<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_1_II">CHAPTER TWO<br/> <span class="cheaderfont">HOW TOMMY LEARNED TO ADMIRE THUNDERER THE RUFFED GROUSE</span></h2></div>
<p class="dropcap">From over in the Green Forest
where the silver beeches grow,
came a sound which made Tommy
stop to listen. For a minute or two all
was still. Then it came again, a deep,
throbbing sound that began slowly and
then grew faster and faster until it
ended in a long rumble like distant
thunder. Tommy knew it couldn’t be
that, for there wasn’t a cloud in the sky;
and anyway it wasn’t the season of thunder-storms.
Again he heard that deep
hollow throbbing grow fast and faster
until there was no time between the
beats and it became a thunderous rumble;<span class="pagenum">[26]</span>
and for some reason which he could
not have explained, Tommy felt his
pulse beat faster in unison, and a strange
sense of joyous exhilaration.</p>
<p><em>Drum—drum—drum—drum—drum,
drum, drum, dr-r-r-r-r-r-um!</em> The
sound beat out from beyond the hemlocks
and rolled away through the
woods.</p>
<p>“It’s an old cock-partridge drumming.”
Tommy had a way of talking
to himself when he was alone. “He’s
down on that old beech log at the head
of the gully. Gee, I’d like to see him!
Bet it’s the same one that was there last
year. Dad says that old log is a reg’lar
drumming-log and he’s seen partridges
drum there lots of times. And yet he
doesn’t really know how they make all
that noise. Says some folks say they<span class="pagenum">[27]</span>
beat the log with their wings, and, because
it’s hollow, it makes that sound.
Don’t believe it, though. They’d
break their wings doing that. Besides,
that old log isn’t much hollow anyway,
and I never can make it sound up much
hammering it with a stick; so how could
a partridge do it with nothing but his
wings?</p>
<p>“Some other folks say they do it by
hitting their wings together over their
backs; but I don’t see any sense in that,
because their wings are mostly feathers.
And some say they beat their sides to
make the noise; but if they do that, I
should think they’d knock all the wind
out of themselves and be too sore to
move. Bet if I could ever catch ol’
Thunderer drumming, I’d find out how
he does it! I know what I’ll do! I’ll<span class="pagenum">[28]</span>
go over to the old wishing-stone. Wonder
why I didn’t think of it before.
Then I’ll find out a lot.”</p>
<p>He thrust his hands into his pockets
and trudged up the Crooked Little Path,
out of the Green Forest, and over to the
great gray stone on the edge of the Green
Meadows where once a wish had come
true, or had seemed to come true, anyway,
and where he had learned so
much about the life of Danny Meadow
Mouse. As he tramped, his thoughts
were all of Thunderer the Ruffed
Grouse, whom he called a partridge, and
some other people call a pheasant, but
who is neither.</p>
<p>Many times had Tommy been startled
by having the handsome bird spring into
the air from almost under his feet, with
a noise of wings that was enough to scare<span class="pagenum">[29]</span>
anybody. It was because of this and the
noise of his drumming that Tommy
called him Thunderer.</p>
<p>With a long sigh of satisfaction, for
he was tired, Tommy sat down on the
wishing-stone, planted his elbows on his
knees, dropped his chin in his hands,
looked over to the Green Forest through
half-closed eyes, and wished.</p>
<p>“I wish,” said he, slowly and earnestly,
“I could be a partridge.” He
meant, of course, that he could be a
grouse.</p>
<p>Just as had happened before when
he had expressed such a wish on the old
wishing-stone, the very instant the
words were out of his mouth, he ceased
to be a boy. He was a tiny little bird,
like nothing so much as a teeny, weeny
chicken, a soft little ball of brown and<span class="pagenum">[30]</span>
yellow, one of a dozen, who all looked
alike as they scurried after their little
brown mother in answer to her anxious
cluck.</p>
<p>Behind them, on the ground, cunningly
hidden back of a fallen tree, was an
empty nest with only some bits of shell
as a reminder that, just a few hours
before, it had contained twelve buff
eggs. Now Tommy and his brothers
and sisters didn’t give the old nest so
much as a thought. They had left it
as soon as they were strong enough to
run. They were starting out for their
first lesson in the school of the Great
World.</p>
<p>Perhaps Tommy thought his mother
fussy and altogether a great deal too
nervous; but if he did, he didn’t say so.
