It was night upon the prairie.
Overhead the stars were twinkling bright their red
and yellow lights. The moon was young. A
silvery thread among the stars, it soon drifted low
beneath the horizon.
Upon the ground the land was pitchy
black. There are night people on the plain who
love the dark. Amid the black level land they
meet to frolic under the stars. Then when their
sharp ears hear any strange footfalls nigh they scamper
away into the deep shadows of night. There they
are safely hid from all dangers, they think.
Thus it was that one very black night,
afar off from the edge of the level land, out of the
wooded river bottom glided forth two balls of fire.
They came farther and farther into the level land.
They grew larger and brighter. The dark hid the
body of the creature with those fiery eyes. They
came on and on, just over the tops of the prairie
grass. It might have been a wildcat prowling low
on soft, stealthy feet. Slowly but surely the
terrible eyes drew nearer and nearer to the heart
of the level land.
There in a huge old buffalo skull
was a gay feast and dance! Tiny little field
mice were singing and dancing in a circle to the boom-boom
of a wee, wee drum. They were laughing and talking
among themselves while their chosen singers sang loud
a merry tune.
They built a small open fire within
the center of their queer dance house. The light
streamed out of the buffalo skull through all the
curious sockets and holes.
A light on the plain in the middle
of the night was an unusual thing. But so merry
were the mice they did not hear the “king, king”
of sleepy birds, disturbed by the unaccustomed fire.
A pack of wolves, fearing to come
nigh this night fire, stood together a little distance
away, and, turning their pointed noses to the stars,
howled and yelped most dismally. Even the cry
of the wolves was unheeded by the mice within the
lighted buffalo skull.
They were feasting and dancing; they
were singing and laughing those funny little
furry fellows.
All the while across the dark from
out the low river bottom came that pair of fiery eyes.
Now closer and more swift, now fiercer
and glaring, the eyes moved toward the buffalo skull.
All unconscious of those fearful eyes, the happy mice
nibbled at dried roots and venison. The singers
had started another song. The drummers beat the
time, turning their heads from side to side in rhythm.
In a ring around the fire hopped the mice, each bouncing
hard on his two hind feet. Some carried their
tails over their arms, while others trailed them proudly
along.
Ah, very near are those round yellow
eyes! Very low to the ground they seem to creep creep
toward the buffalo skull. All of a sudden they
slide into the eye-sockets of the old skull.
“Spirit of the buffalo!”
squeaked a frightened mouse as he jumped out from
a hole in the back part of the skull.
“A cat! a cat!” cried
other mice as they scrambled out of holes both large
and snug. Noiseless they ran away into the dark.