Look not too much on that behind
Lest to the future you be blind.
— Whitefoot.
Whitefoot didn’t wait to be
told twice of that empty house. He thanked Timmy
and then scampered over to that stub as fast as his
legs would take him. Up the stub he climbed,
and near the top he found a little round hole.
Timmy had said no one was living there now, and so
Whitefoot didn’t hesitate to pop inside.
There was even a bed in there.
It was an old bed, but it was dry and soft.
It was quite clear that no one had been in there for
a long time. With a little sigh of pure happiness,
Whitefoot curled up in that bed for the sleep he so
much needed. His stomach was full, and once
more he felt safe. The very fact that this was
an old house in which no one had lived for a long
time made it safer. Whitefoot knew that those
who lived in that part of the Green Forest probably
knew that no one lived in that old stub, and so no
one was likely to visit it.
He was so tired that he slept all
night. Whitefoot is one of those who sleeps
when he feels sleepy, whether it be by day or night.
He prefers the night to be out and about in, because
he feels safer then, but he often comes out by day.
So when he awoke in the early morning, he promptly
went out for a look about and to get acquainted with
his new surroundings.
Just a little way off was the tall,
dead tree in which Timmy the Flying Squirrel had his
home. Timmy was nowhere to be seen. You
see, he had been out most of the night and had gone
to bed to sleep through the day. Whitefoot thought
longingly of the good things in Timmy’s storehouse
in that same tree, but decided that it would be wisest
to keep away from there. So he scurried about
to see what he could find for a breakfast. It
didn’t take him long to find some pine cones
in which a few seeds were still clinging. These
would do nicely. Whitefoot ate what he wanted
and then carried some of them back to his new home
in the tall stub.
Then he went to work to tear to pieces
the old bed in there and make it over to suit himself.
It was an old bed of Timmy the Flying Squirrel, for
you know this was Timmy’s old house.
Whitefoot soon had the bed made over
to suit him. And when this was done he felt
quite at home. Then he started out to explore
all about within a short distance of the old stub.
He wanted to know every hole and every possible hiding-place
all around, for it is on such knowledge that his life
depends.
When at last he returned home he was
very well satisfied. “It is going to be
a good place to live,” said he to himself.
“There are plenty of hiding-places and I am
going to be able to find enough to eat. It will
be very nice to have Timmy the Flying Squirrel for
a neighbor. I am sure he and I will get along
together very nicely. I don’t believe
Shadow the Weasel, even if he should come around here,
would bother to climb up this old stub. He probably
would expect to find me living down in the ground
or close to it, anyway. I certainly am glad
that I am such a good climber. Now if Buster
Bear doesn’t come along in the spring and pull
this old stub over, I’ll have as fine a home
as any one could ask for.”
And then, because happily it is the
way with the little people of the Green Forest and
the Green Meadows, Whitefoot forgot all about his
terrible journey and the dreadful time he had had in
finding his new home.