These were happy days in the Green
Forest. At least, they were happy for Lightfoot
the Deer. They were the happiest days he had
ever known. You see, he had won beautiful, slender,
young Miss Daintyfoot, and now she was no longer Miss
Daintyfoot but Mrs. Lightfoot. Lightfoot was
sure that there was no one anywhere so beautiful as
she, and Mrs. Lightfoot knew that there was no one
so handsome and brave as he.
Wherever Lightfoot went, Mrs. Lightfoot
went. He showed her all his favorite hiding-places.
He led her to his favorite eating-places. She
did not tell him that she was already acquainted with
every one of them, that she knew the Green Forest
quite as well as he did. If he had stopped to
think how day after day she had managed to keep out
of his sight while he hunted for her, he would have
realized that there was little he could show her which
she did not already know. But he didn’t
stop to think and proudly led her from place to place.
And Mrs. Lightfoot wisely expressed delight with
all she saw quite as if it were all new.
Of course, all the little people of
the Green Forest hurried to pay their respects to
Mrs. Lightfoot and to tell Lightfoot how glad they
felt for him. And they really did feel glad.
You see, they all loved Lightfoot and they knew that
now he would be happier than ever, and that there
would be no danger of his leaving the Green Forest
because of loneliness. The Green Forest would
not be the same at all without Lightfoot the Deer.
Lightfoot told Mrs. Lightfoot all
about the terrible days of the hunting season and
how glad he was that she had not been in the Green
Forest then. He told her how the hunters with
terrible guns had given him no rest and how he had
had to swim the Big River to get away from the hounds.
“I know,” replied Mrs.
Lightfoot softly. “I know all about it.
You see, there were hunters on the Great Mountain.
In fact, that is how I happened to come down to the
Green Forest. They hunted me so up there that
I did not dare stay, and I came down here thinking
that there might be fewer hunters. I wouldn’t
have believed that I could ever be thankful to hunters
for anything, but I am, truly I am.”
There was a puzzled look on Lightfoot’s
face. “What for?” he demanded.
“I can’t imagine anybody being thankful
to hunters for anything.”
“Oh, you stupid,” cried
Mrs. Lightfoot. “Don’t you see that
if I hadn’t been driven down from the Great
Mountain, I never would have found you?”
“You mean, I never would have
found you,” retorted Lightfoot. “I
guess I owe these hunters more than you do. I
owe them the greatest happiness I have ever known,
but I never would have thought of it myself.
Isn’t it queer how things which seem the very
worst possible sometimes turn out to be the very best
possible?”
Blacky the Crow is one of Lightfoot’s
friends, but sometimes even friends are envious.
It is so with Blacky. He insists that he is
quite as important in the Green Forest as is Lightfoot
and that his doings are quite as interesting.
Therefore just to please him the next book is to
be Blacky the Crow.
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the Deer by Thornton W. Burgess *This file should
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