Every one was on hand when school
opened the next morning, despite the fear that the
mere mention of Shadow the Weasel had aroused in all
save Jimmy Skunk and Prickly Porky. You see,
all felt they must be there so that they might learn
all they possibly could about one they so feared.
It might help them to escape should they discover
Shadow hunting them sometime.
“Striped Chipmunk,” said
Old Mother Nature, “you know something about
Shadow the Weasel, tell us what you know.”
“I know I hate him!” declared
Striped Chipmunk, and all the others nodded their
heads in agreement. “I don’t know
a single good thing about him,” he continued,
“but I know plenty of bad things. He is
the one enemy I fear more than any other because he
is the one who can go wherever I can. Any hole
I can get into he can. I’ve seen him just
twice in my life, and I hope I may never see him again.”
“What did he look like?” asked Old Mother
Nature.
“Like a snake on legs,”
declared Striped Chipmunk. “Anyway, that
is what he made me think of, because his body was so
long and slim and he twisted and turned so easily.
He was about as long as Chatterer the Red Squirrel
but looked longer because of his slim body and long
neck. He was brown above and white below.
His front feet were white, and his hind feet rather
whitish, but not clear white. His short, round
tail was black at the end. Somehow his small
head and sharp face made me think of a Snake.
Ugh! I don’t like to think about him!”
“I saw him once, and he wasn’t
brown at all. Striped Chipmunk is all wrong,
excepting about the end of his tail,” interrupted
Jumper the Hare. “He was all white, every
bit of him but the end of his tail, that was black.”
“Striped Chipmunk is quite right
and so are you,” declared Old Mother Nature.
“Striped Chipmunk saw him in summer and you
saw him in winter. He changes his coat according
to season, just as you do yourself, Jumper.
In winter he is trapped for his fur and he isn’t
called Weasel then at all, but Ermine.”
“Oh,” said Jumper and
looked as if he felt a wee bit foolish.
“What was he doing when you
saw him?” asked Old Mother Nature, turning to
Striped Chipmunk.
“Hunting,” replied Striped
Chipmunk, and shivered. “He was hunting
me. He had found my tracks where I had been gathering
beechnuts, and he was following them with his nose
just the way Bowser the Hound follows Reddy Fox.
I nearly died of fright when I saw him.”
“You are lucky to be alive,”
declared Chatterer the Red Squirrel.
“I know it,” replied Striped
Chipmunk and shivered again. “I know it.
I guess I wouldn’t be if Reddy Fox hadn’t
happened along just then and frightened Shadow away.
I’ve had a kindlier feeling for Reddy Fox ever
since.”
“I never ran harder in my life
than the time I saw him,” spoke up Jumper the
Hare. “He was hunting me just the same
way, running with his nose in the snow and following
every twist and turn I had made. But for that
black-tipped tail I wouldn’t have seen him until
too late.”
“Pooh!” exclaimed Jimmy
Skunk. “The idea of a big fellow like you
running from such a little fellow as my Cousin Shadow!”
“I’m not ashamed of running,”
declared Jumper. “I may be ever so much
bigger, but he is so quick I wouldn’t stand the
least chance in the world. When I suspect Shadow
is about, I go somewhere else, the farther the better.
If I could climb a tree like Chatterer, it would
be different.”
“No, it wouldn’t!”
interrupted Chatterer. “No, it wouldn’t.
That fellow can climb almost as well as I can.
The only thing that saved me from him once was the
fact that I could make a long jump from one tree to
another and he couldn’t. He had found a
hole in a certain tree where I was living, and it
was just luck that I wasn’t at home when he
called. I was just returning when he popped
out. I ran for my life.”
“He is the most awful fellow
in all the Great World,” declared Whitefoot
the Wood Mouse.
Jimmy Skunk chuckled right out.
“A lot you know about the Great World,”
he said. “Why, you are farther from home
now than you’ve ever been in your life before,
yet I could walk to it in a few minutes. How
do you know Shadow is the most awful fellow in the
Great World?”
