Danger may be anywhere,
So I expect it everywhere.
— Whitefoot.
Whitefoot the Wood Mouse was terribly
frightened. Yes, sir, he was terribly frightened.
It was a long, long time since he had been as frightened
as he now was. He is used to frights, is Whitefoot.
He has them every day and every night, but usually
they are sudden frights, quickly over and as quickly
forgotten.
This fright was different. You
see Whitefoot had caught a glimpse of Shadow the Weasel.
And he knew that if Shadow returned he would be sure
to find the little round holes in the snow that led
down to Whitefoot’s private little tunnels underneath.
The only thing for Whitefoot to do
was to get just as far from that place as he could
before Shadow should return. And so poor little
Whitefoot started out on a journey that was to take
him he knew not where. All he could do was to
go and go and go until he could find a safe hiding-place.
My, my, but that was a dreadful journey!
Every time a twig snapped, Whitefoot’s heart
seemed to jump right up in his throat. Every
time he saw a moving shadow, and the branches of the
trees moving in the wind were constantly making moving
shadows on the snow, he dodged behind a tree trunk
or under a piece of bark or wherever he could find
a hiding-place.
You see, Whitefoot has so many enemies
always looking for him that he hides whenever he sees
anything moving. When at home, he is forever
dodging in and out of his hiding-places. So,
because everything was strange to him, and because
of the great fear of Shadow the Weasel, he suspected
everything that moved and every sound he heard.
For a long way no one saw him, for no one was about.
Yet all that way Whitefoot twisted and dodged and darted
from place to place and was just as badly frightened
as if there had been enemies all about.
“Oh, dear! Oh, dear me!”
he kept saying over and over to himself. “Wherever
shall I go? Whatever shall I do? However
shall I get enough to eat? I won’t dare
go back to get food from my little storehouses, and
I shall have to live in a strange place where I won’t
know where to look for food. I am getting tired.
My legs ache. I ’m getting hungry.
I want my nice, warm, soft bed. Oh, dear!
Oh, dear! Oh, dear me!”
But in spite of his frights, Whitefoot
kept on. You see, he was more afraid to stop
than he was to go on. He just had to get as far
from Shadow the Weasel as he could. Being such
a little fellow, what would be a short distance for
you or me is a long distance for Whitefoot.
And so that journey was to him very
long indeed. Of course, it seemed longer because
of the constant frights which came one right after
another. It really was a terrible journey.
Yet if he had only known it, there wasn’t a
thing along the whole way to be afraid of. You
know it often happens that people are frightened more
by what they don’t know than by what they do
know.