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"Poor fellows! Poor fellows!" Log said, and the Princess wept to think of the awful fate that had overtaken her two sisters.
Well, Log and his bride reached home without further adventure and were received by the King with great honors.
"I knew my heroes were succeeding," the King said, "when first the Dawn appeared again, and then the Moon, and last the mighty Sun. All hail to you, Log, and to your two comrades! But, by the way, where are Three Bottles and Six Bottles?"
"Your Majesty," Log said, "Three Bottles and Six Bottles were brave men both. By their prowess they released the one the Dawn, the other the Moon. Then in an evil adventure on the way home they perished. I can tell you no more."
"You can tell me no more?" the King said. "Why can you tell me no more? What was the evil adventure in which they perished?"
"If I told you, O King, then I, too, should perish, for I should be turned into a blue cross and stood forever in the cemetery!"
"What nonsense!" the King exclaimed. "Who would turn you into a blue cross and stand you forever in the cemetery?"
"That is what I cannot tell you," Log said.
The King laughed and pressed Log no further, but the people of the kingdom, scenting a mystery, insisted on knowing in detail what had happened the other two heroes. Presently the rumor began to spread that Log himself had done away with them in order that he might gather to himself all the glory of the undertaking.
The King was forced at last to send for him again and to demand a full account of everything.
Log realized that his end was near. He met it bravely. Commending to the King's protection his lovely bride, the Youngest Princess, Log related how the three mighty Serpents whom they had killed were sons of Suyettar, and how in revenge Suyettar had succeeded in destroying Three Bottles and Six Bottles together with their brides. Then he told the fate about to overtake himself.
He finished speaking and as the King and the Court looked at him, to their amazement he disappeared.
"To the cemetery!" some one cried.
They all went to the cemetery where at once they found a fresh blue cross that had come there n.o.body knew how. There it stands to this day, a reminder of the life and deeds of the mighty hero, Log.
The King was overcome with sorrow at losing such a hero. He took Log's bride under his protection and he found her so beautiful and so gentle that soon he fell in love with her and married her.
THE LITTLE SISTER
[Decoration]
_The Story of Suyettar and the Nine Brothers_
THE LITTLE SISTER
[Decoration]
There was once a woman who had nine sons. They were good boys and loved her dearly but there was one thing about which they were always complaining.
"Why haven't we a little sister?" they kept asking. "Do give us a little sister!"
When the time came that another child was to be born, they said to their mother:
"If the baby is a boy we are going away and you will never see us again, but if it is a little girl then we shall stay home and take care of it."
The mother agreed that if the child were a girl she would have her husband put a spindle outside on the gatepost and, if it were a boy, an ax.
"Just wait," she said, "and see what your father puts on the gatepost and then you will know whether it is another brother G.o.d has sent you or a little sister."
The baby turned out to be a girl and the mother was overjoyed.
"Hurry, husband!" she cried, "and put a spindle on the gatepost so that our nine sons may know the good news!"
The man did so and then quickly returned to the mother and baby. The moment he was gone Suyettar slipped up and changed the tokens. She took away the spindle and put in its place an ax. Then with an evil grin she hurried off mumbling to herself:
"Now we'll see what we'll see!"
She hoped to bring trouble and grief and she succeeded. As soon as the nine sons saw the ax on the gatepost they thought their mother had given birth to another son and at once they left home vowing never to return.
The poor mother waited for them and waited.
"What is keeping my sons?" she cried at last. "Go out to the gate, husband, and see if they are coming."
The man went out and soon returned bringing back word that some one had changed the tokens.
"The spindle that I put on the gatepost is gone," he said, "and in its place is an ax."
"Alas!" cried the poor mother, "some evil creature has done this to spite us! Oh, if we could only get word to our sons of the little sister they were so eager to have!"
But there was no way to reach them for no one knew the way they had gone.
In a short time the husband died and the poor woman, abandoned by her nine sons, had only her little daughter left. She named the child Kerttu. Kerttu was a dear little girl and her face was as beautiful as her heart was good. Whenever she found her mother weeping alone she tried to comfort her and, as she grew older, she wanted to know the cause of her mother's grief. At last the mother told her about her nine brothers and how they had gone away never to return owing to the trick of some evil creature.
"My poor mother!" she cried, "how sorry I am that I am the innocent cause of your loss! Let me go out into the world and find my brothers!
When once they hear the truth they will gladly come home to you to care for you in your old age!"
At first the mother would not consent to this.
"You are all I have," she said, "and I should indeed be miserable and lonely if anything happened you!"
But Kerttu continued to weep every time she thought of her poor brothers driven unnecessarily from home and at last the mother, realizing that she would nevermore be happy unless she were allowed to go in search of them, gave up opposing her.
"Very well, my daughter, you may go and may G.o.d go with you and bring you safely back to me. But before you go I must prepare you a bag of food for the journey and bake you a magic cake that will show you the way."
So she baked a batch of bread and at the same time mixed a little round cake with Kerttu's own tears and baked it, too. Then she said:
"Here now, my child, are provisions for the journey and here is a magic cake that will lead you to your brothers. All you have to do is throw it down in front of you and say:
'Roll, roll, my little cake!
Show me the way that I must take To find at last the brothers nine Whose own true mother is also mine!'
Then the little cake will start rolling and do you follow wherever it rolls. But, Kerttu, my child, you must not start out alone. You must have some friend or companion to go with you."