When doubtful what course to pursue
'Tis sometimes best to nothing do.
- Whitefoot.
Jumper the Hare was beginning to feel easier in his mind. He was no
longer shaking inside. In fact, he was beginning to feel quite safe.
There he was in plain sight of Whitey the Snowy Owl, sitting motionless
on a stump only a short distance away, yet Whitey hadn't seen him.
Whitey had looked straight at him many times, but because Jumper
had not moved so much as a hair Whitey had mistaken him for a
little heap of snow.
"All I have to do is to keep right on sitting perfectly still, and
I'll be as safe as if Whitey were nowhere about. Yes, sir, I will,"
thought Jumper. "By and by he will become tired and fly away.
I do hope he'll do that before Whitefoot comes out again.
If Whitefoot should come out, I couldn't warn him because that
would draw Whitey's attention to me, and he wouldn't look twice
at a Wood Mouse when there was a chance to get a Hare for his dinner.
"This is a queer world. It is so. Old Mother Nature does queer things.
Here she has given me a white coat in winter so that I may not
be easily seen when there is snow on the ground, and at the same
time she has given one of those I fear most a white coat so that he
may not be easily seen, either. It certainly is a queer world."
Jumper forgot that Whitey was only a chance visitor from the Far North
and that it was only once in a great while that he came down
there, while up in the Far North where he belonged nearly everybody
was dressed in white.
Jumper hadn't moved once, but once in a while Whitey turned his
great round head for a look all about in every direction. But it
was done in such a way that only eyes watching him sharply would
have noticed it. Most of the time he kept his fierce yellow eyes
fixed on the little hole in the snow in which Whitefoot had
disappeared. You know Whitey can see by day quite as well as any
other bird.
Jumper, having stopped worrying about himself, began to worry about
Whitefoot. He knew that Whitefoot had seen Whitey arrive on that
stump and that was why he had dodged back into bis hole and since
then had not even poked his nose out. But that had been so long ago
that by this time Whitefoot must think that Whitey had gone on about
his business, and Jumper expected to see Whitefoot appear any moment.
What Jumper didn't know was that Whitefoot's bright little eyes
had all the time been watching Whitey from another little hole
in the snow some distance away. A tunnel led from this little hole
to the first little hole.
Suddenly off among the trees something moved. At least,
Jumper thought he saw something move. Yes, there it was, a little
black spot moving swiftly this way and that way over the snow.
Jumper stared very hard. And then his heart seemed to jump right up
in his throat. It did so. He felt as if he would choke. That black spot
was the tip end of a tail, the tail of a small, very slim fellow
dressed all in white, the only other one in all the Green Forest who
dresses all in white. It was Shadow the Weasel! In his white
winter coat he is called Ermine.
He was running this way and that way, back and forth, with his nose
to the snow. He was hunting, and Jumper knew that sooner or later
Shadow would find him. Safety from Shadow lay in making the best
possible use of those long legs of his, but to do that would bring
Whitey the Owl swooping after him. What to do Jumper didn't know.
And so he did nothing. It happened to be the wisest thing he could
do.