<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_2_II">CHAPTER TWO<br/> <span class="cheaderfont">WHY TOMMY BECAME A FRIEND OF RED SQUIRRELS</span></h2></div>
<p class="dropcap">“I don’t see what Sis wants to
string this stuff all over the house
for, just because it happens to be
Christmas!” grumbled Tommy, as he
sat on a big stone and idly kicked at a
pile of beautiful ground-pine and fragrant
balsam boughs. “It’s the best day
for skating we’ve had yet, and here I am
missing a whole morning of it, and so
tired that most likely I won’t feel like
going this afternoon!”</p>
<p>Now Tommy knew perfectly well
that if his mother said that he could go,
nothing could keep him away from the<span class="pagenum">[29]</span>
pond that afternoon. He was a little
tired, perhaps, but not nearly so tired
as he tried to think he was. Gathering
Christmas greens was work of course.
But when you come right down to it,
there is work about almost everything,
even skating. The chief difference
between work and pleasure is the difference
between “must” and “want to.”
When you <em>must</em> do a thing it becomes
work; when you <em>want</em> to do a thing it
becomes pleasure.</p>
<p>Right down deep inside, where his
honest self lives, Tommy was glad that
there was going to be a green wreath in
each of the front windows, and that over
the doors and pictures there would be
sweet-smelling balsam. Without them,
why, Christmas wouldn’t be Christmasy
at all! And really it had been fun gathering<span class="pagenum">[30]</span>
those greens. He wouldn’t admit
it, but it had. He wouldn’t have missed
it for the world. It was only that it had
to be done just when he wanted to do
something else. And so he tried to feel
grieved and persecuted, and to forget
that Christmas was only two days off.</p>
<p>He sat on the big gray stone and
looked across the Green Meadows, no
longer green but covered with the whitest
and lightest of snow-blankets, across
the Old Pasture, not one whit less beautiful,
to the Green Forest, and he sighed.
It was a deep, heavy sigh. It was the
sigh of a self-made martyr.</p>
<p>As if in reply, he heard the sharp voice
of Chatterer the Red Squirrel. It rang
out clear and loud on the frosty air, and
it was very plain that, whatever troubles
others might have, Chatterer was very<span class="pagenum">[31]</span>
well satisfied with the world in general
and himself in particular. Just now he
was racing along the fence, stopping at
every post to sit up and tell all the world
that he was there and didn’t care who
knew it. Presently his sharp eyes spied
Tommy.</p>
<p>Chatterer stopped short in the middle
of a rail and looked at Tommy very
hard. Then he barked at him, jerking
his tail with every syllable. Tommy
didn’t move.</p>
<p>Chatterer jumped down from the
fence and came nearer. Every foot or so
he paused and barked, and his bark was
such a funny mixture of nervousness
and excitement and curiosity and sauciness,
not to say impudence, that finally
Tommy laughed right out. He just
couldn’t help it.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[32]</span></p>
<p>Back to the fence rushed Chatterer,
and scampered up to the top of a post.
Once sure of the safety of this retreat,
he faced Tommy and began to scold as
fast as his tongue could go. Of course
Tommy couldn’t understand what Chatterer
was saying, but he could guess.
He was telling Tommy just what he
thought of a boy who would sit moping
on such a beautiful day, and only two
days before Christmas at that!</p>
<p>My, how his tongue did fly! When
he had had his say to the full, he gave
a final whisk of his tail and scampered
off in the direction of the Old Orchard.
And, as he went, it seemed to Tommy
as if he looked back with the sauciest
kind of a twinkle in his eyes, as much
as to say, “You deserve all I’ve said,
but I don’t really mean it!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[33]</span></p>
<p>Tommy watched him, a lively little
red spot against the white background,
and, as he watched, the smile gradually
faded away. It never would do at all
to go home in good spirits after raising
such a fuss as he had when he started
out. So, to make himself feel as badly
as he felt that he ought to feel, Tommy
sighed dolefully.</p>
<p>“Oh, but you’re lucky!” said he, as
Chatterer’s sharp voice floated over to
him from the Old Orchard. “You don’t
have to do a blessed thing unless you
want to! All you have to do is to eat
and sleep and have a good time. It
must be fun. I wish I were a squirrel!”</p>
<p>Right then something happened. It
happened all in a flash, just as it
had happened to Tommy before. One
minute he was a boy, a discontented<span class="pagenum">[34]</span>
boy, sitting on a big gray stone on the
edge of the Green Meadows, and the
next minute he wasn’t a boy at all! You
see, when he made that wish, he had
quite forgotten that he was sitting on
the wishing-stone. Now he no longer
had to guess at what Chatterer was
saying. Not a bit of it. He knew.</p>
<p>He talked the same language himself.
