Mighty Mikko - BestLightNovel.com
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Now it happened that Kerttu had a little dog, Musti, that she loved dearly.
"I'll take Musti with me!" she said. "Musti will protect me!"
So she called Musti and Musti wagged his tail and barked with joy at the prospect of going out into the world with his mistress.
Then Kerttu threw down the magic cake in front of her and sang:
"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!"
At once the cake rolled off like a little wheel and Kerttu and Musti followed it. They walked until they were tired. Then Kerttu picked up the little cake and they rested by the wayside. When they were ready again to start the cake a-rolling, all Kerttu had to do was throw it down in front of her and say the magic rime.
Their first day was without adventure. When night came they ate their supper and went to sleep in a field under a tree.
The second day they overtook an ugly old woman whom Kerttu disliked on sight. But she said to herself:
"Shame on you, Kerttu, not liking this woman just because she's old and ugly!" and she made herself answer the old woman's greetings politely and she made Musti stop snarling and growling.
The old hag asked Kerttu who she was and where she was going and Kerttu told her.
"Ah!" said the old woman, "how fortunate that we have met each other for our ways lie together!"
She smiled and petted Kerttu's arm and Kerttu felt like shuddering.
But she restrained herself and told herself severely:
"You're a wicked girl not to feel more friendly to the poor old thing!"
Musti felt much as Kerttu did. He no longer growled for Kerttu had told him not to, but he drooped his tail between his legs and, pressing up close to Kerttu, he trembled with fright. And well he might, too, for the old hag was none other than Suyettar who had been waiting all these years just for this very chance to do further injury to Kerttu and her brothers.
Kerttu, poor child, was, alas! too good and innocent to suspect evil in others. She said to Suyettar:
"Very well, if our ways lie together then we can be companions."
So Suyettar joined Kerttu and Musti and the three of them walked on following the little cake. As the day advanced the sun grew hotter and hotter and at last when they reached a lake Suyettar said:
"My dear, let us sit down here for a few moments and rest."
They all sat down and presently Suyettar said:
"Let us go bathing in the lake. That will refresh us."
Kerttu would have agreed if Musti had not tugged at her skirts and warned her not to.
"Don't do it, dear mistress!" Musti growled softly. "Don't go in bathing with her! She'll bewitch you!"
So Kerttu said:
"No, I don't want to go in bathing."
Suyettar waited until they were again journeying on and then when Kerttu wasn't looking she turned around and kicked Musti and broke one of the poor little dog's legs. Thereafter Musti had to hop along on three legs.
The next afternoon when they pa.s.sed another lake, Suyettar tried again to tempt Kerttu into the water.
"The sun is very hot," she said, "and it would refresh us both to bathe. Come, Kerttu, my dear, don't refuse me this time!"
But again Musti tugged at Kerttu's skirts and, licking her hand, whispered the warning:
"Don't do it, dear mistress! Don't go in bathing with her or she will bewitch you!"
So again Kerttu said politely:
"No, I don't feel like going in bathing. You go in alone and I'll wait for you here."
But this was not what Suyettar wanted and she said, no, she didn't care to go in alone. She was furious, too, with Musti and later when Kerttu wasn't looking she gave the poor little dog a kick that broke another leg. Thereafter Musti had to hop along on two legs.
They slept the third night by the wayside and the next day they went on again always following the magic cake. In midafternoon they pa.s.sed a lake and Suyettar said:
"Surely, my dear, you must be tired and hot. Let us both bathe in this cool lake."
But Musti, hopping painfully along on two legs, yelped weakly and said to Kerttu:
"Don't do it, dear mistress! Don't go in bathing with her or she'll bewitch you!"
So for a third time Kerttu refused and later, when she wasn't looking, Suyettar kicked Musti and broke the third of the poor little dog's legs. Thereafter Musti hopped on as best he could on only one leg.
Well, they went on and on. When night came they slept by the roadside and then next morning they started on again. The sun grew hot and by midafternoon Kerttu was tired and ready to rest. When they reached a lake Suyettar again begged that they both go in bathing. Kerttu was tempted to agree when poor Musti threw himself panting at her feet and whimpered:
"Don't do it, dear mistress! Don't go in bathing with her or she will bewitch you!"
So Kerttu again refused.
"That's right, dear mistress!" Musti panted, "don't do it! I shall soon be dead, I know, for she hates me, but before I die I want to warn you one last time never to go in bathing with her or she will bewitch you!"
"What's that dog saying?" Suyettar demanded angrily, and without waiting for an answer she picked up a heavy piece of wood and struck poor Musti such a blow on the head that it killed him.
"What have you done to my poor little dog?" Kerttu cried.
"Don't mind him, my dear," Suyettar said. "He was sick and lame and it was better to put him out of his misery."
Suyettar tried to soothe Kerttu and make her forget Musti but all afternoon Kerttu wept to think that she would never again see her faithful little friend.
The next afternoon when Suyettar begged her to go in bathing there was no Musti to warn her against it and at last Kerttu allowed herself to be persuaded. She was tired from her many days' wandering and it was true that the first touch of the cool water refreshed her.
"Now splash water in my face!" Suyettar cried.
But Kerttu didn't want to splash water into Suyettar's face for she supposed Suyettar was an old woman and she thought it would be disrespectful to splash water into the face of an old woman.
"Do you hear me!" screamed Suyettar.