Joyous all the winds that blow
To the heart with love aglow.
— Whitefoot.
It was a wonderful game of hide-and-seek
that Whitefoot the Wood Mouse was playing in the dusk
of early evening. Whitefoot was “it”
all the time. That is, he was the one who had
to do all the hunting. Just who he was hunting
for he didn’t know. He knew it was another
Wood Mouse, but it was a stranger, and do what he would,
he couldn’t get so much as a glimpse of this
little stranger. He would drum with his feet
and after a slight pause there would be an answering
drum. Then Whitefoot would run as fast as he
could in that direction only to find no one at all.
Then he would drum again and the reply would come
from another direction.
Every moment Whitefoot became more
excited. He forgot everything, even danger,
in his desire to see that little drummer. Once
or twice he actually lost his temper in his disappointment.
But this was only for a moment. He was too
eager to find that little drummer to be angry very
long.
At last there came a time when there
was no reply to his drumming. He drummed and
listened, then drummed again and listened. Nothing
was to be heard. There was no reply. Whitefoot’s
heart sank.
All the old lonesomeness crept over
him again. He didn’t know which way to
turn to look for that stranger. When he had drummed
until he was tired, he sat on the end of an old log,
a perfect picture of disappointment. He was
so disappointed that he could have cried if it would
have done any good.
Just as he had about made up his mind
that there was nothing to do but to try to find his
way home, his keen little ears caught the faintest
rustle of dry leaves. Instantly Whitefoot was
alert and watchful. Long ago he had learned to
be suspicious of rustling leaves. They might
have been rustled by the feet of an enemy stealing
up on him. No Wood Mouse who wants to live long
is ever heedless of rustling leaves. As still
as if he couldn’t move, Whitefoot sat staring
at the place from which that faint sound had seemed
to come. For two or three minutes he heard and
saw nothing. Then another leaf rustled a little
bit to one side. Whitefoot turned like a flash,
his feet gathered under him ready for a long jump for
safety.
At first he saw nothing. Then
he became aware of two bright, soft little eyes watching
him. He stared at them very hard and then all
over him crept those funny thrills he had felt when
he had first heard the drumming of the stranger.
He knew without being told that those eyes belonged
to the little drummer with whom he had been playing
hide and seek so long.
Whitefoot held his breath, he was
so afraid that those eyes would vanish. Finally
he rather timidly jumped down from the log and started
toward those two soft eyes. They vanished.
Whitefoot’s heart sank. He was tempted
to rush forward, but he didn’t. He sat
still. There was a slight rustle off to the right.
A little ray of moonlight made its way down through
the branches of the trees just there, and in the middle
of the light spot it made sat a timid little person.
It seemed to Whitefoot that he was looking at the
most beautiful Wood Mouse in all the Great World.
Suddenly he felt very shy and timid himself.
“Who — who — who are you?”
he stammered.
“I am little Miss Dainty,” replied the
stranger bashfully.
Right then and there Whitefoot’s
heart was filled so full of something that it seemed
as if it would burst. It was love. All
in that instant he knew that he had found the most
wonderful thing in all the Great World, which of course
is love. He knew that he just couldn’t
live without little Miss Dainty.