294 
They were heard through their arrows, and those girls from time to 
time could not help laughing. 
Then, when daylight had come, “Now, grandmother, go call that 
young woman! Give her these; she may take them home with her. Per- 
haps the people will be able to live, if they reach their old camp,” he told 
his grandmother. 
Then she was called for and invited. 
“My grandchild, you are to come to my tent for a bit. My grand- 
child has been bothering me to invite you. The rest he will tell you.” 
“Very well,” she said to her. 
She went there. When she entered, who was that sitting there, but 
the one who had courted her! She sat down by his side. 
“Well, these things are why I have called you here. Now, if once 
they camp on the way, that will be from where we others will depart,” he 
told her; “Now then, now let your father announce what I have told you, 
the things I said. A great supply of meat has this one’s father-in-law,” he 
said, referring to his younger brother; “So there.” 
Accordingly, the young woman went home. She called her father 
from her tent. 
“Father, a child has come in here. *********** 
Your fellow-old-man who was abandoned has a store of meat. ‘As many 
as are the deserted camps, so many are the scaffolds where hang the meats,’ 
says your son-in-law; ‘Accordingly, so let him announce it,’ he said to me, 
and that is why I am saying it now.” 
“Yes, daughter. And so at last you have that which you begged for, 
saying, ‘a man.’ Try to live uprightly. Be sympathetic toward your 
fellow-wife,” he told his daughter. 
Then he announced it: “We shall move camp today. It is heard 
that my old friend has a supplj'' of food; it is heard that he has a supply. 
Without delay you are to camp there whence you have moved camp,” he 
said, instructing his people. 
Accordingly, they all moved camp. There where they camped for the 
night, again that one went courting They 
arrived at their dwelling. 
Then, as soon as he entered, “Sister-in-law, be jealous of your hus- 
band! That chief’s daughter, her he has taken to wife,” he said of his 
3munger brother. 
“Nonsense, brother-in-law, it is you, rather, who have taken her to 
wife. I have been listening to you all the time,” his sister-in-law told him. 
“Now then, children, make ready by clearing the snow from the place 
where j^our elder sister is to staj'’ and your other father; in two places you 
will clear the snow,” he told them. 
So the}^ moved camp to that place. Without delay they joined them 
where they camped. By this time the warm weather was coming on. 
Then, “Now, brother, drive in some buffalo. But watch for him: 
there is one who hates you. And there is one who hates me; but, as for 
me, I shall defeat him,” he told him; “Never walk through the herd 
when you bring buffalo,” he told his younger brother; “Do you first fetch 
buffalo,” he told him. 
“Yes,” the other answered him. 