In short, he was a red squirrel, and in
two minutes had forgotten that he ever
had been a boy.</p>
<p>How good it felt to be free and know
that he could do just as he pleased! His
first impulse was to race over to the Old
Orchard and make the acquaintance of
Chatterer. Then he thought better of
it. Something inside him seemed to
tell him that he had no business there—that
the Old Orchard was not big<span class="pagenum">[35]</span>
enough for two red squirrels, and that,
as Chatterer had gone there first, it really
belonged to him in a way.</p>
<p>He felt quite sure of it when he had
replied to Chatterer’s sharp voice, and
had been told in no uncertain tones that
the best thing he could do would be to
run right back where he had come from.</p>
<p>Of course, he couldn’t do that, so he
decided to do the next best thing—run
over to the Green Forest and see what
there was to do there. He hopped up on
the rail fence and whisked along the top
rail.</p>
<p>What fun it was! He didn’t have a
care in the world. All he had to do was
to eat, drink, and have a good time.
Ha! who was that coming along behind
him? Was it Chatterer? It looked
something like him, yet different somehow.<span class="pagenum">[36]</span>
Tommy sat quite still watching
the stranger, and, as he watched, a
curious terror began to creep over him.</p>
<p>The stranger wasn’t Chatterer! No,
indeed, he wasn’t even a squirrel! He
was too long and slim, and his tail was
different. He was Shadow the Weasel!
Tommy didn’t have to be told that.
Although he never had seen Shadow
before, he knew without being told. For
a minute he couldn’t move. Then, his
heart beating with fear until it seemed
as if it would burst, he fled along the
fence toward the Green Forest, and now
he didn’t stop at the posts when he came
to them. His one thought was to get
away, away as far as ever he could; for
in the eyes of Shadow the Weasel he had
seen death.</p>
<p>Up the nearest tree he raced and hid,<span class="pagenum">[37]</span>
clinging close to the trunk near the top,
staring down with eyes fairly bulging
with fright. Swiftly, yet without seeming
to hurry, Shadow the Weasel came
straight to the tree in which Tommy
was hiding, his nose in Tommy’s tracks
in the way that a hound follows a rabbit
or a fox. At the foot of the tree he
stopped just a second and looked up.
Then he began to climb.</p>
<p>At the first scratch of his claws on the
bark Tommy raced out along a branch
and leaped across to the next tree.
Then, in a great panic, he went on from
tree to tree, taking desperate chances in
his long leaps. In the whole of his little
being he had room for but one feeling,
and that was fear—fear of that savage
pitiless pursuer.</p>
<p>He had run a long way before he<span class="pagenum">[38]</span>
realized that he was no longer being followed.
