The game of hide and seek between
Lightfoot the Deer and the beautiful stranger whose
dainty footprints had first started Lightfoot to seeking
her had been going on for several days and nights
when Lightfoot found something which gave him a shock.
He had stolen very softly clown to the Laughing Brook,
hoping to surprise the beautiful stranger drinking
there. She wasn’t to be seen. Lightfoot
wondered if she had been there, so looked in the mud
at the edge of the Laughing Brook to see if there were
any fresh prints of those dainty feet. Almost
at once he discovered fresh footprints. They
were not the prints he was looking for. No,
Sir, they were not the dainty prints he had learned
to know so well. They were prints very near
the size of his own big ones, and they had been made
only a short time before.
The finding of those prints was a
dreadful shock to Lightfoot. He understood instantly
what they meant. They meant that a second stranger
had come into the Green Forest, one who had antlers
like his own. Jealousy took possession of Lightfoot
the Deer; jealousy that filled his heart with rage.
“He has come here to seek that
beautiful stranger I have been hunting for,”
thought Lightfoot. “He has come here to
try to steal her away from me. He has no right
here in my Green Forest. He belongs back up
on the Great Mountain from which he must have come,
for there is no other place he could have come from.
That is where that beautiful stranger must have come
from, too. I want her to stay, but I must drive
this fellow out. I’ll make him fight.
That’s what I’ll do; I’ll make him
fight! I’m not afraid of him, but I’ll
make him fear me.”
Lightfoot stamped his feet and with
his great antlers thrashed the bushes as if he felt
that they were the enemy he sought. Could you
have looked into his great eyes then, you would have
found nothing soft and beautiful about them.
They became almost red with anger. Lightfoot quivered
all over with rage. The hair on the back of
his neck stood up. Lightfoot the Deer looked
anything but gentle.
After he had vented his spite for
a few minutes on the harmless, helpless bushes, he
threw his head high in the air and whistled angrily.
Then he leaped over the Laughing Brook and once more
began to search through the Green Forest. But
this time it was not for the beautiful stranger with
the dainty feet. He had no time to think of
her now. He must first find this newcomer and
he meant to waste no time in doing it.