Why the Crickets Sing at Night retold by Sam Abbott
Long ago, when the world was newly made and the stars had only just learned their places in the sky, the nights were utterly silent. No wind moved through the grass, no owl called from the trees, and no creature dared to break the great quiet that fell when the sun went down. A small brown cricket named Tev watched the moon rise, and every evening he wished he could offer her a song. But his voice was no louder than a falling leaf, and the moon was very far away. One night, in desperation, Tev climbed to the tallest blade of grass in the meadow and cried out to Ulima, the goddess of the night, begging her for a way to be heard. Ulima came down to him in a shaft of silver light. She gave him a gift no creature had ever received: two delicate wings that, when rubbed together, would carry his love-song across the entire world. And that is why, ever since that night, crickets have sung beneath the moon.