wanted to see if he would be a better sled-deer for having begun his training early.
âAklak,â cried Tuktu. âI know you donât really believe that I saw the Good Spirit, but you know that the deer visit the Valley of the Good Spirit every year ; and you know that every year some are chosen and do not return with the herd ; but are found the next year.â
Aklak nodded. âYes,â said he, âI know all that.â
âThen listen to me, Aklak,â said Tuktu. âThose deer are chosen because they are the finest in all the great herd. They are chosen to be the sled-deer of the Good Spirit when he makes his great journey to carry the message of love and happiness to the children of the Great World. Why couldnât we train those deer for the Good Spirit, that he may not have to do it himself?â
Boylike, Aklak laughed. âHow,â he demanded, âcan we train the deer when we do not know which deer the Good Spirit will choose? You say that this year he has chosen one from our own herd, but it is the first time it has happened even if it be true. The other deer were chosen from other herds. So how can we know what deer the Good Spirit may choose?â
âWe cannot know,â replied Tuktu. âThat is, we cannot know for a certainty. But we can do this, Aklak : we can pick out the finest and the handsomest, the swiftest and the strongest of the deer in our herd, and we can train themâI mean, you can train them,Aklak, and perhaps I can help a little. Then, perhaps, when the herd visits the Valley of the Good Spirit next summer, he will discover that these deer are already trained. I just know that he will
know
. Just think, Aklak, how wonderful it would be to help Santa, the Good Spirit.â
Now, Tuktuâs thought was all of helping the Good Spirit, but Aklak, though he thought of this, was more selfish in his thoughts, though he said nothing to Tuktu. To himself he thought, âIf Tuktu should be right and the Good Spirit should choose the deer I have trained, it would be the first time that all the magic deer have been chosen from one herd. If the owner of one or two chosen by the Good Spirit is blessed, how much greater would the blessing be if the eight deer should be chosen from one herd.â
The more Aklak thought over Tuktuâs plan, the better it seemed to him. So, a few days later when they were out together, he promised to try it.
âBut we must keep the secret,â said he. âNo one must know what we are doing, for the herders would laugh at us and make fun of us. They will see me training the deer, but they will not suspect that they are being trained for a special purpose. Let us go out now and pick out those to be trained.â
Tuktu watching Aklak train a young deer
Now, Aklak was a splendid judge of deer. He knew all the fine points, for he had been well taught by his father. So it was that often when Tuktu would point out what seemed to her a particularly fine animal, Aklak would shake his head and would point out to her that it was not as fine as it seemed. There would be some little blemish. Now and then he would find a deer that suited him. Sometimes the deer would be wild and difficult to approach. Then Tuktu would help. Sometimes the deer would struggle after it had been roped, and every time that Aklak came near would strike with its forefeet, as only a reindeer can. Then Tuktu would pet it and soothe it, until in a few days it would be gentle and easy to handle.
At first, Aklak would look only among his fatherâs deer. He wanted those eight deer to be from his fatherâs herd. And so he would not look at some of the finest deer of the great herd, which his father did not own,but of which he had charge. That was the selfishness in Aklak. But when Tuktu refused to have anything to do with these deer, because there were finer ones in the great herd, he admitted after a while that she was right. He didnât
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