It
was the height of summer, the time of year called Hadotso,
the Great Heat. All day long, from a blue and cloudless sky,
the blazing sun beat down upon the earth. No rain had fallen
for many days and there was not the slightest breath of wind
to cool the stifling air. Everything was hot and dry. Even
the rose-red cliffs of the canyons and mesas seemed to take
on a more brilliant colour than before.
The animals drooped with misery.
They were parched and hungry, for it was too hot to hunt for
food and, panting heavily, they sough what shade they could
under the rocks and bushes.
Rabbit was the unhappiest of all.
Twice that day the shimmering heat had tempted him across
the baked earth towards visions of water and cool, shady trees.
He had exhausted himself in his desperate attempts to reach
tem, only to find the mirages dissolve before him, receding
further and further into the distance.
Now, tired and wretched, he dragged
himself into the shadow of an overhanging rock and crouched
there listlessly. His soft fur was caked with the red dust
of the desert. His head swam and his eyes ached from the sun's
glare.
'Why does it have to be so hot?'
he groaned. 'What have we done to deserve such torment?' He
squinted up at the sun and shouted furiously, 'Go away! You
are making everything too hot!'
Sun took no notice at all and continued
to pour down his fiery beams, forcing Rabbit to retreat once
more into the shade of the rock. 'Sun needs to be taught a
lesson,' grumbled Rabbit. 'I have a good mind to go and fight
him. If he refuses to stop shining, I will kill him!'
His determination to punish Sun
made him forget his weariness and, in spite of the oppressive
heat, he set off at a run towards the eastern edge of the
world where the Sun came up each morning.
As he ran, he practised with his
bow and arrows and, to make himself brave and strong, he fought
with everything which crossed his path. He fought with the
gophers and the lizards. He hurled his throwing stick at beetles,
ants and dragonflies. He shot at the yucca and the giant cactus.
He became a very fierce rabbit indeed.
By the time he reached the edge
of the world, Sun had left the sky and was nowhere to be seen.
'The coward!' sneered Rabbit. 'He
is afraid to fight, but he will not escape me so easily,'
and he settled to wait behind a clump of bushes.
In those days, Sun did not appear
slowly as he does now. Instead he rushed up over the horizon
and into the heavens with one mighty bound. Rabbit knew that
he would have to act quickly in order to ambush him and he
fixed his eyes intently on the spot where the Sun usually
appeared.
Sun, however, had heard all Rabbit's
threats and had watched him fighting. He knew that he was
lying in wait among the bushes. He was not at all afraid of
this puny creature and he thought that he might have some
amusement at his expense.
He rolled some distance away from
his usual place and swept up into the sky before Rabbit knew
what was happening. By the time Rabbit had gathered his startled
wits and released his bowstring, Sun was already high above
him and out of range.
Rabbit stamped and shouted with
rage and vexation. Sun laughed and laughed and shone even
more fiercely than before.
Although almost dead from heat,
Rabbit would not give up. Next morning he tried again, but
this time Sun came up in a different place and evaded him
once more.
Day after day the same thing happened.
Sometimes Sun sprang up on Rabbit's right, sometimes on his
left and sometimes straight in front of him, but always where
Rabbit least expected him.
One morning, however, Sun grew careless.
He rose more leisurely than usual, and this time, Rabbit was
ready. Swiftly he drew his bow. His arrow whizzed through
the air and buried itself deep in Sun's side.
Rabbit was jubilant! At last he
had shot his enemy! Wild with joy, he leaped up and down.
He rolled on the ground, hugging himself. He turned somersaults.
He looked at Sun again - and stopped short.
Where his arrow had pierce Sun,
there was a gaping wound and, from that wound, there gushed
a stream of liquid fire. Suddenly it seemed as if the whole
world had been set ablaze. Flames shot up and rushed towards
Rabbit, crackling and roaring.
Rabbit paused not a moment longer.
He took to his heels in panic and ran as fast as he could
away from the fire. He spied a lone cottonwood tree and scuttled
towards it.
'Everything is burning!' he cried.
'Will you shelter me?'
The cottonwood shook its slender
branches mournfully. 'What can I do?' it asked. 'I will be
burned to the ground.'
Rabbit ran on. Behind him, the flames
were coming closer. He could feel their breath on his back.
A greasewood tree lay in his path.
'Hide me! Hide me!' Rabbit gasped.
'The fire is coming.'
'I cannot help you,' answered the
greasewood tree. 'I will be burned up roots and branches.'
Terrified and almost out of breath,
Rabbit continued to run, but his strength was failing. He
could feel the fire licking at his heels and his fur was beginning
to singe. Suddenly he heard a voice calling to him.
'Quickly, come under me!' The fire
will pass over me so swiftly that it will only scorch my top.'
It was the voice of a small green
bush with flowers like bunches of cotton capping its thin
branches. Gratefully, Rabbit dived below it and lay there
quivering, his eyes tightly shut, his ears flat against his
body.
With a thunderous roar, the sheet
of flame leaped overhead. The little bush crackled and sizzled.
Then, gradually, the noise receded and everything grew quiet
once more.
Rabbit raised his head cautiously
and looked around. Everywhere the earth lay black and smoking,
but the fire had passed on. He was safe!
The little bush which had sheltered
him was no longer green. Burned and scorched by the fire,
it had turned a golden yellow. People now call it the desert
yellow brush, for, although it first grows green, it always
turns yellow when it feels the heat of the sun.
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Desert
Yellow Brush
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Rabbit never recovered from his
fright. To this day, he bears brown spots where the fire scorched
the back of his neck. He is no longer fierce and quarrelsome,
but runs and hides at the slightest noise.
As for Sun, he too was never quite
the same. He now makes himself so bright that no one can look
at him long enough to sight an arrow and he always peers very
warily over the horizon before he brings his full body into
view.
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