Darkness had lasted too long, and all the other forest animals
knew it was Turtle's fault.
Long ago, before Turtle had her hard shell, in order to prove her
bravery to the others, Turtle had volunteered for one of the most
important and dangerous jobs
of the forest. Her duty was to bring the Sky Bowl, filled with yellow
corn, up to the cliff top each morning before Sun's first light turned
the hillside red.
She would scatter the corn over the earth, and Sun, knowing he
was needed, would rise.
This morning, though, as Turtle discovered when
she awoke, the Sky Bowl had disappeared.
Vulture's feather. Vulture lived in the crags far to the west where
Sun set. He always complained about how bright the days were and how
short the nights. Vulture had taken the bowl.
Since the Sky Bowl was her responsibility, Turtle set off
through the forest toward the west.
She worried about how she would get the bowl back because the crags
were too high and steep for her to
climb.
As she emerged into a shadowy clearing, Turtle saw Grizzly,
grumbling and rolling as she slept. "Grizzly," she called to the bear,
"I've seen how fast and strong you are and how well you climb. Come
help me get the Sky Bowl back from Vulture so Sun can rise."
"No," Grizzly grumbled, her eyelids heavy. "I have to protect
my cubs in the dark." Turtle heard the little barks and pants of the
cubs behind her.
Turtle left Grizzly and continued on. Finally, she broke
through the trees. At the edge of the wilderness, Moon's cool, hard
light fell on Turtle and she shivered. She saw the crags now, their
chalky faces rising slowly off the valley floor.
Just then Eagle glided down over the foothills above Turtle.
"Eagle! Help me!" Turtle yelled.
Eagle turned his hard, steel-gray eyes on Turtle. "What do you
want?!" Eagle's voice whistled down like an arrow shooting through the
air.
"You can fly. Soar up to Vulture's nook and get the Sky Bowl
back so Sun can rise."
"I'm too hungry," said Eagle. "I've been flying for hours,
trying to catch something. I can't see well in the dark."
Turtle turned away, knowing the job was hers alone. She went to
the crag, looking up, up, up the chalky stone awash in Moon's cold
light. Vulture's nook sat up there, where the rock brushed against the
sky. Turtle tried to climb the steep slope, but slipped back down.
Turtle felt thirsty and needed to think, so she went and sat by
the cool mountain stream flowing down out of the crags. Moon's
roundness floated above, reflected in the water, making the stream's
bubbles and waves gleam. As Turtle sipped the water she stared at Moon,
noticing how beautiful she was. She'd never seen Moon for so long
before, and she no longer feared her.
And as Moon spoke, moonbeams fell to earth
like night rain, and cascaded silently across Turtle’s back, forming a hard shell around her.
Turtle wasn't certain how her new shell could help her get the Sky Bowl back, but she would try.
Turtle went to Vulture's crag, and
called up to him.
"Hey, Vulture! Give back the Sky Bowl!"
"Or what?" Vulture asked, laughing. "Go home before I rip you
apart with my talons." He flew from the nook down toward Turtle,
carrying the bowl in his beak and teasing her with it. Turtle stood
firm.
Vulture descended suddenly, trying to claw Turtle with his sharp
talons. He hit the hard shell instead, barely making a scratch. Angry,
he pecked at Turtle, forgetting he held the bowl. His beak struck the
shell hard and bent at an angle, making him drop the bowl. Turtle,
still unhurt, grabbed it, and retreated back into her shell. Vulture
scratched at the shell for a while, then gave up and flew off.
That was how Turtle earned her shell and Vulture got his
crooked beak. 
In its place lay a single feather, long curved, and smoky gray.


Suddenly, from deep within the darkness came Moon’s voice, whispering softly, "You have shown your bravery well, Turtle. Now go to Vulture and tell
him you want the sky bowl back."
Sun came back the next morning, but from then on he would
shine only half the day, leaving the night to Moon and darkness so that
we might never again forget him.
About the Author: As an English major and anthropology minor at Sonoma State University, Wyatt Bessing was interested in, and studied the myths and legends of many cultures, interests which perhaps helped to inspire this Native-American style Bedtime-Story. While the tale itself is modern, the Sun, the Moon, the Turtle, and the Corn do play similar roles in Pueblo mythology, and these aspects of the story, as well as the ceremony/quest motif were inspired by the Pueblo way of life. During the creation of the story, Wyatt was privileged to have the counsel of two brave dogs, and an ancient WiseCat. You may contact Wyatt Bessing at wbessing@calarts.edu
| Many centuries before European explorers found their way to the western hemisphere, the
Pueblo Indians of what is now New Mexico developed a distinctive and complex civilization.
These peace loving people created an urban life in harmony with the environment and with each
other. Their religion was pantheistic (many entities), and deeply spiritual, and constituted an important an important part of daily life, within which they created an equitable government, a magnificent architecture, intensive agriculture with a sophisticated irrigation system and a highly developed art in pottery, weaving, jewelry, leather work and other crafts.
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