat the
man with the long bow.
“He is the avenger come to shoot
the red eagle,” cried the runners to each other
as they bent forward swinging their elbows together.
They reached the side of the stranger,
but he did not heed them. Proud and silent he
gazed upon the cone-shaped wigwams beneath him.
Spreading a handsomely decorated buffalo robe before
the man, two of the warriors lifted him by each shoulder
and placed him gently on it. Then the four men
took, each, a corner of the blanket and carried the
stranger, with long proud steps, toward the chieftain’s
teepee.
Ready to greet the stranger, the tall
chieftain stood at the entrance way. “How,
you are the avenger with the magic arrow!” said
he, extending to him a smooth soft hand.
“How, great chieftain!”
replied the man, holding long the chieftain’s
hand. Entering the teepee, the chieftain motioned
the young man to the right side of the doorway, while
he sat down opposite him with a center fire burning
between them. Wordless, like a bashful Indian
maid, the avenger ate in silence the food set before
him on the ground in front of his crossed shins.
When he had finished his meal he handed the empty
bowl to the chieftain’s wife, saying, “Mother-in-law,
here is your dish!”
“Han, my son!” answered the woman, taking
the bowl.
With the magic arrow in his quiver
the stranger felt not in the least too presuming in
addressing the woman as his mother-in-law.
Complaining of fatigue, he covered
his face with his blanket and soon within the chieftain’s
teepee he lay fast asleep.
“The young man is not handsome
after all!” whispered the woman in her husband’s
ear.
“Ah, but after he has killed
the red eagle he will seem handsome enough!”
answered the chieftain.
That night the star men in their burial
procession in the sky reached the low northern horizon,
before the center fires within the teepees had flickered
out. The ringing laughter which had floated up
through the smoke lapels was now hushed, and only
the distant howling of wolves broke the quiet of the
village. But the lull between midnight and dawn
was short indeed. Very early the oval-shaped door-flaps
were thrust aside and many brown faces peered out
of the wigwams toward the top of the highest
bluff.
Now the sun rose up out of the east.
The red painted avenger stood ready within the camp
ground for the flying of the red eagle. He appeared,
that terrible bird! He hovered over the round
village as if he could pounce down upon it and devour
the whole tribe.
When the first arrow shot up into
the sky the anxious watchers thrust a hand quickly
over their half-uttered “hinnu!” The second
and the third arrows flew upward but missed by a wide
space the red eagle soaring with lazy indifference
over the little man with the long bow. All his
arrows he spent in vain. “Ah! my blanket
brushed my elbow and shifted the course of my arrow!”
said the stranger as the people gathered around him.
During this happening, a woman on
horseback halted her pony at the chieftain’s
teepee. It was no other than the young woman who
cut loose the tree-bound captive!
While she told the story the chieftain
listened with downcast face. “I passed
him on my way. He is near!” she ended.
Indignant at the bold impostor, the
wrathful eyes of the chieftain snapped fire like red
cinders in the night time. His lips were closed.
At length to the woman he said: “How, you
have done me a good deed.” Then with quick
decision he gave command to a fleet horseman to meet
the avenger. “Clothe him in these my best
buckskins,” said he, pointing to a bundle within
the wigwam.
In the meanwhile strong men seized
Iktomi and dragged him by his long hair to the hilltop.
There upon a mock-pillared grave they bound him hand
and feet. Grown-ups and children sneered and hooted
at Iktomi’s disgrace. For a half-day he
lay there, the laughing-stock of the people.
Upon the arrival of the real avenger, Iktomi was released
and chased away beyond the outer limits of the camp
ground.
On the following morning at daybreak,
peeped the people out of half-open door-flaps.
There again in the midst of the large
camp ground was a man in beaded buckskins. In
his hand was a strong bow and red-tipped arrow.
Again the big red eagle appeared on the edge of the
bluff. He plumed his feathers and flapped his
huge wings.
The young man crouched low to the
ground. He placed the arrow on the bow, drawing
a poisoned flint for the eagle.
The bird rose into the air. He
moved his outspread wings one, two, three times and
lo! the eagle tumbled from the great height and fell
heavily to the earth. An arrow stuck in his breast!
He was dead!
So quick was the hand of the avenger,
so sure his sight, that no one had seen the arrow
fly from his long bent bow.
In awe and amazement the village was
dumb. And when the avenger, plucking a red eagle
feather, placed it in his black hair, a loud shout
of the people went up to the sky. Then hither
and thither ran singing men and women making a great
feast for the avenger.
Thus he won the beautiful Indian princess
who never tired of telling to her children the story
of the big red eagle.