“I just know, that’s all,”
retorted Whitefoot in a very positive though squeaky
voice. “He hunts and kills just for the
love of it, and no one, no matter how big he is, can
do anything more awful than that. I have a lot
of enemies. Sometimes it seems as if almost
every one of my neighbors is looking for a Mouse dinner.
But all but Shadow the Weasel hunt me when they are
hungry and need food. I can forgive them for
that. Every one must eat to live. But
Shadow hunts me even when his stomach is so full he
cannot eat another mouthful. That fellow just
loves to kill. He takes pleasure in it.
That is what makes him so awful.”
“Whitefoot is right,”
declared Old Mother Nature, and she spoke sadly.
“If Shadow was as big as Buster Bear or Puma
the Panther or even Tufty the Lynx, he would be the
most terrible creature in all the Great World because
of this awful desire to kill which fills him.
He is hot-blooded, quick-tempered and fearless.
Even when cornered by an enemy against whom he has
no chance he will fight to the last gasp. I
am sorry to say that there is no kindness nor gentleness
in him towards any save his own family. Outside
of that he hasn’t a friend in the world, not
one.”
“Hasn’t he any enemies?” asked Peter
Rabbit.
“Oh, yes,” replied Old
Mother Nature. “Reddy Fox, Old Man Coyote,
Hooty the Owl and various members of the Hawk family
have to be watched for by him. But they do not
worry him much. You see he moves so quickly,
dodging out of sight in a flash, that whoever catches
him must be quick indeed. Then, too, he is almost
always close to good cover. He delights in old
stone walls, stone piles, brush-grown fences, piles
of rubbish and barns and old buildings, the places
that Mice delight in. In such places there is
always a hole to dart into in time of danger.
He hunts whenever he feels like it, be it day or
night, and often covers considerable ground, though
nothing to compare with his big, brown, water-loving
cousin, Billy Mink. It is because of his wonderful
ability to disappear in an instant that he is called
Shadow.
“Shadow is known as the Common
Weasel, Short-tailed Weasel, Brown Weasel, Bonaparte
Weasel and Ermine, and is found all over the forested
parts of the northern part of the country. A
little farther south in the East is a cousin very
much like him called the New York Weasel. On
the Great Plains of the West is a larger cousin with
a longer tail called the Long-tailed Weasel, Large
Ermine, or Yellow-bellied Weasel. His smallest
cousin is the Least Weasel. The latter is not
much longer than a Mouse. In winter he is all
white, even the tip of his tail. In summer he
is a purer white underneath than his larger cousins.
All of the Weasels are alike in habits. When
running they bound over the ground much as Peter Rabbit
does.
“In that part of the West where
Yap Yap the Prairie Dog lives is a relative called
the Blackfooted Ferret who looks like a large Weasel.
He is about the size of Billy Mink, but instead of
the rich dark brown of Billy’s coat his coat
is a creamy yellow. His feet are black and so
is the tip of his tail. His face is whitish
with a dark band across the eyes. He is most
frequently found in Prairie dog towns and lives largely
on Yap Yap and his friends. His ways are those
of Shadow and his cousins. There is no one Yap
Yap fears quite as much.
“The one good thing Shadow the
Weasel does is to kill Robber the Rat whenever they
meet. Robber, as you know, is big and savage
and always ready for a fight when cornered. But
all the fight goes out of him when Shadow appears.
Perhaps it is because he knows how hopeless it is.
When Shadow finds a barn overrun with Rats he will
sometimes stay until he has killed or driven out the
last one. Then perhaps he spoils it all by killing
a dozen Chickens in a night.
“It is a sad thing not to be
able to speak well of any one, but Shadow the Weasel,
like Robber the Rat, has by his ways made himself
hated by all the little people of the Green Forest
and the Green Meadows and by man. There is not
one to say a good word for him. Now to-morrow
we will meet on the bank of the Smiling Pool instead
of here.”