There was one thing that seemed to have<span class="pagenum">[31]</span>
been born in him, something that as a
boy he had to learn, and that was the
habit of instant obedience.</p>
<p>It was instinct, which, so naturalists
say, is habit confirmed and handed down
through many generations. Tommy
didn’t know why he obeyed. He just
did, that was all. It didn’t occur to
him that there was anything else to do.
The idea of disobeying never entered
his funny, pretty little head. And it
was just so with all the others. Mother
Grouse had only to speak and they did
just exactly what she told them to.</p>
<p>This habit of obedience on their part
took a great load from the mind of
Mother Grouse. They hadn’t been in
the Great World long enough to know,
but she knew that there were dangers
on every side; and to watch out for and<span class="pagenum">[32]</span>
protect them from these she needed all
her senses, and she couldn’t afford to
dull any of them by useless worrying.
So it was a great relief to her to know
that, when she had bidden them hide
and keep perfectly still until she called
them, they would do exactly as she said.
This made it possible for her to leave
them long enough to lead an enemy
astray, and be sure that when she
returned she would find them just where
she had left them.</p>
<p>She had to do this twice on their very
first journey into the Great World.
Tommy was hurrying along with the
others as fast as his small legs could take
him when his mother gave a sharp but
low call to hide. There was a dried
leaf on the ground close to Tommy. Instantly
he crept under it and flattened<span class="pagenum">[33]</span>
his small self to the ground, closed his
eyes tight, and listened with all his
might.</p>
<p>He heard the whir of strong wings
as Mother Grouse took flight. If he
had peeped out, he would have seen that
she flew only a very little way, and that,
when she came to earth again, there appeared
to be something the matter with
her, so that she flopped along instead of
running or flying. But he didn’t see
this, because he was under that dead
leaf.</p>
<p>Presently, the ground vibrated under
the steps of heavy feet that all but trod
on the leaf under which Tommy lay,
and frightened him terribly. But he
did not move and he made no sound.
Again, had he peeped out, he would have
seen Mother Grouse fluttering along the<span class="pagenum">[34]</span>
ground just ahead of an eager boy who
thought to catch her and tried and tried
until he had been led far from the place
where her babies were.</p>
<p>Then all was still, so still that surely
there could be no danger near. Surely
it was safe to come out now. But
Tommy didn’t move, nor did any of his
brothers and sisters. They had been
told not to until they were called, and
it never once entered their little heads
to disobey. Mother knew best.</p>
<p>At last there came a gentle cluck. Instantly
Tommy popped out from under
his leaf to see his brothers and sisters
popping out from the most unexpected
places all about him. It seemed almost
as if they had popped out of the very
ground itself. And there was Mother
Grouse, very proud and very fussy, as<span class="pagenum">[35]</span>
she made sure that all her babies were
there.</p>
<p>Later that same day the same thing
happened, only this time there was no
heavy footstep, but the lightest kind of
patter as cushioned feet eagerly hurried
past, and Reddy Fox sprang forward,
sure that Mother Grouse was to make
him the dinner he liked best, and thus
was led away to a safe distance, there
to realize how completely he had been
fooled.</p>
<p>It was a wonderful day, that first day.
There was a great ant-hill which Mother
Grouse scratched open with her stout
claws, exposing ever and ever so many
white things, which were the so-called
eggs of the big black ants, and which
were delicious eating, as Tommy soon
found out. It was great fun to scramble<span class="pagenum">[36]</span>
for them, and eat and eat until not another
one could be swallowed. And
when the shadow began to creep
through the Green Forest, they nestled
close under Mother Grouse in one of
her favorite secret hiding-places and
straightway went to sleep as healthy
children should, sure that no harm could
befall them, nor once guessed how lightly
their mother slept and more than once
shivered with fear, not for herself but
for them, as some prowler of the night
passed their retreat.</p>
<p>So the days passed and Tommy grew
and learned, and it was a question which
he did the faster. The down with which
he had been covered gave way to real
feathers and he grew real wings, so that
he was little over a week old when he
could fly in case of need. And in that<span class="pagenum">[37]</span>
same length of time, short as it was, he
had filled his little head with knowledge.
