As Lightfoot the Deer and the big
stranger from the Great Mountain fought in the little
opening near the pond of Paddy the Beaver, neither
knew or cared who saw them. Each was filled fully
with rage and determined to drive the other from the
Green Forest. Each was fighting for the right
to win the love of Miss Daintyfoot.
Neither of them knew that Miss Daintyfoot
herself was watching them. But she was.
She had heard the clash of their great antlers as
they had come together the first time, and she had
known exactly what it meant. Timidly she had
stolen forward to a thicket where, safely hidden,
she could watch that terrible fight. She knew
that they were fighting for her. Of course.
She knew it just as she had known how both had been
hunting for her. What she didn’t know
for some time was which one she wantedto win that
fight.
Both Lightfoot and the big stranger
were handsome. Yes, indeed, they were very handsome.
Lightfoot was just a little bit the bigger and it
seemed to her just a little bit the handsomer.
She almost wanted him to win. Then, when she
saw how bravely the big stranger was fighting and
how well he was holding his own, even though he was
a little smaller than Lightfoot, she almost hoped
he would win.
That great fight lasted a long time.
To pretty Miss Daintyfoot it seemed that it never
would end. But after a while Lightfoot’s
greater size and strength began to tell. Little
by little the big stranger was forced back towards
the edge of the open place. Now he would be
thrown to his knees when Lightfoot wasn’t.
As Lightfoot saw this, he seemed to gain new strength.
At last he caught the stranger in such a way that
he threw him over. While the stranger struggled
to get to his feet again, Lightfoot’s sharp
antlers made long tears in his gray coat. The
stranger was beaten and he knew it. The instant
he succeeded in getting to his feet he turned tail
and plunged for the shelter of the Green Forest.
With a snort of triumph, Lightfoot plunged after him.
But now that he was beaten, fear took
possession of the stranger. All desire to fight
left him. His one thought was to get away, and
fear gave him speed. Straight back towards the
Great Mountain from which he had come the stranger
headed. Lightfoot followed only a short distance.
He knew that that stranger was going for good and
would not come back. Then Lightfoot turned back
to the open place where they had fought. There
he threw up his beautiful head, crowned by its great
antlers, and whistled a challenge to all the Green
Forest. As she looked at him, Miss Daintyfoot
knew that she had wanted him to win. She knew
that there simply couldn’t be anybody else so
handsome and strong and brave in all the Great World.