
Achomawi Myth - Achomawi.
Sixty
little spider children shivered as they slept. Snow had fallen
every day for
months. All the animals were cold, hungry, and
frightened. Food supplies were
almost gone. No one knew what to do.
Blue jay and Redheaded Woodpecker sang
and danced for Silver Gray
Fox, who floats above the clouds. Since Silver
Gray Fox, the creator,
had made the whole world with a song and a dance, Blue
jay and
Woodpecker hoped to be answered with blue skies. But the snow
kept
falling.
Finally the animals decided to ask Coyote. "Coyote's
been around a
long time, almost since the beginning. He might know how to
reach
Silver Gray Fox." They went to the cave where Coyote was
sleeping,
told him their troubles, and asked for help.
"Grrrrowwwlll...go
away," grumbled Coyote, "and let me think." Coyote stuck
his head
into the cold air outside and thought till he caught an idea.
He
tried singing in little yelps and loud yowls to Silver Gray Fox.
Coyote
sang and sang, but Silver Gray Fox didn't listen, or didn't
want to. After
all, it was Coyote's mischief-making when the world
was new that had caused
Silver Gray Fox to go away beyond the clouds
in the first
place.
Coyote thought he'd better think some more. Suddenly he saw
Spider
Woman swinging down on a silky thread from the top of the
tallest
tree in the forest. "Spider Woman's been on Earth a long, long
time,"
Coyote thought. "She's very wise. I'll ask her what to do."
Coyote
loped over to the tree and lifted his ears to Spider Woman.
"Spider
Woman, O wise weaver, O clever one," called Coyote in his
sweetest
voice, "we're all cold and hungry. Everyone's afraid this winter
will
never end. Silver Gray Fox doesn't see m to notice. Can you
help?"
Spider Woman swayed her shining black body back and forth, back
and
forth, thinking and thinking, thinking and
thinking.
Her eight
black eyes sparkled when she spoke, "I know how to reach
Silver Gray Fox,
Coyote, but I'm not the one for the work. Everyone
will have to help. You'll
need my two youngest children, too. They're
little and light as dandelion
fluff, and the fastest spinners in my
web." Spider Woman called up to her two
littlest ones. Spinnnnnn!
Spinnnnnn! They came down fast, each spinning on
eight little legs,
fine, black twin Spider Boys, full of curiosity and fun.
Spider Woman
said, "My dear little quick ones, are you ready for a
great
adventure?" "Yes! Yes!" they cried. "We're ready!"
Spider Woman told
them her plan, and the Spider Boys set off with
Coyote in the snow. They
hadn't gone far when they met two White-
Footed Mouse Brothers rooting around
for seeds to eat. Coyote told
them Spider Woman's plan. "Will you help?" he
asked. "Yes! Yes! We'll
help!" they squeaked, and they all traveled the trail
towards Mount
Shasta until they met Weasel Man looking hungry and even
thinner than
usual.
Coyote told Weasel Man his plan. "Will you help?"
asked Coyote. "Of
course," rasped Weasel Man, joining them on the trail.
Before long
they came across Red Fox Woman swishing her big fluffy tail
through
the bushes. "Will you help?" asked "Of course, I'll come,"
crooned
Red Fox Woman. Then Rabbit Woman poked her head out of her
hole.
"I'll come too," she sneezed, shivering despite her thick fur.
Meadowlark
wrapped a winter shawl around her wings, and trudged after
the others along
the trail to the top of Mount Shasta. The snow had
stopped, but the sky was
still cloudy. On top of Mount Shasta, Coyote
barked, "Will our two best
archers step forward?" The two White
Footed Mouse Brothers proudly lifted
their bows.
"Everyone listen," barked Coyote. "If any one of us is only
half-
hearted, Spider Woman's plan will fail. To get through the clouds
to
Silver Gray Fox, we must each share our powers whole-heartedly,
our
thoughts, our dreams, our strength, and our songs. Now, you
White-
Footed Mouse Brothers, I want you to shoot arrows at exactly the
same
spot in the sky."
