He proves himself a neighbor true
Who seeks a kindly deed to do.
— Whitefoot.
Occasionally Timmy the Flying Squirrel
came over to visit Whitefoot. If Whitefoot was
in his house he always knew when Timmy arrived.
He would hear a soft thump down near the bottom of
the tall stub. He would know instantly that thump
was made by Timmy striking the foot of the stub after
a long jump from the top of a tree. Whitefoot
would poke his head out of his doorway and there, sure
enough, would be Timmy scrambling up towards him.
Whitefoot had grown to admire Timmy
with all his might. It seemed to him that Timmy
was the most wonderful of all the people he knew.
You see there was none of the others who could jump
as Timmy could. Timmy on his part enjoyed having
Whitefoot for a neighbor. Few of the little
people of the Green Forest are more timid than Timmy
the Flying Squirrel, but here was one beside whom
Timmy actually felt bold. It was such a new
feeling that Timmy enjoyed it.
So it was that in the dusk of early
evening, just after the Black Shadows had come creeping
out from the Purple Hills across the Green Meadows
and through the Green Forest, these two little neighbors
would start out to hunt for food. Whitefoot never
went far from the tall, dead stub in which he was
now living. He didn’t dare to. He
wanted to be where at the first sign of danger he could
scamper back there to safety. Timmy would go
some distance, but he was seldom gone long.
He liked to be where he could watch and talk with
Whitefoot. You see Timmy is very much like other
people, — he likes to gossip a little.
One evening Whitefoot had found it
hard work to find enough food to fill his stomach.
He had kept going a little farther and a little farther
from home. Finally he was farther from it than
he had ever been before. Timmy had filled his
stomach and from near the top of a tree was watching
Whitefoot. Suddenly what seemed like a great
Black Shadow floated right over the tree in which Timmy
was sitting, and stopped on the top of a tall, dead
tree. It was Hooty the Owl, and it was simply
good fortune that Timmy happened to see him.
Timmy did not move. He knew that he was safe
so long as he kept perfectly still. He knew
that Hooty didn’t know he was there. Unless
he moved, those great eyes of Hooty’s, wonderful
as they were, would not see him.
Timmy looked over to where he had
last seen Whitefoot. There he was picking out
seeds from a pine cone on the ground. The trunk
of a tree was between him and Hooty. But Timmy
knew that Whitefoot hadn’t seen Hooty, and that
any minute he might run out from behind that tree.
If he did Hooty would see him, and silently as a shadow
would swoop down and catch him. What was to be
done?
“It’s no business of mine,”
said Timmy to himself. “Whitefoot must
look out for himself. It is no business of mine
at all. Perhaps Hooty will fly away before Whitefoot
moves. I don’t want anything to happen
to Whitefoot, but if something does, it will be his
own fault; he should keep better watch.”
For a few minutes nothing happened.
Then Whitefoot finished the last seed in that cone
and started to look for more. Timmy knew that
in a moment Hooty would see Whitefoot. What do
you think Timmy did? He jumped. Yes, sir,
he jumped. Down, down, down, straight past the
tree on which sat Hooty the Owl, Timmy sailed.
Hooty saw him. Of course. He couldn’t
help but see him. He spread his great wings
and was after Timmy in an instant. Timmy struck
near the foot of a tree and without wasting a second
darted around to the other side. He was just
in time. Hooty was already reaching for him.
Up the tree ran Timmy and jumped again. Again
Hooty was too late. And so Timmy led Hooty the
Owl away from Whitefoot the Wood Mouse.