One day long ago a traveling party of the Kiowa People were crossing  the great prairie and camped by a stream. Many of the Bear People lived  nearby, and they smelled the Kiowa People. The Bear People were hungry,  and some of the bear warriors went out to hunt the Kiowa People. 
  Seven young girls from the Kiowa camp were out gathering berries, up  along the stream, far from the campsite. The Bears came upon them and  growled to attack. The girls ran and ran, out across the open prairie,  until they came to a large gray rock. They climbed onto the rock, but the  bears began to climb the rock also. 
  The girls began to sing a prayer to the rock, asking it to protect them  form the Bear People. No one had ever honored the rock before, and the  rock agreed to help them. The rock, who had laid quietly for centuries,  began to stand up and reach to the sky. The girls rose higher and  higher as the rock stood up. The bear warriors began to sing to the bear  gods, and the bears grew taller as the rock rose up. 
  The bears tried and tried to climb the rock as it grew steeper and  higher, but their huge claws only split the rock face into thousands of  strips as the rock grew up out of their reach. Pieces of rock were scraped  and cut away by the thousands and fell in piles at the foot of the  rock. The rock was cut and scarred on all of its sides as the bears fought  to climb it. 
  At last, the bears gave up the hunt, and turned to go back to their own  houses. They slowly returned to the original sizes. As the huge bears  came back across the prairie, slowly becoming smaller, the Kiowas saw  them and broke camp. They fled in fear, and looking back at the towering  mountain of rock, they guessed that it must be the lodge of these giant  bears. "Tso' Ai'," some People say today, or "Bears' Lodge." 
  The Kiowa girls were afraid, high up on the rock, and they saw their  People break camp and leave them there, thinking the girls had all  already been eaten by the bears. 
  The girls sang again, this time to the stars. The stars were happy to  hear their song, and the stars came down and took the seven girls into  the sky, the Seven Sisters, and each night they pass over Bears' Lodge  and smile in gratitude to the rock spirit. 
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