Turning to the others, Coyote said, "Spider
Boys, start spinning
spider silk as fast as you can. Weasel Man, White-
Footed Mouse
Brothers, Red Fox Woman, Rabbit Woman, and I will sing and
make
music. We must sing with all our might or the Spider Boys won't
make
it." "One!" called Coyote. Everyone got ready. "Two!" The
animals
drew in deep breaths. The Mouse Brothers pulled back
their
bowstrings. "Three!" Two arrows shot straight up
and stuck at the
same spot in the clouds.
"Whiff wiff! Wiff wiff!" sang the White Footed
Mouse
Brothers. "Yiyipyipla!" sang Red Fox Woman. "Wowooooolll!"
sang
Coyote. Rabbit Woman shook her magic rattle. Weasel Man beat his
very
old and worn elk-hide drum. The Spider Boys hurled out long lines
of
spider silk, weaving swiftly with all their legs. The animals sang up
a
whirlwind of sound to lift the spider silk until it caught on the
arrows in
the clouds. Then the Spider Twins scurried up the lines of
silk and scrambled
through the opening.
All the while, down below, the animals continued
singing, rattling
and drumming. The little Spiders sank, breathless, onto the
clouds.
Silver Gray Fox spied them and called out, "What are you two
doing
here?" The Spider Boys bent low on their little legs and answered,
"O
Silver Gray Fox, we bring greetings from our mother, Spider Woman,
and
all the creatures of the world below. We've come to ask if you'd
please let
the sun shine again. The whole world is cold. Everyone is
hungry. Everyone is
afraid spring will not
return, ever."
They were so sincere and polite
that Silver Gray Fox became gentler,
and asked, "How did you two get up
here?" The Spider Boys
said "Listen, can you hear the people singing? Can you
hear the drum
and rattle?" Silver Gray Fox heard the drum and rattle and the
people
singing. When the Spider Boys finished telling their story,
Silver
Gray Fox was pleased. "I'm happy when creatures use their
powers
together. I'm especially glad to hear Coyote's been helping too.
Your
mother, Spider Woman, made a good plan. To reward all your hard
work,
I'll create a sign to show that the skies will clear. And you two
may
help.
"First picture the sun shining bright," called Silver Gray
Fox. The
Spider Boys thought hard and saw the sun sending out fiery rays
in
all directions. "Now, where sunrays meet the damp air," sang
Silver
Gray Fox, Picture a stripe of red, Red as Woodpecker's head, Add
a
stripe nearby of bluest Blue Jay blue. The Spider Boys thought hard,
and
great stripes appeared of red and blue. Silver Gray Fox chanted,
Now in
between, Add stripes of orange, yellow and green! The Spider
Boys thought
hard. Then, dazzling their eyes, a beautiful bright arc
of colors curved
across the whole sky above the clouds. It was the
very first
rainbow.
Meanwhile, down below, beneath the clouds, the animals and
people
were so cold, hungry, and tired that they had stopped singing
and
drumming. Spider Woman missed her two youngest children. Each day
she
missed them more. She blamed Coyote for the trouble. So did the
other
animals. Coyote slipped away silent, lonely and sad. Above, on
the
clouds, the Twins rested. Their legs ached and their minds were
tired.
Silver Gray Fox said, "You did what I asked and kept it
secret.
That's very difficult, so I'm giving you a special reward. On
wet
mornings, when the sun starts to shine, you'll see what I mean."
Then
the Spider Boys spun down to Earth, and ran back to their mother
as
fast as they could. Spider Woman cried for joy and wrapped all her
legs
around her two littlest children. Their fifty-eight sisters and
brothers
jumped up and down with happiness. All the animals gathered
around to hear
the Spiders story. When they finished, the Spider Boys
cried, "Look up!"
Everyone looked up. The clouds had drifted apart.
There, bridging sky to
earth in a radiant arch, was the very first
rainbow.
Sun began to warm
the earth. Shoots of grass pushed up through the
melting snow. Meadowlark
blew her silver whistle of spring across the
valley, calling streams and
rivers awake. Coyote came out of hiding,
raced to a distant hilltop, and gave
a long, long howl of joy. The
animals held a great feast to honor the
rainbow, Silver Gray Fox,
Spider Woman, the Spider Twins, Coyote, and the
hard work everyone
had done together.
To this day, after the rain,
when the sun comes out, dewdrops on
spider webs shine with tiny rainbows.
This is the spiders' special
reward. You can see for yourself.
From Blue Panther Keeper of
Stories