bodies, but their spirits. Their women watched over thebodies and the waves, and the men took their spirits back to our harbor.
銆��鈥淭hey could not physically touch the enemy tribe, but they had other ways. The stories tell us that theycould blow fierce winds into their enemy鈥檚 camps; they could make a great screaming in the wind that terrifiedtheir foes. The stories also tell us that the animals could see the spirit warriors and understand them; theanimals would do their bidding.
銆��鈥淜aheleha took his spirit army and wreaked havoc on the intruders. This invading tribe had packs of big,cheap coach bags,thick-furred dogs that they used to pull their sleds in the frozen north. The spirit warriors turned the dogsagainst their masters and then brought a mighty infestation of bats up from the cliff caverns. They used thescreaming wind to aid the dogs in confusing the men. The dogs and bats won. The survivors scattered,cheap furla bags, callingour harbor a cursed place. The dogs ran wild when the spirit warriors released them. The Quileutes returnedto
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