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At last, one night, she followed Aglu and his companions to the surface.
It had been a rich time for the scavengers and the cubs of Aglu.
Aglu, her brother, came running through the burrows.
But Aglu was sly, and nothing was ever proven.
It was over the moment I tusked that spawn of Aglu.
He would not be destroyed, in this dismal place, by a carrion-breathed cub of Aglu!
Aglu's followers soon fled, leaving Kilukpuk facing her brother.
One was called Aglu.
Now, Kilukpuk had a brother, called Aglu.
Aglu grew frightened.
While the others were skinny and raddled by disease, Aglu and his band of companions seemed sleek and healthy.
Though Longtusk was rightly wary of any cub of Aglu, he approached the wolf.
She saw that Aglu and the others made little effort to conceal themselves-in fact, they laughed and cavorted in the Moonlight.
And when an unwary Hotblood came poking her nose out of the ground, Aglu and his friends prepared to attack her.
When they had eaten their fill of the roots and green plants, Aglu and his friends climbed up low bushes and hurled themselves at the ground.
She fell on Aglu and his followers, cuffing and kicking and biting them, scattering their pebbles and their sticks.
In the winter, Inuit would also hunt sea mammals by patiently watching an aglu (breathing hole) in the ice and waiting for the air-breathing seals to use them.
He is buried at the Dar al-Murabitin Ribat in Aglu a village near Tiznit, Morocco where his grave became a shrine known as "Sidi Waggag".
Silverhair could see the wolf's moist eyes, the gleam of her teeth in the sunlight, and imagined the calculation going on in her sharp-edged mind, the dark legacy of Aglu, brother of Kilukpuk.
He then went to the Sous where he founded a Ribat in the village of Aglu (located near preset-day Tiznit) named Ribat al-Murabitin where he took disciples and taught the Maliki doctrine.
The name might be related to the ribat of Waggag ibn Zallu in the village of Aglu (near present-day Tiznit), where the future Almoravid spiritual leader Abdallah ibn Yasin got his initial training.
He was a Maliki theologian, he was a disciple of Waggag ibn Zallu al-Lamti and studied in his Ribat, "Dar al-Murabitin" which was located in the village of Aglu, (near present-day Tiznit).
As for Aglu, some say he was ripped apart and eaten by his own calves, and they have never forgotten the taste of that grisly repast: for they became the bear and the wolf, and the other Hotbloods that eat their own kind.