He had learned that a big sandy
dome in a sunny spot in the woods
usually meant an ants’ castle, where he
could eat to his heart’s content if only
it was torn open for him.</p>
<p>He had learned that luscious fat
worms and <SPAN name="Ref_1_036a" href="#Ref_1_036">bugs were to be found under
rotting pieces of bark and the litter of
decaying old logs</SPAN> and stumps. He had
learned that wild strawberries and some
other berries afforded a welcome variety
to his bill of fare.</p>
<div id="Ref_1_036" class="figcenter">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_1_036.jpg" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="center"><SPAN href="#Ref_1_036a">BUGS WERE TO BE FOUND UNDER OLD LOGS</SPAN></p>
</div>
</div>
<p>He had learned that a daily bath in
fine dust was necessary for cleanliness
as well as being vastly comforting. He
had learned that danger lurked in the
air as well as on the ground, for a swooping
hawk had caught one of his brothers<span class="pagenum">[38]</span>
who had not instantly heeded his mother’s
warning.</p>
<p>But most important of all, he had
learned the value of that first lesson in
obedience, and to trust wholly to the
wisdom of Mother Grouse and never to
question her commands.</p>
<p>A big handsome grouse had joined
them now. It was old Thunderer, and
sometimes when he would throw back
his head, spread his beautiful tail until
it was like a fan, raise the crest on his
head and the glossy ruff on his neck, and
proudly strut ahead of them, Tommy
thought him the most beautiful sight in
all the world and wondered if ever he
would grow to be half as handsome.
While he did little work in the care of
the brood, Thunderer was of real help
to Mother Grouse in guarding the little<span class="pagenum">[39]</span>
family from ever-lurking dangers.
There was no eye or ear more keen than
his, and none more skillful than he in
confusing and baffling a hungry enemy
who had chanced to discover the presence
of the little family. Tommy
watched him every minute he could
spare from the ever important business
of filling his crop, and stored up for future
need the things he learned.</p>
<p>Once he ventured to ask Thunderer
what was the greatest danger for which
a grouse must watch out, and he never
forgot the answer.</p>
<p>“There is no greatest danger while
you are young,” replied Thunderer,
shaking out his feathers. “Every
danger is greatest while it exists. Never
forget that. Never treat any danger
lightly. Skunks and foxes and weasels<span class="pagenum">[40]</span>
and minks and coons and hawks and
owls are equally dangerous to youngsters
like you, and one is as much to be
feared as another. It is only when you
have become full-grown, like me, and
then only in the fall of the year, that
you will know the greatest danger.”</p>
<p>“And what is that?” asked Tommy
timidly.</p>
<p>“A man with a gun,” replied Thunderer.</p>
<p>“And what is that?” asked Tommy
again, eager for knowledge.</p>
<p>“A great creature who walks on two
legs and points a stick which spits fire
and smoke, and makes a great noise, and
kills while it is yet a long distance off.”</p>
<p>“Oh!” gasped Tommy. “How is
one ever to learn to avoid such a dreadful
danger as that?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[41]</span></p>
<p>“I’ll teach you when the time comes,”
replied Thunderer. “Now run along
and take your dust-bath. You must
first learn to avoid other dangers before
you will be fitted to meet the greatest
danger.”</p>
<p>All that long bright summer Tommy
thought of that greatest danger, and,
by learning how to meet other dangers,
tried to prepare himself for it. Sometimes
he wondered if there really could
be any greater danger than those about
him every day. It seemed sometimes
as if all the world sought to kill him,
who was so harmless himself. Not only
were there dangers from hungry animals,
and robbers of the air, but also
from the very creatures that furnished
him much of his living—the tribe of
insects. An ugly-looking insect, called<span class="pagenum">[42]</span>
a tick, with wicked blood-sucking jaws,
killed one of the brood while they were
yet small, and an equally ugly worm
called a bot-worm caused the death of
another.</p>
<p>Shadow the Weasel surprised one
foolish bird who insisted on sleeping on
the ground when he was big enough to
know better, and Reddy Fox dined on
another whose curiosity led him to move
when he had been warned to lie perfectly
still, and who paid for his disobedience
with his life. Tommy, not three feet
away, saw it all and profited by the
lesson.</p>
<p>He was big enough now to act for
himself and no longer depended wholly
