can find me. And now, if you will excuse me…' He bent over to pick up the foil again.
'Please don't go yet,' said Mrs Frisby. 'I think perhaps you can help me now.'
'Ah,' said Jeremy. 'What kind of help? Are you hungry? I'll bring you some seeds from the barn loft. I know where they're stored.'
'No, thank you,' said Mrs Frisby. 'We have enough to eat.' And then she told him, as briefly as she could, about Timothy, his sickness, and the problem of Moving Day. Jeremy knew about Moving Day; crows do not have to move, but they keep a close watch on such activities as ploughing and planting so as to get their fair share of what's planted, and with their sharp eyes they see the small animals leaving before the plough.
So he clucked sympathetically when he heard Mrs Frisby's story, cocked his head to one side, and thought as hard as he could for as long as he could, which was about thirty seconds. His eyes closed with the effort.
'I don't know what you should do,' he said finally.
'I'm sorry. But maybe I can help even so. At least, I can tell you what we do when we don't know what to do.'
'We?'
'The crows. Most of the birds.'
'What do you do, then?'
'Over that way,' Jeremy nodded in the direction of the deep woods and faraway mountains that rose beyond the fence, 'about a mile from here there grows a very large beech tree, the biggest tree in the whole forest. Near the top of the tree there is a hollow in the trunk. In the hollow lives an owl who is the oldest animal in the woods - some say the world.
'When we don't know what to do, we ask him. Sometimes he answers our questions, sometimes he doesn't. It depends on how he feels. Or as my father used to say - what kind of humour he's in.'
Or possibly, thought Mrs Frisby, on whether or not he knows the answer. But she said:
'Could you ask him, then, if he knows of any help for me?' She did not think it likely that he would.
'Ah, no,' Jeremy said,'that won't do. That is, I could ask him, but I don't think the owl would listen. Imagine. A crow come to ask for help for a lady mouse with a sick child. He wouldn't believe me.'
'Then what's to be done?'
'What's to be done? You must go yourself and ask him.'
'But I could never find the tree. And if I did, I don't think I could climb so high.'
'Ah, now. That is where I can help, as I said I would.
I will carry you there on my back, the way I did before. And home again, of course.'
Mrs Frisby hesitated. It was one thing to leap on a crow's back when the cat is only three jumps away and coming fast, but quite another to do it deliberately, and to fly deep into a dark and unknown forest. In short, Mrs Frisby was afraid.
Then she thought of Timothy, and of the big steel plough blade. She told herself: I have no choice. If there is any chance that the owl might be able to help me, to advise me, I must go. She said to Jeremy:
'Thank you very much. I will go and talk to the owl if you will take me. It's a great favour.'
'It's nothing,' said Jeremy. 'You're welcome. But we can't go now.'
'Why not?'
'In the daytime, when the sun is out, the owl goes deep into the hollow and sleeps. That is, they say he sleeps, but I don't believe it. How could anyone sleep so long? I think he sits in there, part of the time at least, and thinks. And that's why he knows so much.
'But anyway, he won't speak in the daytime, not to anyone. And at night he's out flying, flying and hunting
'I know,' said Mrs Frisby - and that was another reason to be afraid.
'The time to see him is just at dusk. Then, when the light gets dim, he comes to the entrance of the hollow and watches while the dark comes in. That's the time to ask him questions.'
'I understand,' said Mrs Frisby. 'Shall we go this evening?'
'At five o'clock,' Jeremy said, I'll be at your house.' He picked up the piece of foil in his bill, waved goodbye, and flew off.
The Owl
Jeremy appeared as promised when the last thumbnail of sun winked out over the mountains