THE WIND HUNT
After all, Mother Helma was not there
the next morning, nor the next, nor the
next. She did not come back for days and days
and days. Much happened before she returned,
and much happened after. I will tell you.
During the days the children roamed
the forest looking for their mother. They asked
every one they could find whether he had seen her.
The Tree Man, his daughter, the Bird Fairies, and
the Forest Children, not one of them had seen or heard
of her since she went away. But they all said
with one accord that she would surely come back in
her own time. It was not wise to go seeking her
so. She loved them. She would return.
“Wait and be patient,”
they said. “Time will bring Helma.”
But they were Forest People, who live
long, long lives, and see far. Eric was an Earth
Child, and Ivra was not all a Forest Child. So
they found it hard to be wise and wait and do nothing
but trust Helma and know she would return.
So they went wandering all the day.
They did not go home for meals, even, after a while,
but ate with the Tree Man and his daughter or the
Forest Children. Sometimes as they walked through
the forest, looking all about, even up into the trees
for their mother, they would suddenly burst into play.
“Tag,” Ivra would cry, tapping Eric on
the shoulder, and away she would fly, he after her,
in a race that grew merrier and merrier as it ran
on. Ivra darted and twisted away when Eric thought
he had her, rolling down little hills on the snow
crust, climbing trees, jumping brooks until he was
lucky enough to catch her by one of her pigtails at
last, or snatch her flying skirt. “Tag!”
Then away he sped, and the game would go on for a
happy while.
But sooner or later they always stopped
running, stopped laughing, and remembered why they
were wandering the wood alone. Then they would
call for Helma. Ivra’s voice was shrill
and sweet, and rang through the bare woods like a
birdsong. Eric’s wavered a little uncertainly,
as though he doubted whether Helma knew it well enough
to answer. “Helma, Helma, Helma! Ohh
Helma! Helmaa-a!”
No Helma answered. Sometimes
a Forest Child came running to say, “We haven’t
seen her yet, Ivra. But we are watching.”
The Bird Fairies fluttered at the call and nodded
their little heads uneasily. Children’s
voices calling for their mother was a sad sound, and
made the kindly little creatures restless. One
or two of them would fly to nestle in Ivra’s
neck and whisper, “Give her time. Do not
hurry her so. She will come back.”
But the children were losing faith.
They went calling, seeking and playing through the
woods all the hours of daylight. At night Ivra
told Eric World Stories, World Story after World Story
until sleep made them forget.
The fifth morning of their search
dawned blue and clear and windy.
“The Wind Creatures will be
happy to-day,” said Ivra when she opened her
eyes and heard the wind pushing at all the windows
of the house and saw the blue morning sky. “Wild
Star will be circling the world.”
“Why, then he will see Helma somewhere!”
cried Eric.
Ivra sprang from her bed. “Eric,
how splendid! We must go with him! Why didn’t
I think of it at the very first!”
They did not stop for breakfast, but
were into their coats and ready for the day’s
search in a twinkling. Neither of them had bothered
to undress the night before. Ivra’s hair
had gone unbrushed for two days. Things like
that are apt to slip when one’s mother is away.
So her little pigtails were no longer smooth and glossy,
but frowsy and loose, and the rest of her hair was
ruffled until it looked something like the Bird Fairies’
soft plumage. Eric’s head, too, was shaggier
than ever, and a smudge from firebuilding had darkened
one of his cheeks since the morning before. They
had not bathed in the “bird bath” since
Helma had gone away. They never seemed to have
time, or else they were too sleepy.
Now they no more thought of baths
than they thought of breakfast. Eric followed
Ivra, who knew all the ways in the forest, to the spot
where Wild Star was most likely to be, if he was to
be found at all on such a windy, perfect day.
They ran earnestly, never slackening to skip or play.
And soon they came in sight of some giant cedar trees
near the edge of the forest. There were several
Wind Creatures standing there, laughing in shrill,
glad voices, pointing with their arms, and flapping
their purple wings. Wind Creatures are growing-up
boys and girls with fairy-hearts and strong, never-tiring
purple wings, remember. Wild Star was among them.
But before the children had come up
to them, the Wind Creatures suddenly joined hands, as
they do just before flying, and started
running down the sloping hill that ended the forest.
For a minute Ivra was in despair.
