Jupka was angry because Damhauja had tried to kill Juiwaiyu with the poisonous pipe. Now he took vengeance. He put the two sisters on a high place in the sweat-house, made a great storm of wind and rain. Soon the whole place was filled with water. It rolled and swept through the sweat-house, drowned Damhauja and his wife; washed their bodies out through the door away.

Juiwaiyu on the mountain took his yaiyauna flute and began to play. All the world heard him, all people went to hill-tops and mountain-tops, all stretched their heads up and listened, all said, “That must be Juiwaiyu; no one plays in that way but Juiwaiyu.” Deer began to come from the east along the same way over which Juiwaiyu had come, and all stood before him.

“Let one stand in front of me and look this way,” said Juiwaiyu, “let all the others stand behind that first one.”

They stood in the line, a fawn in the first place. He shot them all with one arrow, hundreds of them. The arrow entered the mouth of the front deer and went out near the tail of the last. Then Juiwaiyu took the little fawn and opened it, made the deer very small, put them all inside the fawn’s body, took that home in one hand, threw the fawn down on the sweat-house. The deer inside the fawn became as big as ever, rolled down, filled the whole place around the sweat-house.

Juiwaiyu now saw Damhauja and Pahnino Marimi lying cold and dead. He ran then to Jupka in the sweat-house. “Bring them to life, my uncle; bring them to life again!”

Jupka whipped both with a rose-twig and brought them to life. Damhauja shook himself and said, “I slept too hard.”

“You would not have waked up at all but for my nephew. You wanted to kill him. I punished you.”

Damhauja knew Jupka now. “Oh, why did you not let me know that you were here? I would not have tried to hurt Juiwaiyu.”

The old man saw so many deer around the sweat-house that he didn’t know what to think. At last he went up on the sweat-house. “Come, my sons, come,” cried he; “there is venison here for all of you.”

All the sons came. Each had one deer, and there were many others to spare.