The fact is, Shadow had found
other game, easier to catch, and had
given up. Now, just as soon as Tommy
realized that Shadow the Weasel was
no longer on his track, he straightway
forgot his fear. In fact it was just as if
he never had had a fright, for that is
the law of Mother Nature with her little
people of the wild. So presently Tommy
was once more as happy and care-free as
before.</p>
<p>In a big chestnut-tree just ahead of
him he could see Happy Jack the Gray
Squirrel; and Happy Jack was very
busy about something. Perhaps he had
a storehouse there. The very thought
made Tommy hungry. Once more he
hid, but this time not in fear. He hid
so that he could watch Happy Jack.<span class="pagenum">[39]</span>
Not a sound did he make as he peered
out from his hiding-place.</p>
<p>Happy Jack was a long time in that
hollow limb? It seemed as if he never
would come out. So Tommy started on
to look for more mischief, for he was
bubbling over with good spirits and felt
that he must do something.</p>
<p>Presently, quite by accident, he discovered
another hoard of nuts, mostly
acorns, neatly tucked away in a crotch
of a big tree. Of course he sampled
them. “What fun!” thought he. “I
don’t know who they belong to, and I
don’t care. From now on, they are
going to belong to me.”</p>
<p>He started to carry them away, but <SPAN name="Ref_2_038a" href="#Ref_2_038">a
sudden harsh scream close to him
startled him so that he dropped the nut</SPAN>
he had in his mouth. He dodged behind<span class="pagenum">[40]</span>
the trunk of the tree just in time to
escape the dash of an angry bird in a
brilliant blue suit with white and black
trimmings.</p>
<div id="Ref_2_038" class="figcenter">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_2_038.jpg" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="center"><SPAN href="#Ref_2_038a">A SUDDEN HARSH SCREAM STARTLED HIM SO
THAT HE DROPPED THE NUT</SPAN></p>
</div>
</div>
<p>“Thief! thief! thief! Leave my
acorns alone!” screamed Sammy Jay,
anger making his voice harsher than
ever.</p>
<p>Round and round the trunk of the
tree Tommy dodged, chattering back in
reply to the sharp tongue of the angry
bird. It was exciting without being very
dangerous. After a while, however, it
grew tiresome, and, watching his chance,
he slipped over to another tree and into
a hole made by Drummer the Woodpecker.
Sammy Jay didn’t see where
he had disappeared, and, after hunting
in vain, gave up and began to carry his
acorns away to a new hiding-place.<span class="pagenum">[41]</span>
Tommy’s eyes sparkled with mischief
as he watched. By and by he would
have a hunt for it! It would be fun!</p>
<p>When Sammy Jay had hidden the
last acorn and flown away, Tommy came
out. He didn’t feel like hunting for
those acorns just then, so he scampered
up in a tall hemlock-tree, and, just out
of sheer good spirits and because he
could see no danger near, he called
sharply that all within hearing might
know that he was about.</p>
<p>Almost instantly he received a reply
from not far away. It was an angry
warning to keep away from that part of
the Green Forest, because he had no
business there! It was the voice of
Chatterer. Tommy replied just as angrily
that he would stay if he wanted
to. Then they barked and chattered at<span class="pagenum">[42]</span>
each other for a long time. Gradually
Chatterer came nearer. Finally he was
in the very next tree. He stopped there
long enough to tell Tommy all that he
would do to him when he caught him,
and at the end he jumped across to
Tommy’s tree.</p>
<p>Tommy waited no longer. He
wasn’t ready to fight. In the first place
he knew that Chatterer probably had
lived there a long time, and so was
partly right in saying that Tommy had
no business there. Then Chatterer
looked a little the bigger and stronger.
So Tommy nimbly ran out on a branch
and leaped across to the next tree. In
a flash Chatterer was after him, and then
began a most exciting race through the
tree-tops.</p>
<p>Tommy found that there were regular<span class="pagenum">[43]</span>
squirrel highways through the tree-tops,
and along these he raced at top speed,
Chatterer at his heels, scolding and
threatening. When he reached the
edge of the Green Forest, Tommy darted
down the last tree, across the open space
to the old stone wall and along this,
Chatterer following.</p>
<p>Suddenly the anger in Chatterer’s
voice changed to a sharp cry of warning.
Tommy scrambled into a crevice between
two stones without stopping to
inquire what the trouble was. When
he peeped out, he saw a great bird sailing
back and forth. In a few minutes
it alighted on a near-by tree, and sat
there so still that, if Tommy had not
seen it alight, he never would have
known it was there.</p>
<p>“Mr. Goshawk nearly got you that<span class="pagenum">[44]</span>
time,” said a voice very near at hand.
Tommy turned to find Chatterer peeping
out from another crevice in the old
wall. “It won’t be safe for us to show
ourselves until he leaves,” continued
Chatterer. “It’s getting so that an honest
squirrel needs eyes in the back of
his head to keep his skin whole, not to
mention living out his natural life.
Hello! here comes a boy, and that means
more trouble. There’s one good thing
about it, and that is he’ll frighten away
that hawk.”</p>
<p>Tommy looked, and sure enough there
was a boy, and in his hands was an air-rifle.
Tommy didn’t know what it was,
but Chatterer did.</p>
<p>“I wish that hawk would hurry up
and fly so that we can run!” he sputtered.
