ly Mink, would have
been frightened half to death. But Shadow was simply angry. He was angry
that any one should try to catch him. He was still more angry because
his hunt for Jumper the Hare was interfered with. You see, he had just
found Jumper's trail when Whitey swooped at him.
So Shadow's little eyes grew red with rage as he dodged this way and
that and was gradually driven away from the place where he had found the
trail of Jumper the Hare. At last he saw a hole in an old log and into
this he darted. Whitey couldn't get him there. Whitey knew this and he
knew, too, that waiting for Shadow to come out again would be a waste of
time. So Whitey promptly flew away.
Hardly had he disappeared when Shadow popped out of that hole, for he
had been peeping out and watching Whitey. Without a moment's pause
he turned straight back for the place where he had found the trail of
Jumper the Hare. He had no intention of giving up that hunt just because
he had been driven away. Straight to the very spot where Whitey had
first swooped at him he ran, and there once more his keen little nose
took up the trail of Jumper. It led him straight to the foot of the tree
where Jumper had crouched so long.
But, as you know, Jumper wasn't there then. Shadow ran in a circle and
presently he found where Jumper had landed on the snow at the end
of that first bound. Shadow snarled. He understood exactly what had
happened.
"Jumper was under that tree when that white robber from the Far North
tried to catch me, and he took that chance to leave in a hurry. I can
tell that by the length of this jump. Probably he is still going. It is
useless to follow him because he has too long a start," said Shadow, and
he snarled again in rage and disappointment.
Then, for such is his way, he wasted no more time or thought on Jumper
the Hare. Instead he began to look for other trails. So it was that he
found one of the little holes of Whitefoot the Wood Mouse.
"Ha! So this is where Whitefoot has been living this winter!" he
exclaimed. Once more his eyes glowed red, but this time with eagerness
and the joy of the hunt. He plunged down into that little hole in the
snow. Down there the scent of Whitefoot was strong. Shadow followed it
until it led out of another little hole in the snow. But there he lost
it. You see, it was so long since Whitefoot had hurriedly left that the
scent on the surface had disappeared.
Shadow ran swiftly this way and that way i
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