
|
![]() |
Sedna began her life with the bird-phantom in a swirl of pure pleasure but gradually the enchantment began to fade and she became aware of her surroundings. She was high atop a barren cliff in a rough nest strewn with discarded fish remains. It was cold, wet, uncomfortable and smelly.
Despite this Sedna remained captivated by her husband's charms and thought him to be the most perfect man. That is until the day when, thinking his wife slept, he removed his glasses. Sedna jumped back in horror as she looked into the bird eyes and for the first time she was able to appreciate the horror of her situation.
When Sedna had gone with the stranger her father had been heartbroken and set off in his canoe to find her. Well, it was the very day after Sedna had seen her husband clearly for the first time that he arrived in the swelling ocean beneath the nest to hear her distraught cries.
Sedna dived from the nest and her father pulled her aboard his canoe and wasted no time in pointing his canoe homewards in case the petrel should return. But as they paddled away the petrel's sharp eye saw them and he swooped from the skies to intercept them. He pleaded with Sedna to stay with him but she would not. The petrel rose on a sudden gust of sea wind, uttered the strange cry of the loon and, heartbroken, flew off into the empty icy wastes.
As he left a great swell started and storm clouds broke over the kayak. Thunder lightening and rain lashed the little vessel and Sedna's father was filled with a dreadful fear. He had offended the spirits and surely he was doomed, all that could save him was to throw his daughter overboard into the seething ocean. He grabbed Sedna, she fought him like a devil possessed, the kayak rocked and looked as if it would overturn. They scratched and hit at each other in a violent frenzy. Finally, flailing, Sedna tumbled into the turbulent waters.
As she fell she managed to grab at the canoe, seized with panic her father grabbed the paddle and chopped at her hands. First the top joints of her fingers were severed and as they fell they turned into seals. Then the second joints fell away and became deep-sea seals. The third joints became walruses; finally the fractured thumbs became great whales. And as Sedna sank into the depths a great calm descended over the ocean.
Her father was overcome by a great weariness and rowed to the shore to set up his tent. He crawled inside to sleep and as he slept a great wave came crashing upon him and took him deep, deep to the ocean's floor. Sedna and her father live there still. Sedna rules over the sea and its creatures and all who die must pass through her kingdom.