No home is ever mean or poor
Where love awaits you at the door.
— Whitefoot.
“There,” said Mrs. Whitefoot,
as she worked a strip of white birch bark into the
roof of the new home she and Whitefoot had been building
out of the old home of Melody the Wood Thrush, “this
finishes the roof. I don’t think any water
will get through it even in the hardest rain.”
“It is wonderful,” declared
Whitefoot admiringly. “Wherever did you
learn to build such a house as this?”
“From my mother” replied
Mrs. Whitefoot. “I was born in just such
a home. It makes the finest kind of a home for
Wood Mouse babies.”
“You don’t think there
is danger that the wind will blow it down, do you?”
ventured Whitefoot.
“Of course I don’t,”
retorted little Mrs. Whitefoot scornfully. “Hasn’t
this old nest remained right where it is for over a
year? Do you suppose that if I had thought there
was the least bit of danger that it would blow down,
I would have used it? Do credit me with a little
sense, my dear.”
“Yes’m, I do,” replied
Whitefoot meekly. “You are the most sensible
person in all the Great World. I wasn’t
finding fault. You see, I have always lived
in a hole in the ground or a hollow stump, or a hole
in a tree, and I have not yet become used to a home
that moves about and rocks as this one does when the
wind blows. But if you say it is all right,
why of course it is all right. Probably I will
get used to it after awhile.”
Whitefoot did get used to it.
After living in it for a few days, it no longer seemed
strange, and he no longer minded its swaying when
the wind blew. The fact is, he rather enjoyed
it. So Whitefoot and Mrs. Whitefoot settled
down to enjoy their new home. Now and then they
added a bit to it here and there.
Somehow Whitefoot felt unusually safe,
safer than he had ever felt in any of his other homes.
You see, he had seen several feathered folk alight
close to it and not give it a second look. He
knew that they had seen that home, but had mistaken
it for what it had once been, the deserted home of
one of their own number.
Whitefoot had chuckled. He had
chuckled long and heartily. “If they make
that mistake,” said he to himself, “everybody
else is likely to make it. That home of ours
is right in plain sight, yet I do believe it is safer
than the best hidden home I ever had before.
Shadow the Weasel never will think of climbing up this
little tree to look at an old nest, and Shadow is
the one I am most afraid of.”
It was only a day or two later that
Buster Bear happened along that way. Now Buster
is very fond of tender Wood Mouse. More than
once Whitefoot had had a narrow escape from Buster’s
big claws as they tore open an old stump or dug into
the ground after him. He saw Buster glance up
at the new home without the slightest interest in
those shrewd little eyes of his. Then Buster
shuffled on to roll over an old log and lick up the
ants he found under it. Again Whitefoot chuckled.
“Yes, sir,” said he. “It is
the safest home I ’ve ever had.”
So Whitefoot and little Mrs. Whitefoot
were very happy in the home which they had built,
and for once in his life Whitefoot did very little
worrying. Life seemed more beautiful than it
had ever been before. And he almost forgot that
there was such a thing as a hungry enemy.