“The thing that boy carries<span class="pagenum">[45]</span>
throws things, and they hurt. It isn’t
best to let him get too near when he has
that with him. He seems to think it’s
fun to hurt us. I’d just like to bite him
once and see if he thought <em>that</em> was fun!
There goes that hawk. Come on now,
we’ve got to run for it!”</p>
<p>Chatterer led the way and Tommy
followed. He was frightened, but there
wasn’t that terror which had possessed
him when Shadow the Weasel was after
him. Something struck sharply against
the wall just behind him. It frightened
him into greater speed. Something
struck just in front of him, and then
something hit him so hard that just for
a second he nearly lost his balance. It
hurt dreadfully.</p>
<p>“Hurrah!” shouted the boy, “I hit
him that time!” Then the boy started<span class="pagenum">[46]</span>
to run after them so as to get a closer
shot.</p>
<p>“We’ll get up in the top of that big
hemlock-tree and he won’t be able to
see us,” panted Chatterer. “Did he hit
you? That’s too bad. It might have
been worse though. If he had had one
of those things that make a big noise
and smoke we might not either of us be
here now.</p>
<p>“Boys are hateful things. I don’t see
what fun they get out of frightening
and hurting such little folks as you and
me. They’re brutes! That’s what they
are! When we get across that little
open place, we can laugh at him. Come
on now!”</p>
<p>Down from the end of the old wall
Chatterer jumped and raced across to
the foot of a big hemlock-tree, Tommy<span class="pagenum">[47]</span>
at his heels. Up the tree they ran and
hid close to the trunk where the branches
were thick. They could peer down and
see the boy, but he couldn’t see them.
He walked around the tree two or three
times, and then shot up into the top to
try to frighten the squirrels.</p>
<p>“Don’t move!” whispered Chatterer.
“He doesn’t see us.”</p>
<p>Tommy obeyed, although he felt as if
he must run. His heart seemed to jump
every time a bullet spatted in among the
branches. It was dreadful to sit there
and do nothing while being shot at, and
not know but that the very next minute
one of those little lead shot would hit.
Tommy knew just how it would hurt
if it did hit.</p>
<p>Presently the boy gave up and went
off to torment some one else. No sooner<span class="pagenum">[48]</span>
was his back fairly turned than Chatterer
began to scold and jeer at him.
Tommy joined him. It was just as if
there never had been any danger. If
that boy could have understood what
they said, his ears would have burned.</p>
<p>Then Chatterer showed Tommy just
what part of the Green Forest he claimed
as his own, and also showed him a part
that had belonged to another squirrel
to whom something had happened, and
suggested that Tommy take that for his.
It wasn’t as good as Chatterer’s, but still
it would do very well. Tommy took
possession at once. Each agreed not
to intrude on the other’s territory. On
common ground, that didn’t belong to
either of them, they would be the best
of friends, but Tommy knew that if he
went into Chatterer’s part of the Green<span class="pagenum">[49]</span>
Forest, he would have to fight, and he
made up his mind that if any other squirrel
came into <em>his</em> part of the Green Forest,
there would be a fight. Suddenly
he was very jealous of his new possession.
He was hardly willing to leave it,
when Chatterer suggested a visit to a
near-by corn-crib for a feast of yellow
corn.</p>
<p>Chatterer led the way. Tommy
found that he was quite lame from the
shot which had hit him, but he was soon
racing after Chatterer again.</p>
<p>Along the old stone wall, then along a
fence, up a maple-tree, and from there
to the roof of the corn-crib, they scampered.
Chatterer knew just where to
get inside, and in a few minutes they
were stuffing themselves with yellow
corn. When they had eaten all that<span class="pagenum">[50]</span>
they could hold, they stuffed their cheeks
full and started back the way they had
come.</p>
<p>Tommy went straight to his own part
of the Green Forest, and there he hid
his treasure, some in a hollow stump, and
some under a little pile of leaves between
the roots of a tree. All the time
he watched sharply to make sure that
no one saw him. While looking for new
hiding-places, his nose told him to dig.
