One summer the fox heard that Ankakumikaityn the
nomad wolf was courting his neighbor, the elder she-dog.
So the wily fox made himself an outfit of wolf's clothing: a
grey fur cloak, boots and cap. Then, when the she-dog's brothers
were away and she was at home with her younger sister, he called
upon her.
"I have two herds of fat reindeer," said the fox to
the elder sister, as he sipped the bilberry tea she offered him.
"I have come to seek your hand."
Thinking that this was, indeed, Ankakumikaityn the nomad
wolf, the she-dog treated him to reindeer meat, hot mare's-blood
sausages, raw walrus liver and pickled fish, the very choicest
pieces. All the while, the fox sat in his cap, unwilling to take
it off lest he be recognized.
"Being a wealthy person," he explained, "I
keep my cap on that people might respect me."
All of a sudden, the sound of dogs barking could be heard
from afar.
"It is my brothers returning from hunting," the
she-dog said.
"Oh dear," exclaimed the fox, "they will
likely scare my herds. I must run to caution them."
Once away from the tent, the fox quickly dashed up the nearby
hill and loosened some rocks. When the dog brothers came in
sight, he pushed the boulders down the hillside and crushed them
all. Thereupon, he returned to the tent and finished his tea,
charming the sisters with his oily-tongued tales. As dusk fell
and the sisters were busy about their housework, he made off
with all their food supplies.
Early next morning, the sisters became most alarmed on
discovering their supplies gone and their brothers still absent.
As they searched the valley and found their poor brothers dead,
they wept in despair.
"Who could have done us such harm?" they wailed.
In their sorrow, they decided to go to Ankakumikaityn to seek
his counsel. The nomad wolf was puzzled.
"But I never came to you yesterday!" he exclaimed.
It was not long before the sisters realized they had been
tricked by the fox. With the wolf's help, they worked out a plan
to get their revenge.
Next day, the fox, unaware that he had been discovered called
on the sisters again dressed as Ankakumikaityn. But this time
they were expecting him. While the fox drank bilberry tea and
exchanged pleasantries, the nomad wolf stealthily entered the
tent, grabbed the treacherous fox and tied him up.
"What shall we do with the scoundrel?" asked the
wolf.
"Let's put him in a sack and leave him in the
tundra," suggested the two sisters.
That they did. The poor fox almost fainted from fright,
wondering what his fate would be. At last, he was set down with
a bump; the younger sister collected a heap of dry grass and
brushwood for a fire, piled it round the sack, surrounded the
tinder with stones and then lit the fire.
Poor fox. He at last burst out of the burning sack, his
wolf's clothing aflame, and rushed headlong over the tundra like
a burning torch.
Satisfied at their revenge, the dog sisters and the wolf
returned to the tent. Ankakumikaityn wed the elder sister, and
the younger dog looked after their children. Some time later,
she found herself a husband too.
Since that time red foxes began to appear in the tundra. So
it seems that wily old fox, scorched and fiery red, managed to
survive his roasting after all.