“Now they are gone for the day to circle the
world, and I shall never find mother,” she thought.
But she did not waste any more breath running.
She stopped short and lifted her voice, clear and
insistent, “Wild Star! Wild Star! I
need you! Don’t run away. Wild Star!”
The Wind Creatures had reached the
foot of the hill, running swiftly hand in hand, and
their wings were already lifted for flying. But
Wild Star, at the sound of Ivra’s voice, leaned
back suddenly on the hands he was holding, almost
throwing his comrades on their faces, and breaking
the line. He turned right about, swinging the
others with him, and came leaping and running back.
“What is the matter, little
comrade?” he asked. “What is the matter?”
“In all your flying ’round
the world, Wild Star, you must have seen my mother
Helma. She is lost. Oh, can’t you tell
us where she is?”
“Yes, of course. But I
didn’t know she was lost. I thought she
was visiting Earth-friends.”
“Truly, truly?” Ivra’s
eyes shone with joy, and Eric grabbed his cap from
his head and threw it up in the air shouting, “Hurrah!”
“Oh, will you bring her to us right away?”
Ivra begged.
Wild Star looked doubtful. “Perhaps she
wouldn’t want to come.”
Ivra laughed merrily at that.
“Then take us to her,” she said, “and
you will see how she wants to come when we ask her.”
“Give us your hands, then!”
They held out their hands. Ivra’s
was grasped by Wild Star’s and Eric’s
by another Wind Creature. With their free hands
they clasped each other’s. So the four
started running down the hill, while the rest of the
Wind Creatures flew off over their heads.
Wild Star and his comrade ran faster
and faster, until Eric wondered how it was that he
and Ivra were ever keeping up with them. Soon
he realized that his feet were scarcely touching the
ground. At the foot of the hill stood a little
group of birches, and they were running right upon
it. He did not see how they could either turn
out or stop themselves at that speed. Almost
as soon as he had seen the birches, though, they were
beyond them. They had not turned out, they had
jumped right over the birches, and they were much
higher than Eric’s head! They were running
so swiftly now that only their toes ever touched the
ground, if they did.
What fun it was to run like that,
the wind at their backs, and the Wind Creatures drawing
them strongly forward faster and faster and faster
until they were really flying just above the snow.
Across white fields they skimmed, over
fences and frozen streams, bushes and banks, through
orchards and meadows, on, on, on, until they came
to the town.
There Ivra pulled back for a minute,
and the Wind Creatures slowed down. Eric knew
why Ivra was afraid of the town. She had told
him all about it while they played in the wood.
Helma, her mother, was a human, but she hated the
town and loved the fairies and their ways. That
was why she had run away to live by herself in the
wood. But Ivra was neither fairy nor human; she
was both.
Now the fairies are afraid of humans
because humans look right through them and do not
see them. That upsets the fairies and makes them
uncomfortable. Of course Helma and Eric were exceptions,
for because they had no shadows in their eyes they
could see them and play with them. So the fairies
accepted those two as one of themselves. Ivra
was different. Because she was only half fairy,
any human could see her whether his eyes were shadowed
or not if he would only look hard enough. The
dreadful part was that when a human did see her, he
was likely not to believe in her. He would just
think he was day-dreaming, and that the little girl
with the soft eyes, the ash-colored pigtails, and the
quick feet was just a piece of his day-dream.
Not to be seen is bad enough. But it is much
worse to be seen and not believed in. That was
why Ivra was afraid of the town. People saw her
there and either rubbed their eyes and looked another
way, or laughed.
But now she was going for her mother,
and she could bear anything, even that. She did
not hold back long. They ran past the canning
factory, and Eric did not give a glance to it.
A little girl looking out over a pile of cans saw
him, however, and wondered at his warm suit of brown
cloth, his leggins, sandals and the cap with
wings. She remembered him in rags. She saw
Ivra too, and did not rub her eyes and think her a
dream. But she did not call to any one in the
factory or point, for she knew they would think
it a dream.
Through the crooked narrow streets,
past the crooked narrow houses, one of
them Mrs. Freg’s, they sped faster
than the wind! On, on, on, up the
wide avenue through the “residential section”
where big houses eyed them from proud terraces, out
into the country again they raced.
There they came to a high gray stone
wall, blocking their way, and stood still.
“You must climb,” said Wild Star.
“She is in there.”