There, buried under the leaves, he found
nuts hidden by the one who had lived
there before him. There must be many
more hidden there, and it would be great
fun hunting for them. Doubtless he
would find as many as if he had hidden
them himself, for he had seen that Chatterer
didn’t know where he had put a
tenth part of the things <em>he</em> had hidden.<span class="pagenum">[51]</span>
He just trusted to his nose to help him
get them again.</p>
<p>He found a splendid nest made of
leaves and strips of inner bark in the
hollow stub of a big branch of a chestnut-tree,
and he made up his mind that
there was where he would sleep. Then
he ran over to see Chatterer again. He
found him scolding at a cat who watched
him with yellow, unblinking eyes.
Chatterer would run down the trunk of
the tree almost to the ground, and there
scold and call names as fast as his tongue
could go. Then he would run back up
to the lowest branch and scold from
there. The next time he would go a little
farther down. Finally he leaped
to the ground, and raced across to another
tree. The cat sprang, but was
just too late. Chatterer jeered at her.<span class="pagenum">[52]</span>
Then he began the same thing over
again, and kept at it until finally the
cat gave up and left in disgust. It had
been exciting, but Tommy shivered at
the thought of what might have happened.</p>
<p>“Ever try that with a fox?” asked
Chatterer.</p>
<p>“No,” replied Tommy.</p>
<p>“I have!” boasted Chatterer. “But
I’ve seen squirrels caught doing it,” he
said. “Still, I suppose one may as well
be caught by a fox as by a hawk.”</p>
<p>“Did you see that weasel this morning?”
asked Tommy.</p>
<p>Chatterer actually shivered as he replied:
“Yes, I saw him after you. It’s
a wonder he didn’t get you. You’re
lucky! I was lucky myself this morning,
for a mink went right past where I<span class="pagenum">[53]</span>
was hiding. Life is nothing but one
jump after another these days. It seems
as if, when one has worked as hard as
I did last fall to store up enough food
to keep me all winter, I ought to be allowed
to enjoy it in comfort.</p>
<p>“Those who sleep all winter, like
Johnny Chuck, have a mighty easy time
of it. They don’t know when they are
well off. Still, I’d hate to miss all the
excitement and fun of life. I would
rather jump for my life twenty times a
day as I have to, and know that I’m
alive, than to be alive and not know it.
See that dog down there? I hate dogs!
I’m going to tell him so.”</p>
<p>Off raced Chatterer to bark and scold
at a little black-and-white dog which
paid no attention to him at all. The
shadows were creeping through the trees,<span class="pagenum">[54]</span>
and Tommy began to think of his nest.
He looked once more at Chatterer, who
was racing along the top of the old wall
scolding at the dog. Suddenly what
seemed like merely a darker shadow
swept over Chatterer, and, when it had
passed, he had vanished. For once,
that fatal once, he had been careless.
Hooty the Owl had caught him.
Tommy shivered. He was frightened
and cold. He would get to his nest as
quickly as he could. He leaped down
to a great gray stone, and—behold, he
wasn’t a squirrel at all! He was just
a boy sitting on a big stone, with a heap
of Christmas greens at his feet.</p>
<p>He shivered, for he was cold. Then
he jumped up and stamped his feet and
threshed his arms. A million diamond
points glittered in the white meadows<span class="pagenum">[55]</span>
where the snow crystals splintered the
sunbeams. From the Old Orchard
sounded the sharp scolding chirr and
cough of Chatterer the Red Squirrel.</p>
<p>Tommy listened and slowly a smile
widened. “Hooty didn’t get you after
all!” he muttered. Then in a minute
he added: “I’m glad of it. And you
haven’t anything more to fear from me.
You won’t believe it, but you haven’t.
You may be mischievous, but I guess
you have troubles enough without me
adding to them. Oh, but I’m glad I’m
not a squirrel! Being a boy’s good
enough for me, ’specially ’long ’bout
Christmas time. I guess Sis will be
tickled with these greens. But it’s
queer what happens when I sit down on
this old rock!”</p>
<p>He frowned at it as if he couldn’t<span class="pagenum">[56]</span>
understand it at all. Then he gathered
up his load of greens, and, with the merriest
of whistles, trudged homeward.
And to this day Chatterer the Red Squirrel
cannot understand how it came about
that from that Christmas he and Tommy
became fast friends. But they did.</p>
<p>Perhaps the wishing-stone could tell
if it would.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum">[57]</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />