way, and in a few moments would surely wind
them or strike their trail. There was no time to lose.
'Krrr! Krrr! (Hide! Hide!) cried the mother in a low, firm voice, and
the little bits of things, scarcely bigger than acorns and but a day old,
scattered far (a few inches) apart to hide. One dived under a leaf,
another between two roots, a third crawled into a curl of birch-bark, a
fourth into a hole, and so on, till all were hidden but one who could
find no cover, so squatted on a broad yellow chip and lay very flat, and
closed his eyes very tight, sure that now he was safe from being seen.
They ceased their frightened peeping and all was still.
Mother Partridge flew straight toward the dreaded beast, alighted
fearlessly a few yards to one side of him, and then flung herself on the
ground, flopping as though winged and lame--oh, so dreadfully
lame-and whining like a distressed puppy. Was she begging for
mercy--mercy from a bloodthirsty, cruel fox? Oh, dear, no! She was no
fool. One often hears of the cunning of the fox. Wait and see what a
fool he is compared with a mother-partridge. Elated at the prize so
suddenly within his reach, the fox turned with a dash and caught--at
least, no, he didn't quite catch the bird; she flopped by chance just a
foot out of reach. He followed with another jump and would have
seized her this time surely, but somehow a sapling came just between,
and the partridge dragged herself awkwardly away and under a log, but
the great brute snapped his jaws and bounded over the log, while she,
seeming a trifle less lame, made another clumsy forward spring and
tumbled down a bank, and Reynard, keenly following, almost caught
her tail, but, oddly enough, fast as he went and leaped, she still seemed
just a trifle faster. It was most extraordinary. A winged partridge and he,
Reynard, the Swift-foot, had not caught her in five minutes' racing. It
was really shameful. But the partridge seemed to gain strength as the
fox put forth his, and after a quarter of a mile race, racing that was
somehow all away from Taylor's Hill, the bird got unaccountably quite
well, and, rising with a decisive whirr, flew off through the woods,
leaving the fox utterly dumfounded to realize that he had been made a
fool of, and, worst of all, he now remembered that this was not the first
time he had been served this very trick, though he never knew the
reason for it.
Meanwhile Mother Partridge skimmed in a great circle and came by a
roundabout way back to the little fuzz-balls she had left hidden in the
woods.
With a wild bird's keen memory for places, she went to the very
grass-blade she last trod on, and stood for a moment fondly to admire
the perfect stillness of her children. Even at her step not one had stirred,
and the little fellow on the chip, not so very badly concealed after all,
had not budged, nor did he now; he only closed his eyes a tiny little bit
harder, till the mother said:
'_K-reet_,' (Come, children) and instantly, like a fairy story, every hole
gave up its little baby-partridge, and the wee fellow on the chip, the
biggest of them all really, opened his big-little eyes and ran to the
shelter of her broad tail, with a sweet little '_peep peep_' which an
enemy could not have heard three feet away, but which his mother
could not have missed thrice as far, and all the other thimblefuls of
down joined in, and no doubt thought themselves dreadfully noisy, and
were proportionately happy.
The sun was hot now. There was an open space to cross on the road to
the water, and, after a careful lookout for enemies, the mother gathered
the little things under the shadow of her spread fantail and kept off all
danger of sunstroke until they reached the brier thicket by the stream.
Here a cottontail rabbit leaped out and gave them a great scare. But the
flag of truce he carried behind was enough. He was an old friend; and
among other things the little ones learned that day that Bunny always
sails under a flag of truce, and lives up to it too.
And then came the drink, the purest of living water, though silly men
had called it Mud Creek.
At first the little fellows didn't know how to drink, but they copied their
mother, and soon learned to drink like her and give thanks after every
sip. There they stood in a row along the edge, twelve little brown and
golden balls on twenty-four little pink-toed, in-turned feet, with
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