The country lay bare and entirely leafless
around him, and he thought that he had never seen so far and so intimately into
the insides of things as on that winter day when Nature was deep in her annual
slumber and seemed to have kicked the clothes off. Copses, dells, quarries and
all hidden places, which had been mysterious mines for exploration in leafy
summer, now exposed themselves and their secrets pathetically, and seemed to
ask him to overlook their shabby poverty for a while, till they could riot in
rich masquerade as before, and trick and entice him with the old deceptions. It
was pitiful in a way, and yet cheering — even exhilarating. He was glad that he
liked the country undecorated, hard, and stripped of its finery. He had got
down to the bare bones of it, and they were fine and strong and simple. He did
not want the warm clover and the play of seeding grasses; the screens of
quickset, the billowy drapery of beech and elm seemed best away; and with great
cheerfulness of spirit he pushed on towards the Wild Wood, which lay before him
low and threatening, like a black reef in some still southern sea.
There was
nothing to alarm him at first entry. Twigs crackled under his feet, logs
tripped him, funguses on stumps resembled caricatures, and startled him for the
moment by their likeness to something familiar and far away; but that was all
fun, and exciting. It led him on, and he penetrated to where the light was
less, and trees crouched nearer and nearer, and holes made ugly mouths at him
on either side.
Everything was
very still now. The dusk advanced on him steadily, rapidly, gathering in behind
and before; and the light seemed to be draining away like flood-water.
Then the faces
began.
It was over
his shoulder, and indistinctly, that he first thought he saw a face; a little
evil wedge-shaped face, looking out at him from a hole. When he turned and
confronted it, the thing had vanished.
He quickened
his pace, telling himself cheerfully not to begin imagining things, or there
would be simply no end to it. He passed another hole, and another, and another;
and then — yes! — no! — yes! certainly a little narrow face, with hard eyes,
had flashed up for an instant from a hole, and was gone. He hesitated — braced
himself up for an effort and strode on. Then suddenly, and as if it had been so
all the time, every hole, far and near, and there were hundreds of them, seemed
to possess its face, coming and going rapidly, all fixing on him glances of
malice and hatred: all hard-eyed and evil and sharp.
If he could
only get away from the holes in the banks, he thought, there would be no more
faces. He swung off the path and plunged into the untrodden places of the wood.
Then the
whistling began.
Very faint and
shrill it was, and far behind him, when first he heard it; but somehow it made
him hurry forward. Then, still very faint and shrill, it sounded far ahead of
him, and made him hesitate and want to go back. As he halted in indecision it
broke out on either side, and seemed to be caught up and passed on throughout
the whole length of the wood to its farthest limit. They were up and alert and
ready, evidently, whoever they were! And he — he was alone, and unarmed, and
far from any help; and the night was closing in.
Then the
pattering began.
He thought it
was only falling leaves at first, so slight and delicate was the sound of it.
Then as it grew it took a regular rhythm, and he knew it for nothing else but
the pat-pat-pat of little feet still a very long way off. Was it in front or
behind? It seemed to be first one, and then the other, then both. It grew and
it multiplied, till from every quarter as he listened anxiously, leaning this
way and that, it seemed to be closing in on him. As he stood still to hearken,
a rabbit came running hard towards him through the trees. He waited, expecting
it to slacken pace, or to swerve from him into a different course. Instead, the
animal almost brushed him as it dashed past, his face set and hard, his eyes
staring. ‘Get out of this, you fool, get out!’ the Mole heard him mutter as he
swung round a stump and disappeared down a friendly burrow.

The pattering
increased till it sounded like sudden hail on the dry leaf-carpet spread around
him. The whole wood seemed running now, running hard, hunting, chasing, closing
in round something or — somebody? In panic, he began to run too, aimlessly, he
knew not whither. He ran up against things, he fell over things and into things,
he darted under things and dodged round things. At last he took refuge in the
deep dark hollow of an old beech tree, which offered shelter, concealment —
perhaps even safety, but who could tell? Anyhow, he was too tired to run any
further, and could only snuggle down into the dry leaves which had drifted into
the hollow and hope he was safe for a time. And as he lay there panting and
trembling, and listened to the whistlings and the patterings outside, he knew
it at last, in all its fullness, that dread thing which other little dwellers
in field and hedgerow had encountered here, and known as their darkest moment —
that thing which the Rat had vainly tried to shield him from — the Terror of
the Wild Wood!
Meantime the
Rat, warm and comfortable, dozed by his fireside. His paper of half-finished
verses slipped from his knee, his head fell back, his mouth opened, and he
wandered by the verdant banks of dream-rivers. Then a coal slipped, the fire
crackled and sent up a spurt of flame, and he woke with a start. Remembering
what he had been engaged upon, he reached down to the floor for his verses,
pored over them for a minute, and then looked round for the Mole to ask him if
he knew a good rhyme for something or other.
But the Mole
was not there.
He listened
for a time.
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