I’d rather be frightened
With no cause for fear
Than fearful of nothing When
danger is near.
— Whitefoot.
Whitefoot kept on going and going.
Every time he thought that he was so tired he must
stop, he would think of Shadow the Weasel and then
go on again. By and by he became so tired that
not even the thought of Shadow the Weasel could make
him go much farther. So he began to look about
for a safe hiding-place in which to rest.
Now the home which he had left had
been a snug little room beneath the roots of a certain
old stump. There he had lived for a long time
in the greatest comfort. Little tunnels led to
his storehouses and up to the surface of the snow.
It had been a splendid place and one in which he
had felt perfectly safe until Shadow the Weasel had
appeared. Had you seen him playing about there,
you would have thought him one of the little people
of the ground, like his cousin Danny Meadow Mouse.
But Whitefoot is quite as much at
home in trees as on the ground. In fact, he is
quite as much at home in trees as is Chatterer the
Red Squirrel, and a lot more at home in trees than
is Striped Chipmunk, although Striped Chipmunk belongs
to the Squirrel family. So now that he must find
a hiding-place, Whitefoot decided that he would feel
much safer in a tree than on the ground.
“If only I can find a hollow
tree,” whimpered Whitefoot. “I will
feel ever so much safer in a tree than hiding in or
near the ground in a strange place.”
So Whitefoot began to look for a dead
tree. You see, he knew that there was more likely
to be a hollow in a dead tree than in a living tree.
By and by he came to a tall, dead tree. He knew
it was a dead tree, because there was no bark on it.
But, of course, he couldn’t tell whether or
not that tree was hollow. I mean he couldn’t
tell from the ground.
“Oh, dear!” he whimpered
again. “Oh, dear! I suppose I will
have to climb this, and I am so tired. It ought
to be hollow. There ought to be splendid holes
in it. It is just the kind of a tree that Drummer
the Woodpecker likes to make his house in. I
shall be terribly disappointed if I don’t find
one of his houses somewhere in it, but I wish I hadn’t
got to climb it to find out. Well, here goes.”
He looked anxiously this way.
He looked anxiously that way. He looked anxiously
the other way. In fact, he looked anxiously every
way.
But he saw no one and nothing to be
afraid of, and so he started up the tree.
He was half-way up when, glancing
down, he saw a shadow moving across the snow.
Once more Whitefoot’s heart seemed to jump right
up in his throat. That shadow was the shadow
of some one flying. There couldn’t be the
least bit of doubt about it. Whitefoot flattened
himself against the side of the tree and peeked around
it. He was just in time to see a gray and black
and white bird almost the size of Sammy Jay alight
in the very next tree. He had come along near
the ground and then risen sharply into the tree.
His bill was black, and there was just a tiny hook
on the end of it. Whitefoot knew who it was.
It was Butcher the Shrike. Whitefoot shivered.