120 GLOOSCAP AND OTHER STORIES and placed it by the door of his wigwam. Then he went quietly to bed and fell asleep. In the morning when ho awoke, he looked into the wooden bowl—and there, instead of water, he saw blood; so he knew that the sea-maiden wife had been destroyed by the sorcerers. Pulowech took a stone hatchet and stone- headed arrows, and his bow, and set out to track the sorcerers. At last, he found their trail and followed it along the path that led beyond the forest, and in front of the cliff by the ocean. He travelled on and on, looking very carefully at every object he passed. At last he saw, high up on the cliff, projecting from the rock itself, the lower part of a man's leg. "Ah! This sorcerer thinks that he is hid¬ den in the cliff. He does not know that his end has come," thought Pulowech . And with that he cut the leg off with his stone hatchet; and thus one of the wicked sorcerers of the forest was destroyed, for he could not turn himself back into a human being again, but must always be a part of the cliff. Then Pulowech went on his way, looking all about him as he journeyed along. At last he saw a man's foot and ankle protruding from the cliff near the ground. He took his stone hatchet from his belt, and cut off the foot. And this sorcerer became a part of the stone cliff. He, too, was destroyed.