for safety on the wisdom of Mother
Grouse and Thunderer. But while he
trusted to his own senses and judgment,<span class="pagenum">[43]</span>
he was ever heedful of their example and
still ready to learn. Especially did he
take pains to keep near Thunderer and
study him and his ways, for he was wise
and cunning with the cunning of experience
and knowledge. Tommy was
filled with great admiration for him and
tried to copy him in everything.</p>
<p>Thus it was that he learned that there
were two ways of flying, one without
noise and the other with the thunder
of whirring wings. Also he learned that
there was a time for each. When he
knew himself to be alone and suddenly
detected the approach of an enemy, he
often would launch himself into the air
on silent wings before his presence had
been discovered. But when others of
his family were near, he would burst
into the air with all the noise he could<span class="pagenum">[44]</span>
make as a warning to others. Also, it
sometimes startled and confused the
enemy.</p>
<p>Thunderer had taught him the trick
one day when Reddy Fox had stolen,
unseen by Tommy, almost within jumping
distance. Thunderer had seen him,
and purposely had waited until Reddy
was just gathering himself to spring on
the unsuspecting Tommy. Then with a
splendid roar of his stout wings Thunderer
had risen just to one side of the
fox, so startling him and distracting his
attention that Tommy had had ample
time to whir up in his turn, to the discomfiture
of Reddy Fox.</p>
<p>So, when the fall came, Tommy was
big from good living, and filled with the
knowledge that makes for long life
among grouse. He knew the best<span class="pagenum">[45]</span>
scratching-grounds, the choicest feeding-places
according to the month, every
bramble-tangle and every brush-pile,
the place for the warmest sun-bath, and
the trees which afforded the safest and
most comfortable roosting places at
night.</p>
<p>He knew the ways and the favorite
hunting-grounds of every fox, and
weasel, and skunk, and coon of the
neighborhood, and how to avoid them.
He knew when it was safest to lie low
and trust to the protective coloring of
his feathers, and when it was best to
roar away on thundering wings.</p>
<p>The days grew crisp and shorter. The
maples turned red and yellow, and soon
the woods were filled with fluttering
leaves and the trees began to grow bare.
It was then that old Thunderer warned<span class="pagenum">[46]</span>
Tommy that the season of greatest danger
was at hand. Somehow, in the confidence
of his strength and the joy of the
splendid tide of life surging through
him, he didn’t fear this unknown danger
as he had when as a little fellow he had
first heard of it. Then one day, quite
unexpectedly, he faced it.</p>
<p>He and Thunderer had been resting
quietly in a bramble-tangle on the very
edge of the Green Forest, when suddenly
there was the rustle of padded feet
in the leaves just outside the brambles.
Looking out, Tommy saw what at first
he took to be a strange and very large
kind of fox, and he prepared to fly.</p>
<p>“Not yet! Not yet!” warned Thunderer.
“That is a dog and he will not
harm us. But to fly now might be to
go straight into that greatest danger, of<span class="pagenum">[47]</span>
which I had told you. That is the mistake
young grouse often make, flying
before they know just where the danger
is. Watch until you see the two-legged
creature with the fire-stick, then follow
me and do just as I do.”</p>
<p>The dog was very near now. In fact,
he had his nose in the brambles and was
standing as still as if turned to stone,
one of his fore feet lifted and pointing
straight at them. No one moved.
Presently Tommy heard heavy steps,
and, looking through the brambles, saw
the great two-legged creature of whom
Thunderer had told him.</p>
<p>“Now!” cried Thunderer. “Do as I
do!” With a great roar of wings he
burst out of the tangle on the opposite
side from where the hunter was, and
flying low, so as to keep the brambles<span class="pagenum">[48]</span>
between himself and the hunter,
swerved sharply to the left to put a tree
between them, and then flew like a bullet
straight into the Green Forest where
the trees were thickest, skillfully dodging
the great trunks, and at last at a
safe distance sailing up over the tops
to take to the ground on the other side
of a hill and there run swiftly for a way.</p>
<p>Tommy followed closely, doing exactly
as Thunderer did. Even as he
swerved behind the first tree, he heard a
terrible double roar behind him and the
sharp whistle of things which cut
through the leaves around him and
struck the tree behind him. One even
nipped a brown feather from his back.
He was terribly frightened, but he was
unhurt as he joined Thunderer behind
the hill.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[49]</span></p>
<p>“Now you know what the greatest
danger is,” said Thunderer. “Never fly
until you know just where the hunter is,
and then fly back of a bush or a tree,
the bigger the better, or drop over the
edge of a bank if there is one. Make
as much noise as you can when you get
up. It may startle the hunter so that
he cannot point his fire-stick straight.
If he has no dog, it is sometimes best to
lie still until he has passed and then fly
silently. If there is no tree or other
cover near enough when you first see the
dog, run swiftly until you reach a place
where it will be safe to take wing.”</p>
<p>For the next few weeks it seemed as
if from daylight to dark the woods were
filled with dogs and hunters, and
Tommy knew no hour of peace and security
until the coming of night. Many<span class="pagenum">[50]</span>
a dreadful tragedy did Tommy see when
companions, less cunning than old
Thunderer, were stricken in mid-air and
fell lifeless to the ground. But he,
learning quickly and doing as Thunderer
did, escaped unharmed.</p>
<p>At last the law, of which Tommy
knew nothing, put an end to the murder
of the innocents, and for another year
the greatest danger was over. But now
came a new danger. It was the month
of madness. Tommy and all his companions
were seized with an irresistible
desire to fly aimlessly, blindly, sometimes
in the darkness of night, they
knew not where. And in this mad flight
some met death, breaking their necks
against buildings and against telegraph
wires. Where he went or what he did
during this period of madness, Tommy<span class="pagenum">[51]</span>
never knew; but when it left him as
abruptly as it had come, he found himself
in the street of a village.</p>
<p>With swift strong wings he shot into
the air and headed straight back for the
dear Green Forest, now no longer green
save where the hemlocks and pines grew.
Once back there, he took up the old life
and was happy, for he felt himself a
match for any foe. The days grew
shorter and the cold increased. There
were still seeds and acorns and some
berries, but with the coming of the snow
these became more and more scarce and
Tommy was obliged to resort to catkins
and buds on the trees. Between his toes
there grew little horny projections,
which were his snowshoes and enabled
him to get about on the snow without
sinking in. He learned to dive into the<span class="pagenum">[52]</span>
deep soft snow for warmth and safety.
Once he was nearly trapped there. A
hard crust formed in the night and,
when morning came, Tommy had hard
work to break out.</p>
<p>So the long winter wore away and
spring came with all its gladness.
Tommy was fully as big as old Thunderer
now and just as handsome, and he
began to take pride in his appearance
and to strut. One day he came to an
old log, and, jumping up on it, strutted
back and forth proudly with his fan-like
tail spread its fullest and his broad ruff
raised. Then he heard the long rolling
thunder of another grouse drumming.
Instantly he began to beat his
wings against the air, not as in flying,
but with a more downward motion, and
to his great delight there rolled from<span class="pagenum">[53]</span>
under them that same thunder. Slowly
he beat at first and then faster and faster,
until he was forced to stop for breath.
He was drumming! Then he listened
for a reply.</p>
<p><em>Drum—drum—drum—drum—drum,
drum, drum, dr-r-r-r-r-r-rum.</em>
Tommy’s eyes flew open. He was sitting
on the old wishing-stone on the edge of
the Green Meadows. For a minute he
blinked in confusion. Then, from over
in the Green Forest, came that sound
like distant thunder, <em>drum—drum—drum—drum—drum,
drum, drum,
dr-r-r-r-r-r-rum</em>.</p>
<p>“It’s ol’ Thunderer again on that
beech log!” cried Tommy. “And now
I know how he does it. He just beats
the air. I know, because I’ve done it
myself. Geewhilikens, I’m glad I’m<span class="pagenum">[54]</span>
not really a partridge! Bet I’ll never
hunt one after this, or let anybody else
if I can help it. Isn’t this old wishing-stone
the dandy place to learn things,
though! I guess the only way of really
knowing how birds and animals live and
feel is by being one of ’em. Somehow
it makes things look all different. Just
listen to ol’ Thunderer drum! I know
now just how fine he feels. I’m going
to get Father to put up a sign and stop
all shooting in our part of the Green
Forest next fall, and then there won’t be
any greatest danger there.”</p>
<p>And Tommy, whistling merrily, started
for home.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum">[55]</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />