<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<div class="align-None container titlepage">
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="medium">The Bedtime Story-Books</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="x-large">THE ADVENTURES OF
<br/>SAMMY JAY</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="medium">BY</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="large">THORNTON W. BURGESS</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="small">Author of "Old Mother West Wind," "Mother West
<br/>Wind 'Why' Stories," "Adventures
<br/>of Mr. Mocker," etc.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><em class="italics small">With Illustrations by
<br/>HARRISON CADY</em></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="medium">BOSTON
<br/>LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY
<br/>1924</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
</div>
<div class="align-None container verso">
<p class="center pfirst"><em class="italics small">Copyright, 1915,</em><span class="small">
<br/>BY LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY.</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><em class="italics small">All rights reserved</em></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 3em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="small">PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
</div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">CONTENTS</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span></p>
<ol class="upperroman simple">
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#sammy-jay-makes-a-fuss">Sammy Jay Makes a Fuss</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#a-bitter-disappointment">A Bitter Disappointment</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#the-vanity-of-sammy-jay">The Vanity of Sammy Jay</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#sammy-jay-gets-even-with-peter-rabbit">Sammy Jay Gets Even with Peter Rabbit</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#sammy-jay-brings-news">Sammy Jay Brings News</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#black-pussy-almost-catches-a-good-breakfast">Black Pussy Almost Catches a Good Breakfast</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chatterer-works-hard">Chatterer Works Hard</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#sammy-jay-drops-a-hint">Sammy Jay Drops a Hint</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chatterer-screws-up-his-courage">Chatterer Screws up His Courage</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chatterer-studies-a-way-to-get-farmer-brown-s-corn">Chatterer Studies a Way to Get Farmer Brown's Corn</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chatterer-grows-reckless">Chatterer Grows Reckless</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chatterer-frightens-sammy-jay">Chatterer Frightens Sammy Jay</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#sammy-jay-tells-his-troubles-to-reddy-fox">Sammy Jay Tells His Troubles to Reddy Fox</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#reddy-fox-plays-spy">Reddy Fox Plays Spy</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#sammy-jay-spoils-the-plan-of-reddy-fox">Sammy Jay Spoils the Plan of Reddy Fox</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chatterer-and-sammy-jay-quarrel">Chatterer and Sammy Jay Quarrel</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chatterer-and-sammy-jay-make-up">Chatterer and Sammy Jay Make Up</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chatterer-has-to-keep-his-promise">Chatterer Has to Keep His Promise</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chatterer-gets-sammy-jay-some-corn">Chatterer Gets Sammy Jay Some Corn</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chatterer-remembers-something">Chatterer Remembers Something</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#sammy-jay-makes-a-call">Sammy Jay Makes a Call</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chatterer-has-a-dreadful-day">Chatterer Has a Dreadful Day</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chatterer-hits-on-a-plan-at-last">Chatterer Hits on a Plan at Last</SPAN></p>
</li>
<li><p class="first noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chatterer-has-his-turn-to-laugh">Chatterer Has His Turn to Laugh</SPAN></p>
</li>
</ol>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#matter-enough-reddy-fox-matter-enough-snapped-sammy-jay">"Matter enough, Reddy Fox! Matter enough!" snapped
Sammy Jay</SPAN><span> . . . </span><em class="italics">Frontispiece</em><span> (missing from book) (Page </span><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#id1">60</SPAN><span>)</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#i-ll-get-even-with-you-peter-rabbit">"I'll get even with you, Peter Rabbit!"</SPAN><span> (missing from book)</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#farmer-brown-s-boy-didn-t-even-look-towards-him">Farmer Brown's boy didn't even look towards him</SPAN></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#no-o-o-replied-chatterer-slowly">"No-o-o," replied Chatterer slowly</SPAN></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#sammy-flew-straight-over-to-where-blacky-was-sitting">Sammy flew straight over to where Blacky was sitting</SPAN></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chatterer-gave-a-little-gasp-of-fright">Chatterer gave a little gasp of fright</SPAN></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="sammy-jay-makes-a-fuss"><span class="bold x-large">THE ADVENTURES OF
<br/>SAMMY JAY</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold large">I</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">SAMMY JAY MAKES A FUSS</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Sammy Jay doesn't mind the cold
of winter. Indeed, he rather likes
it. Under his handsome coat of
blue, trimmed with white, he wears a
warm silky suit of underwear, and he
laughs at rough Brother North Wind
and his cousin, Jack Frost. But still he
doesn't like the winter as well as he
does the warmer seasons because—well,
because he is a lazy fellow and doesn't
like to work for a living any harder
than he has to, and in the winter
it isn't so easy to get something to eat.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And there is another reason why
Sammy Jay doesn't like the winter as
well as the other seasons. What do you
think it is? It isn't a nice reason at all.
No, Sir, it isn't a nice reason at all. It
is because it isn't so easy to stir up
trouble. Somehow, Sammy Jay never
seems really happy unless he is stirring
up trouble for some one else. He just
delights in tormenting other little
people of the Green Meadows and the
Green Forest.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Dear, dear, it is a dreadful thing to
say, but Sammy Jay is bold and bad.
He steals! Yes, Sir, Sammy Jay steals
whenever he gets a chance. He had
rather steal a breakfast any time than
get it honestly. Now people who steal
usually are very sly. Sammy Jay is sly.
Indeed, he is one of the slyest of all the
little people who live in the Green
Forest. Instead of spending his time
honestly hunting for his meals, he spends
most of it watching his neighbors to find
out where they have their store-houses,
so that he can help himself when their
backs are turned. He slips through the
Green Forest as still as still can be,
hiding in the thick tree-tops and behind
the trunks of big trees, and peering out
with those sharp eyes of his at his
neighbors. Whenever he is discovered,
he always pretends to be very busy
about his own business, and very much
surprised to find any one is near.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It was in this way that he had
discovered one of the store-houses of
Chatterer the Red Squirrel. He didn't let
Chatterer know that he had discovered
it. Oh, my, no! He didn't even go near
it again for a long time. But he didn't
forget it. Sammy Jay never forgets
things of that kind, never! He thought
of it often and often. When he did, he
would say to himself:</span></p>
<blockquote>
<div>
<div class="line-block outermost">
<div class="line"><span>"Sometime when the snow is deep</span></div>
<div class="line"><span>And Chatterer is fast asleep,</span></div>
<div class="line"><span>When Mother Nature is unkind</span></div>
<div class="line"><span>And things to eat are hard to find,</span></div>
<div class="line"><span>I'll help myself and fly away</span></div>
<div class="line"><span>To steal again some other day."</span></div>
<div class="line"> </div>
</div></div>
</blockquote>
<p class="pfirst"><span>The snow was deep now, and things
to eat were hard to find, but Chatterer
the Red Squirrel wasn't asleep. No,
indeed! Chatterer seemed to like the
cold weather and was as frisky and spry
as ever he is. And he never went very
far away from that store-house.
Sammy Jay watched and watched, but
never once did he get a chance to
steal the sweet acorns that he had
seen Chatterer store away in the fall.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"H-m-m!" said Sammy Jay to himself,
"I must do something to get
Chatterer away from his store-house."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>For a long time Sammy Jay sat in the
top of a tall, dark pine-tree, thinking
and thinking. Then his sharp eyes
twinkled with a look of great cunning,
and he chuckled. It was a naughty
chuckle. Away he flew to a very thick
spruce-tree some distance away in the
Green Forest, but where Chatterer the
Red Squirrel could hear him. There
Sammy Jay began to make a great fuss.
He screamed and screeched as only he
can. Pretty soon, just as he expected,
he saw Chatterer the Red Squirrel
hurrying over to see what the fuss was all
about. Sammy Jay slipped out of the
other side of the spruce-tree and
without a sound hurried over to Chatterer's
store-house.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="a-bitter-disappointment"><span class="bold large">II</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">A BITTER DISAPPOINTMENT</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>As he flew through the Green
Forest, Sammy Jay chuckled and
chuckled to himself. It wasn't
a good chuckle to hear. It was the kind
of chuckle that only folks who are
doing wrong, and think they are smart
because they are doing wrong, use.
Sammy Jay thought that he was smart,
very smart indeed. He had screamed
and shrieked and made a great fuss
over nothing at all until Chatterer the
Red Squirrel had come hurrying over
to find out what it all meant. Then
Sammy Jay had slipped away unseen
and come straight to the store-house of
Chatterer the Red Squirrel.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This particular store-house had once been
the home of Blacky the Crow. When Blacky
deserted it for a new home, Chatterer had
taken it for a store-house. He had roofed
it over, and all through the pleasant fall
he had stored away nuts and acorns in it.
Sammy Jay had watched him. He had seen those
sweet acorns and nuts put there, and he had
never forgotten them. Now, with the snow
deep on the ground, the easiest way to get
a good meal that he knew of was to steal
some of those very acorns. So he chuckled
as he pulled apart the roof of Chatterer's
store-house in search of those acorns.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now Chatterer the Red Squirrel is quite as
smart as Sammy Jay. Indeed, he is very much
like Sammy Jay, for he is a mischief-maker
and a thief himself. So, because people
who do wrong always are on the watch for
others to do wrong, Chatterer the Red
Squirrel had kept his sharp eyes wide
open all the time he had been filling his
store-house in the fall, and he had spied
Sammy Jay's smart blue coat when Sammy
had thought himself nicely hidden.
Chatterer had known what Sammy Jay was
hiding there for. His sharp eyes snapped,
but he went right on filling his store-house
just the same. Then, just as soon as he
was sure that Sammy Jay had gone away,
Chatterer had taken out every one of the
sweet acorns and put them in another
store-house inside a hollow tree. He had
left nothing but hickory nuts, for he
knew that these are too hard for Sammy
Jay to crack.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Sammy Jay didn't know anything about
this, and so now, as he broke his way into
the store-house, he chuckled greedily.
Pretty soon he had a hole big enough to
stick his head in,
and his mouth watered as he reached in
for a sweet acorn. All he could find
were hard hickory nuts. What did it
mean? In a great rage, Sammy Jay
began to tear the store-house to pieces.
There must be some sweet acorns there
somewhere! Hadn't he seen Chatterer
put them there? He forgot that he was
stealing. He forgot everything except
his disappointment, and the more he
thought of this, the angrier he grew.
He would have pulled the store-house
all to pieces, if Chatterer himself hadn't
come home.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Sammy Jay had just stopped for
breath when he heard the rattle of claws
on the bark of the tree. He knew what
that meant, and he didn't wait to look
down. He just spread his blue wings
and with a scream of rage flew over to
the next tree. Then such a dreadful
noise as there was in the Green Forest!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Robber!" screamed Chatterer the
Red Squirrel, dancing up and down
with anger.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Thief yourself!" screamed Sammy Jay.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>It was a dreadful quarrel, and all the
little forest people who were within
hearing stopped their ears.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="the-vanity-of-sammy-jay"><span class="bold large">III</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">THE VANITY OF SAMMY JAY</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>When Sammy Jay isn't planning
mischief, or sticking his
bill into the affairs of other
folks with which he has no concern, or
trying to frighten some one bigger than
himself or scare some one smaller than
himself, he spends a great deal of his
time admiring his fine clothes and
thinking what a handsome fellow he is.
And he is a handsome fellow. Even
Chatterer the Red Squirrel, who is
always quarreling with him, admits that
Sammy Jay is a handsome fellow. He
carries himself proudly when he thinks
any one is looking. His shape is very
trim and neat, and he is a very smart
looking fellow indeed. And his coat!
Was there ever such a coat before? It
seems as if Old Mother Nature must
have cut off a little piece of the sky
when it was bluest on a summer day to
make Sammy Jay's coat, and that she
must have taken a tiny strip from the
whitest cloud to trim it with. And then
she gave him a smart cap and a black
collar and a waistcoat of just the softest
grayish-white, that shows off his blue
coat best. Old Mother Nature certainly
was feeling very good indeed when she
planned Sammy Jay's clothes.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now Sammy Jay knows just how
handsome he is. If you should ask him,
and he would condescend to talk to you
at all, which he probably wouldn't do,
he would tell you that he is the
handsomest fellow in the world. Of course
this isn't true, but Sammy Jay thinks it
is. And so Sammy Jay is very fond of
showing off his fine clothes and making
fun of other people who are not so finely
dressed. He spends a great deal of
time in caring for his beautiful coat and
in admiring himself whenever he can
see his reflection in a little pool of water.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now Peter Rabbit isn't the least bit
like Sammy Jay. He doesn't think
about his clothes at all. Indeed, Peter
thinks so little about his clothes that it
doesn't trouble him a bit to wear a
white patch on the seat of his trousers.
And Peter dearly loves to make fun of
Sammy Jay.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So it tickled Peter immensely one day
to find Sammy Jay admiring himself.
Peter had come up through the Green
Forest without making a sound, for
with the snow covering the ground,
there were no dead leaves to rustle. As
usual, his long ears were cocked up to
catch every sound. Suddenly Peter
stopped. He had heard Sammy Jay's
voice, and by the sound, Peter knew
that Sammy was talking to himself.
Very, very softly Peter stole forward
and hid where he could see Sammy Jay
in a big pine-tree.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I've got the handsomest coat in all
the Green Forest!" said Sammy Jay,
stretching one of his wings out and
cocking his head on one side to admire
it. "And where else is such a beautiful
tail to be found?" He spread his tail
so that a ray of sunshine would fall on
it. It certainly was very beautiful, as
blue as the sky, with a little band of
white across the tip and little bars of
black across the outer sides. Even
Peter Rabbit, with his nose turned up in
scorn, had to admit to himself that it
certainly was a handsome tail.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I'm so glad it's mine!" sighed
Sammy Jay. "It must be dreadful not
to be handsome."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Peter Rabbit could keep still no
longer. "It's a good thing you admire
yourself, Sammy Jay, because no one
else does!" he shouted.</span></p>
<blockquote>
<div>
<div class="line-block outermost">
<div class="line"><span>"Handsome is as it may do!</span></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>Don't forget that, Sammy Jay.</span></div>
</div>
<div class="line"><span>Underneath that coat of blue</span></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>Is a black heart, Sammy Jay.</span></div>
</div>
<div class="line"><span>Everybody near and far</span></div>
<div class="line"><span>Knows you for just what you are—</span></div>
<div class="line"><span>Of all mischief-makers chief.</span></div>
<div class="line"><span>Handsome clothes won't hide a thief."</span></div>
<div class="line"> </div>
</div></div>
</blockquote>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Sammy Jay flew into a rage, but
when he opened his mouth to call Peter
names, all he could say was "Thief! thief! thief!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What did I tell you?" said Peter
Rabbit, grinning.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="sammy-jay-gets-even-with-peter-rabbit"><span class="bold large">IV</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">SAMMY JAY GETS EVEN WITH PETER RABBIT</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>"I'll get even with you, Peter
Rabbit! I'll get even with you!" Sammy
Jay fairly hopped up and
down on the branch of the big pine, he
was so angry. Peter just thrust his
tongue into one cheek in the sauciest
way and then laughed at Sammy Jay.
Of course it is true, as every one in the
Green Forest and on the Green
Meadows knows, that Sammy Jay is a thief.
But no one likes to be told that he is a
thief, even if he is, Sammy Jay least of
all. Like a great many other people
who do wrong, Sammy Jay likes to
pretend that he is a very fine gentleman,
and he wants other people to think so
too. So he takes great care of his
handsome blue coat and struts around a
great deal when he thinks other folks
are looking at him.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="i-ll-get-even-with-you-peter-rabbit"><span class="bold">[Illustration: "I'll get even with you, Peter Rabbit!" (missing from book)]</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>So Sammy Jay studied and studied
how he could get even with Peter
Rabbit. He called Peter names whenever
he saw him, but Peter didn't mind that
in the least, for he could call names
back again. Besides, names never hurt,
and it is very foolish to call them. So
Sammy Jay studied and studied how he
could get even with Peter Rabbit in
some other way. Then one day, as he
sat in the big pine-tree studying,
Sammy heard a voice that gave him an
idea. It was the voice of Redtail the
Hawk, who, you know, is own cousin to
old Whitetail and to Roughleg. Now
Sammy Jay can scream so exactly like
Redtail the Hawk that you cannot tell
their voices apart. When he heard that
scream, Sammy Jay chuckled out loud.
He had thought of a plan to get even
with Peter Rabbit.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Every day after that, Sammy Jay
went peeking and prying through the
Green Forest and around the edge of
the Green Meadows without making a
sound, just watching for Peter Rabbit.
The snow was almost all gone, and that
is how it happened that Redtail had
come back from the South where he had
spent the winter. Sammy Jay felt quite
sure that Peter didn't know that
Redtail was back yet. He hoped he didn't,
anyway.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Early one morning, Sammy Jay sat
hidden on the edge of the Green Forest,
watching the Old Briar-patch where
Peter Rabbit lives. He saw Peter come
out of one of his private little paths and
sit up very straight. For a long time
Peter sat looking this way and looking
that way over the Green Meadows.
When he was sure that Reddy and
Granny Fox were nowhere about, and
that Roughleg was nowhere in sight,
Peter kicked up his heels and
scampered out on to the Green Meadows
away from the dear Old Briar-patch
to see if there were any signs of spring.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Sammy waited until Peter had
reached the big hickory-tree over by
the Smiling Pool, then very silently he
flew over to the big hickory-tree. Peter
was so busy looking for Jerry Muskrat
that he didn't see Sammy Jay at all.
Suddenly, right over Peter's head,
sounded a fierce, shrill scream. Peter
knew that voice. At least, he thought
he did. He didn't stop to look. He had
learned long ago that it is best to run
first and look afterward. So now he
started for the dear Old Briar-patch as
fast as his long legs would take him, his
heart in his mouth.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Again that fierce scream sounded
right over him. Peter ran faster than
ever, and as he ran, he dodged this way
and dodged that way. Every second he
expected to feel the sharp claws of
Redtail the Hawk. My, such jumps as
Peter did take! It seemed to him that
he never would reach the dear Old
Briar-patch. But he did, and just as
soon as he was safely inside, he turned
around to see what had become of
Redtail. And what do you think he saw?
Why, only Sammy Jay laughing fit to
kill himself.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Fraidcat! Fraidcat!" shouted Sammy Jay.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Peter shook his fist. Then he grinned
foolishly. "I guess you are even,
Sammy Jay!" he said.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="sammy-jay-brings-news"><span class="bold large">V</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">SAMMY JAY BRINGS NEWS</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Peter Rabbit had a very funny
feeling. He had started out that
morning with the best intentions
in the world. He had meant to go
straight to Chatterer the Red Squirrel
and tell him how mean he had been to
spy and so find the new house that
Chatterer was trying to keep a secret, and
then he had overheard Chatterer telling
Tommy Tit the Chickadee how he had
fooled Peter, and that Peter didn't
know where the new house was, at all.
Peter had never felt more foolish in his
life. No, Sir, he never had felt more
foolish in his life. Of course, if it were
true that he had been fooled and really
didn't know where Chatterer's new
house was, there was no use in begging
Chatterer's pardon, for he would only
make himself still more of a laughing
stock than he was already. And yet the
thing he had done was just as mean as
if he had found out Chatterer's secret,
and he knew that he would feel better if
he owned up. He scratched his left ear
with his right hind foot and then
scratched his right ear with his left
hind foot. He pulled his whiskers, and
still he didn't know what to do.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He was still trying to decide, when he
heard a great racket in the direction of
the Green Forest. It was Sammy Jay,
screaming noisily as usual, and he was
hurrying straight up to the Old
Orchard. Of course Chatterer heard him,
and as soon as Sammy was within hearing,
he called to him. Sammy hurried
over at once.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"So here you are!" he exclaimed.
"I've hunted all through the Green
Forest for you until I'm quite tuckered
out. I've got news for you."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What is it?" begged Chatterer,
dancing about with impatience.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I've seen Shadow the Weasel," replied Sammy.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Where is he?" asked Chatterer,
and his voice sounded very anxious.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"He's over in the Green Forest, and
he says he is going to stay there until he
catches you, if he has to stay all
winter," replied Sammy. "He says he is
going to find you if he has to hunt
through every tree in the Green Forest."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Chatterer actually turned pale for a
minute. "You—you didn't tell him
that I wasn't in the Green Forest, did
you?" he asked.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Of course I didn't! How could I
when I didn't know it myself?"
retorted Sammy scornfully.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"And—and you won't tell him when
you see him again, will you, Sammy?"
begged Chatterer.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What do you take me for?" demanded
Sammy angrily. "I haven't
got any love for you, Chatterer, and you
know it. You're a red-headed, red-coated
nuisance, and I'm not a bit sorry
to see you in trouble, but I wouldn't
turn my worst enemy over to such a
cruel, cold-blooded robber as Shadow
the Weasel. He would kill me just as
quickly as he would you, if he could
catch me, which he can't, and I am
going to make it my business to see to it
that all the little people who are afraid
of him know that he is about. I am
going over to the Old Briar-patch right
away to warn Peter Rabbit."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You don't need to, because I am
right here," spoke up Peter from his
hiding place. "I am ever so much
obliged to you for planning to warn me,
and I'm sorry I've ever said mean
things about you, Sammy Jay."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Pooh!" replied Sammy. "You
needn't be. I guess I've deserved them."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then Sammy and Peter and Chatterer
began to talk over the news about
Shadow the Weasel so eagerly that not
one of them saw Black Pussy stealing
along the old stone wall.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="black-pussy-almost-catches-a-good-breakfast"><span class="bold large">VI</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">BLACK PUSSY ALMOST CATCHES A GOOD BREAKFAST</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Black Pussy was out very
early, hunting for her breakfast.
Not that she needed to hunt for
her breakfast; oh, my, no! Black
Pussy didn't need a single thing. Every
morning Farmer Brown's boy filled a
saucer with warm fresh milk for her,
and every day she had all the meat that
was good for her, so there wasn't the
least need in the world for her to go
hunting. Black Pussy was just like all
cats. Lying before the fire in Farmer
Brown's house, blinking and purring
contentedly, she seemed too good-natured
and gentle to hurt any one, and
all Farmer Brown's family said that
she was and believed it. They knew
nothing about the empty little nests in
the joyful springtime,—empty because
Black Pussy had found them and emptied
them and broken the hearts of little
father and mother birds.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>You see, Farmer Brown's folks really
didn't know Black Pussy. But the
little forest and meadow people did. They
knew that Black Pussy was just like all
cats,—fierce and cruel down inside,—and
they hated Black Pussy, every one
of them. They knew that down in her
heart was the love of killing, just that
same love of killing that is in the heart
of Shadow the Weasel, and so they
hated Black Pussy. If she had had to
hunt for a living, they wouldn't have
minded so much, but she didn't have to
hunt for a living, and so they hated her.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>This particular morning Black Pussy
had chosen to have a look along the old
stone wall at the edge of the Old
Orchard. Many times she had hunted
Striped Chipmunk there. She didn't
know enough about the ways of the
little people of the Green Forest and the
Green Meadows to know that this cold
weather had sent Striped Chipmunk
down into his snug bedroom under
ground for a long sleep, so she sneaked
along from stone to stone, hoping that
she would surprise him. She had gone
half the length of the old wall without
a sign of anything to catch when she
heard voices that put all thought of
Striped Chipmunk out of her head.
Crawling flat on her stomach to keep
out of sight, she softly worked nearer
and nearer until, peeping from behind
a big stone in the old wall, she could see
Chatterer the Red Squirrel, Peter
Rabbit, and Sammy Jay talking so busily
and so excited that they didn't seem
to be paying attention to anything else.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Sammy Jay was safe, because he was
sitting in an old apple-tree, but
Chatterer was on the old wall, and Peter was
on the ground. Which should she
catch? Peter would make the biggest
and best breakfast, but Black Pussy
hadn't forgotten the terrible kick he
had once given her when she had caught
little Miss Fuzzytail up in the Old
Pasture, and she had great respect for
Peter's stout hind legs. She would be
content to catch Chatterer this
morning. She hated him, anyway, for he had
been very saucy to her many times. He
would never make fun of her or call her
names again.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>More slowly and carefully than ever,
Black Pussy stole forward. Her eyes
grew yellow with excitement, and fierce
and cruel. At last she reached a place
where one good jump would land her on
Chatterer. Carefully she drew her feet
under her to make the jump. The end
of her black tail twitched with
eagerness. Just as she got ready to spring,
there was a shrill scream from Sammy
Jay. He had caught sight of the moving
tip of that tail, and he knew what it
meant. Black Pussy sprang, but she
was just too late. Chatterer had dived
headfirst down between the stones of
the old wall at the sound of Sammy's
scream, and Peter had dived headfirst
into Johnny Chuck's house, on the
doorstep of which he happened to be sitting.
Black Pussy looked up at Sammy Jay
and snarled at him in a terrible rage.
Sammy shrieked at her just as angrily.
Then, when her head was turned for
just an instant, he darted down and
actually pulled a tuft of hair from her
coat, and was safely out of the way
before she could turn and spring. Then
Black Pussy thrust a paw down
between the stones where Chatterer had
disappeared. She pulled it out again
with a yowl of pain, for sharp little
teeth had bitten it. Slowly and
sullenly Black Pussy turned and limped
back towards Farmer Brown's house.
She suddenly remembered that saucer
of milk, and that that was really all the
breakfast she wanted.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="chatterer-works-hard"><span class="bold large">VII</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">CHATTERER WORKS HARD</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>When Chatterer had left the
Green Forest because of his
terrible fear of Shadow the
Weasel, he had been fat. At least, he
had been fat for him. All through the
pleasant fall, while he had been
gathering his supply of nuts and seeds to
store away for the winter, he had eaten
all he could hold and had filled his red
coat out until it actually felt too tight.
But now that same red coat hung so
loose on Chatterer that it looked too
big for him. Yes, Sir, Chatterer had
grown so thin that his coat actually
looked too big for him. And he was
growing thinner every day.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>You see, most of the food had been
collected and stored away long ago, and
Chatterer had to run about a great deal
and hunt very hard to find enough to
eat day by day, while as for filling a
new store-house,—that seemed impossible!
Still Chatterer kept trying, and
day by day he managed to add a little
to the supply of seeds. But it was
pretty poor fare at best. There were
no plump nuts or tasty pine-seeds, such
as filled his store-houses in the Green
Forest, because no nut or pine-trees
grew near the Old Orchard, and
Chatterer didn't dare go back to the Green
Forest for fear that Shadow the Weasel
would find him and track him to his
new home. So he patiently did his best
to find food close at hand. But it was
discouraging, terribly discouraging, to
work from sun-up to sun-down,
running here, running there, running
everywhere, until he was so tired he
was ready to drop, and knowing all
the time that the snow might come
any day and bury what little food
there was. Oh, those were hard days
for Chatterer the Red Squirrel, very
hard days indeed.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>One morning he started very early
and made a long journey by way of the
old stone wall and the rail fences down
to Farmer Brown's cornfield. Of
course Farmer Brown had long ago
taken away the corn, but in doing it,
a great many grains had been scattered
about on the ground, half buried where
they had been trodden on, hidden under
leaves and among weeds and under the
piles of stalks from which the ears had
been stripped. For the first time for
days Chatterer felt something like
cheer in his heart, as he scurried about
hunting for and finding the plump
yellow grains. First he ate all he could
hold, for he saw that then there would
be plenty to take home. Then he
stuffed his cheeks full, scrambled up on
the rail fence, and started for his new
home in the Old Orchard.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It is a terrible long way to have to
carry all my supplies," thought he, as
he sat up on the top of a post to rest.
"I don't see how I ever can do it.
Well, I certainly can't, if I sit here all
day!" With that he jumped down to
the rail below him. He was half way
across when he noticed a crack in it. It
looked to him as if that rail were
hollow part way. A great idea came to
him. His eyes grew bright with
excitement. He ran the length of the
rail and back again, looking for an
opening. There was none. Then very
slowly and carefully he worked his way
back, stretching his head over so that
he could look underneath. Almost over
to the next post he found what he had
so hoped to find. What was it? Why,
a knot-hole. Yes, Sir, a knot-hole that
opened right into the hollow in the rail.
It wasn't quite big enough for
Chatterer to squeeze through, but that
didn't trouble him. He emptied the
corn from his cheeks and then he went
to work with those sharp teeth of his
and in a little while, a very little while,
that knot-hole was plenty big enough
for Chatterer to slip through.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>His eyes snapped with pleasure as he
explored the hollow rail. "I'll make
this my store-house!" he cried. "I'll
fill it full of corn, and then when I am
hungry in the winter, I can run down
here and fill up. It will be a lot better
than trying to carry the corn up to the
Old Orchard." And with that,
Chatterer began the work of filling the
hollow rail with corn.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="sammy-jay-drops-a-hint"><span class="bold large">VIII</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">SAMMY JAY DROPS A HINT</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Whatever faults Chatterer
the Red Squirrel may have,
and they are many, laziness is
not one of them. No, Sir, there is no
laziness about Chatterer. When he has
work to do, he does it, and he keeps at it
until it is finished. Every morning he
got up with the sun and raced along the
old stone wall and the rail fences down
to Farmer Brown's cornfield, where he
first ate his breakfast, and then worked
to fill the hollow rail of the fence which
he had made into a store-house. It was
hard work, because he had to do a great
deal of hunting for the corn; and it was
exciting work, because he had to keep
his eyes and ears open every minute to
keep from furnishing a dinner for
some one else.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Redtail the Hawk, who had not yet
gone South, discovered him one
morning, and Chatterer dodged behind a
fence post just in time. After that,
Redtail was on hand every morning,
watching from the top of a tree for
Chatterer to grow careless and get too
far from shelter.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Then one morning Reddy Fox
surprised him at the edge of a heap of
cornstalks. Chatterer had just time to
wriggle his way to the middle of the heap.
Reddy had seen him, and he could smell
him. Very softly Reddy tiptoed around
the pile of cornstalks to see if Chatterer
had come out on the other side. Then
he came back to where Chatterer had
gone in and excitedly began to dig,
making the dry stalks fly right and left.
He made so much noise that Chatterer
felt sure that he wouldn't hear him
move, and he didn't. By the time
Reddy had worked his way to the
middle of the pile, Chatterer was safe in his
store-house in the hollow rail. He had
slipped from under the cornstalks, run
across to another pile, worked his
way through this, and so reached the fence.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>After that, Reddy Fox came every
morning, hoping to surprise Chatterer.
But Chatterer felt quite equal to
fooling Reddy and Redtail. Of course they
interfered with his work and were very
bothersome, but he wasn't afraid of
them. The one thing he did fear was
that Shadow the Weasel would hear
where he was. That thought bothered
him a great deal.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>One morning Sammy Jay just happened
along. He saw Reddy Fox
creeping up behind some bushes at the edge
of the cornfield, and at once Sammy
began to scream as he always does when
he thinks he can spoil Reddy's hunting.
Reddy looked up at him and showed all
his long teeth, but Sammy only grinned
and screamed the louder. Then Reddy
walked away with a great deal of
dignity, for he knew that it wasn't the
least use to try to hunt while Sammy
Jay was about. When he had
disappeared in the Green Forest, Sammy
returned to the cornfield, and there he
found Chatterer hard at work.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I'm much obliged, Sammy, for
driving that nuisance away; he bothers
me a great deal, and I've got to do a lot
of work yet to fill my store-house before
it is too late," said Chatterer, as he
hurried to the hollow rail with his mouth
full of corn.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Have you moved down here?"
demanded Sammy Jay. "I thought you
were living up in the Old Orchard."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I am. At least, my house is up
there, but there is no food there, and so
I have made a store-house down here
and am trying to get it full of corn
before snow comes," replied Chatterer.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It will be a long way to come for
your food every day," said Sammy.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I know it," replied Chatterer, "but
I guess I'm lucky to have any food to
come for."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Pooh!" said Sammy, "I wouldn't
work as you do. I'd use my wits a
little. If corn is what you want to eat,
why don't you go up to Farmer
Brown's? It's nearer to the Old
Orchard than this, and the corn is all
stored ready for you to help yourself.
I get all I want there."</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="chatterer-screws-up-his-courage"><span class="bold large">IX</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">CHATTERER SCREWS UP HIS COURAGE</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Ever since Sammy Jay had
dropped a hint about the
plentiful supply of corn over at
Farmer Brown's and how easy it was to
get all that one wanted, Chatterer had
been trying to screw up his courage to
go see for himself if Sammy had told
the truth. Chatterer had spent most of
his life in or close to the Green Forest.
He had a very wholesome fear of
Farmer Brown's boy and his dreadful
gun, and he always had been content to
keep away from Farmer Brown's door-yard.
The truth is, he was afraid to go
up there. You see, there were Black
Pussy the Cat and Bowser the Hound
and Farmer Brown's boy—why, it was
a terribly dangerous place!</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And yet Sammy Jay went up there
every day and didn't seem to be in the
least afraid. He even scolded and said
impudent things to Farmer Brown's
boy. If Sammy dared go up there, why
shouldn't he? He certainly was as
brave as Sammy Jay! Right down in
his heart Chatterer had always thought
Sammy Jay very much of a coward.
Yet here was Sammy going up there
and helping himself to corn, just as if
it belonged to him. Chatterer thought
how hard he worked every day to fill
that store-house in the hollow
fence-rail, and how every minute of the time
he had to watch out for Redtail the
Hawk and Reddy Fox. It seemed as if
he never, never could get enough corn
to keep him all winter. And then it
was a long way to go every day from
the Old Orchard down to the cornfield.
Chatterer sighed at the thought.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If Sammy Jay told me the truth,
and it is so easy to get all the corn one
wants over there at Farmer Brown's,
it will be ever so much easier in bad
weather," thought Chatterer. "Anyway,
it won't do any harm to have a
look and see for myself how things are."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So Chatterer started running briskly
along the old stone wall which led right
up to Farmer Brown's yard. As he
drew near, he would stop every few
steps to make sure that the way was
clear. At last he reached the very end
of the wall, and hiding between two
stones, he peeked out. Right across a
wide road was Farmer Brown's house,
and in the sun on the back doorstep sat
Black Pussy dozing. Chatterer had
hard work to hold his tongue. The very
sight of her made him so angry that he
almost forgot that he didn't want to be
seen. He just longed to tell her what
he thought of her. But he kept still and
set his sharp little eyes to discover
where Farmer Brown kept his corn.
He could see Bowser the Hound fast
asleep in front of his own special little
house. He could see the big barn and
the henhouse and the shed where the
wagons were kept and the long wood-shed.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I wonder," said Chatterer to
himself, "I wonder if that corn is kept in
any of those places, and how Sammy
Jay gets it if it is."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Just then Farmer Brown's boy came
out of the barn. Chatterer dodged back
at sight of him. He wanted to scold,
just as he had wanted to scold at Black
Pussy, but he wisely held his tongue.
Farmer Brown's boy didn't even look
towards him but went straight over to
a queer little building standing high on
four legs and with wide cracks between
the boards of the walls, through which
something yellow showed. Farmer
Brown's boy went up several steps and
opened a door. Chatterer gave a little
gasp. There was the corn, more corn
than he ever had seen in all his life,
more corn than he had supposed the
whole world held! Chatterer made up
his mind right then and there that he
was going to have some of that corn in
spite of Black Pussy and Bowser the
Hound and Farmer Brown's boy. The
very sight of it screwed his courage up
till he felt brave enough to dare anything.</span></p>
<div class="align-center auto-scaled figure margin" style="width: 74%" id="figure-47">
<span id="farmer-brown-s-boy-didn-t-even-look-towards-him"></span><ANTIMG class="align-center block" style="display: block; width: 100%" alt="Farmer Brown's boy didn't even look towards him." src="images/img-045.jpg" />
<div class="caption centerleft figure-caption margin">
<span class="italics">Farmer Brown's boy didn't even look towards him.</span></div>
</div>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="chatterer-studies-a-way-to-get-farmer-brown-s-corn"><span class="bold large">X</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">CHATTERER STUDIES A WAY TO GET
<br/>FARMER BROWN'S CORN</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Chatterer could think of but
one thing—Farmer Brown's
house full of corn, and how he
could get some of it. Sammy Jay had
said that he got all he wanted, and
Chatterer made up his mind that he
would see how Sammy did it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So very early the next morning
Chatterer was in his hiding place between
the stones of the old wall. Just as
Mr. Sun shot his first red rays in at the
windows of Farmer Brown's house,
Sammy Jay arrived. For a wonder he
made no noise. Chatterer noticed this
right away. Sammy peered this way
and that way, without making the least
sound. When he was quite sure that no
one was about, he flew over to the queer
little house on four legs, where Farmer
Brown kept his corn, and thrust his bill
in between the wide cracks of the wall.
In this way he helped himself to all the
corn he wanted without the least bit of
trouble. When he had enough, he flew
away as quietly as he had come.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Chatterer grinned. "Sammy has
taught me something, although he
doesn't know it," said he to himself.
"He's stealing that corn, and he
doesn't think it safe to be found out. I
must be just as careful as he is."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>There were no signs of any one
around Farmer Brown's house. Chatterer
scurried across the yard as fast as
his little legs would take him straight
for the little house. There he found a
great disappointment. He couldn't get
up to the cracks through which Sammy
Jay had helped himself to corn. You
see, the little house stood on four stone
legs, and before it had been put on those
four legs, an old pan had been placed
bottom up on each leg. It would be the
hardest kind of hard work to climb one
of those stone legs, anyway, and even
if he did succeed in climbing it, there
was no way of getting around that tin
pan at the top, and of course he couldn't
gnaw through it. Chatterer ground his
teeth with anger. It was so terribly
provoking to be so near such a feast and
still not be able to get to it. He wished
he had wings like Sammy Jay.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Chatterer was so intent on studying
out some way to get at that corn that he
quite forgot everything else. The
rustle of a leaf made him turn his head.
Goodness gracious! there was Black
Pussy within two jumps of him, and her
eyes were yellow with fierce desire.
Chatterer darted to the nearest tree and
scrambled up as fast as he could.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He wasn't the least bit afraid now,
because he knew that he could run out
on the little branches where Black
Pussy would not dare to follow him. So
he faced about and he called Black
Pussy everything bad he knew of.
When she had slunk away, Chatterer
scampered to the very top of the tree to
think matters over, and right then he
discovered a way to get the corn from
Farmer Brown's little house.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="chatterer-grows-reckless"><span class="bold large">XI</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">CHATTERER GROWS RECKLESS</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Chatterer saw that a branch
of the very tree he was sitting
in stretched right over the roof
of the little house and the very tips of
some of the twigs actually touched it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Chatterer's eyes danced. "If I
can't get in from the ground, perhaps I
can get in from the air," said he and
chuckled. Chatterer looked around
hastily to see if any one was watching.
No one was in sight but Black Pussy,
watching him from the ground. He
didn't mind her up there so he ran
lightly out along the branch over the
roof of the little house and jumped on to
it. Swiftly he ran around the edge of
it, peeping over. He was looking for an
opening big enough to crawl through.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>At last, over in one corner, he spied
a knothole close up under the edge of
the roof. Chatterer dug his sharp claws
into the wood to keep from falling and
very carefully crept over until he had
safely reached the hole. It wasn't quite
big enough to push his head wholly;
through. Gnaw, gnaw, gnaw! The
little splinters began to fly. Gnaw, gnaw,
gnaw! The hole was big enough, and
Chatterer slipped safely inside just as
Farmer Brown's boy came out of the
house and noticed Black Pussy sitting
on the ground, staring up at the roof
of the little house.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Hello, Puss! Did you think you
heard a mouse in there?" exclaimed
Farmer Brown's boy. "You didn't,
because no mice can get in there.
Come along over to the barn, and I'll
give you some nice fresh warm milk."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Phew!" exclaimed Chatterer to
himself, "That was a narrow escape!
I'm glad that pesky black cat can't tell
what she saw!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>When they were out of sight, Chatterer
turned to see what kind of a place
he was in. His eyes glistened with
greed. Corn, corn, com everywhere!
It seemed to him there was corn enough
for all the Squirrels in the world.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"And it's all mine!" gasped Chatterer,
quite forgetting that he was
stealing. Then he began to eat, and he
ate and ate until he couldn't swallow
another mouthful.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I believe I'll take a nap right
here," said he to himself, and curled up
in the darkest corner. In two minutes
he was fast asleep, dreaming that all
the world seemed to have turned to
golden corn and all for him.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="chatterer-frightens-sammy-jay"><span class="bold large">XII</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">CHATTERER FRIGHTENS SAMMY JAY</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Chatterer the Red
Squirrel was mightily tickled
with himself because he had
found a way of getting into Farmer
Brown's corn-crib, where was stored so
much beautiful yellow corn that it
seemed to him that there was enough
for all the Squirrels in the world.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The more some people have, the more
they want. It is the very worst kind of
selfishness and is called greediness.
Chatterer had found a way to get all the
corn he wanted without working for it,
and there was enough to feed him as
long as he lived, though he should live
to be a hundred years old. To be sure,
it wasn't his; it was Farmer Brown's.
But Chatterer looked on Farmer Brown
and Farmer Brown's boy as his
enemies, and he could see nothing wrong in
taking things from his enemies.
Perhaps he didn't want to see anything
wrong. All his life he had stolen from
his neighbors. That is one reason they
dislike him so. Anyway, if ever a little
voice down inside tried to tell him that
he was doing wrong, Chatterer didn't
listen to it. Perhaps, after a while, the
little voice grew tired and didn't try
any more.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>After Chatterer had made a few
successful trips to the corn-crib, he began
to look upon it as his own. He would
sometimes hide in the old stone wall,
where he could watch Farmer Brown's
boy open the door of the corn-crib and
fill a basket with yellow ears to feed to
the hens and the pigs and the horses.
At such times Chatterer would work
himself into a great rage, as if Farmer
Brown's boy were stealing from him.
But there was nothing he could do
about it, so he would go back to the Old
Orchard and scold for an hour. But
what made him still angrier was to see
Sammy Jay help himself to a few grains
of corn from between the cracks in the
walls of the corn-crib. He forgot how
Sammy had first told him about the
corn-crib, and how Sammy had warned
him about Shadow the Weasel. That is
the trouble with greed: it forgets
everything but the desire to have and to
keep others from having. Chatterer
didn't say anything to Sammy Jay,
because he knew it would be of no use.
Besides, if he did, Sammy might meet
him over in the corn-crib some day and
make such a fuss that Farmer Brown's
boy would find him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Finally Chatterer thought of a plan
and chuckled wickedly. The next
morning he was over in the corn-crib
bright and early. This time he stayed
there until it was time for Sammy Jay
to arrive. Peeping out of the hole by
which he came and went, he saw Sammy
come flying from the Old Orchard.
Sammy made no noise, for you see
Sammy meant to steal, too. Presently
Sammy found a crack against which an
ear of corn lay very close. He began
to peck at it and pick out the grains.
Chatterer stole over to it, taking the
greatest care not to make a sound.
Presently Sammy's black bill came
poking through the crack. Chatterer
seized it and held on.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Poor Sammy Jay! He was terribly
frightened. He thought that it was
some kind of a trap. He beat his wings
and tried to scream but couldn't,
because he couldn't open his mouth.
Then Chatterer let go so suddenly that
Sammy almost fell to the ground before
he could catch his balance. He didn't
wait to see what had caught him. He
started for the Green Forest as fast as
his wings could take him, and as he
went he screamed with fright and
anger. Chatterer chuckled, and his
chuckle was a very wicked sounding
chuckle.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I guess," said Chatterer, "that
Sammy Jay will leave my corn alone
after this."</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="sammy-jay-tells-his-troubles-to-reddy-fox"><span class="bold large">XIII</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">SAMMY JAY TELLS HIS TROUBLES TO REDDY FOX</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Sammy Jay could think of
nothing but the terrible fright he had
had at Farmer Brown's corn-crib.
He had thrust his bill through a crack
for a few grains of corn when something
had seized his bill and hung on. Sammy
didn't have the least bit of doubt that it
was a trap of some kind set by Farmer
Brown's boy. He flew down to the
Green Forest to think it over and plan
some way to get even with Farmer
Brown's boy. As he sat there
muttering to himself, along came Reddy Fox.
For a wonder Reddy saw Sammy
before Sammy saw him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Reddy grinned. "Sammy certainly
has got something on his mind,"
thought Reddy. Then he said aloud:
"Hello, Sammy! What's the matter?
You look as if you had the stomach-ache
and the head-ache and a few other aches."</span></p>
<p class="pnext" id="id1"><span>"Matter enough, Reddy Fox!
Matter enough!" snapped Sammy. Then,
because he felt that he just had to tell
some one, he told Reddy all about his
terrible fright that morning.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It was a trap," said Sammy. "It
was some kind of a trap set by Farmer
Brown's boy. Just as if he couldn't
spare a few grains of corn when he has
got so much! I—I—I'd like to—to
peck his eyes out! That's what I'd like
to do!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Sammy said that because it was the
most dreadful thing he could think of,
but he didn't really mean it. Reddy
knew it and grinned, for he also knew
that Sammy didn't dare go near enough
to Farmer Brown's boy to more than
scream at him. All the time he had
been listening, Reddy had sat with his
head cocked on one side, which is a way
he has when he is thinking. Inside he
was laughing, for Reddy knows a lot
about traps and about Farmer Brown's
boy, and he didn't believe that Farmer
Brown's boy would ever set a trap in
such a queer place as a crack in the wall
of a corn-crib.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"He wouldn't bother to try to trap
Sammy Jay; he would just watch with
his gun and shoot Sammy if he really
cared about the few grains of corn
Sammy has taken," thought Reddy.
"It was some one or something else
that frightened Sammy. But it isn't
the least bit of use to tell him so. I
believe I'll have a look and see what is
going on at that corn-crib." Aloud he
said:</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"That was a terrible experience,
Sammy Jay, and I don't wonder that
you were frightened. Are you going up
there to-morrow morning?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What?" screamed Sammy. "Going
up there again? What do you take
me for? I guess I don't need but one
lesson of that kind. There's plenty to
eat in the Green Forest and on the
Green Meadows without running any
such risk as that. No, Sir, you won't
catch me around Farmer Brown's
corn-crib again very soon. Not if my name
is Sammy Jay!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You are wise, very wise," replied
Reddy gravely. "It is always wise to
keep out of danger." And with this
Reddy trotted on up the Lone Little
Path, and inside his red head were busy
thoughts. Reddy had made up his mind
that there was something very queer
about Sammy Jay's fright, and he
meant to find out about it. He would
be on hand at the first peep of day the
next morning and see what was going
on around Farmer Brown's corn-crib.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And all day long Sammy Jay flew
about through the Green Forest telling
every one who would listen how Farmer
Brown's boy had tried to trap him.
Late that afternoon he visited the Old
Orchard and told his story all over
again to Chatterer the Red Squirrel,
and Chatterer didn't so much as smile
until after Sammy had left. Then he
threw himself on the ground and rolled
over and over and laughed until his
sides ached.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="reddy-fox-plays-spy"><span class="bold large">XIV</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">REDDY FOX PLAYS SPY</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Reddy Fox didn't have to get
up early to be hiding behind the
fence back of Farmer Brown's
corn-crib when jolly, round, red
Mr. Sun chased the little stars from the sky.
He didn't have to get up early, for the
very good reason that he hadn't been to
bed. You see, Reddy Fox does a great
many things that he wouldn't like to
have seen, and so he does them in the
night when most of the other little
people of the Green Meadows and the
Green Forest are asleep. And so it
happens that often he does not go to
bed at all at night, but sleeps in the day,
when most honest people are abroad.
He had been roaming about all this
night, and now he had come to watch
and see what was going on at Farmer
Brown's corn-crib, and whether or not
Farmer Brown's boy had been setting
a trap there for Sammy Jay, as Sammy
was so sure he had.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Just as the little stars disappeared
and the first faint light from Mr. Sun
began to chase away the black shadows,
Reddy's sharp eyes saw something
move over at the corner of the old stone
wall at the edge of the Old Orchard.
Then a little dark form scampered
across the road, and there was the
scratch of sharp little claws on the tree
growing near the corn-crib. Reddy
grinned and watched the top of the tree.
In a minute the same little form ran out
along a limb that overhung the
corn-crib and nimbly jumped to the roof. It
ran along one edge and suddenly
disappeared. Reddy guessed right away
that there was a hole there. He arose
and stretched.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I thought as much," said Reddy to
himself. "I thought as much." Then
he lay down to watch again. After a
while, out popped the same lively little
form. It was quite light now, light
enough for Reddy to see the red coat of
Chatterer the Red Squirrel.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Chatterer's cheeks were stuffed so
full of corn that his head looked twice
as large as it really is. He ran along
the roof to where the tips of the limb of
the tree brushed the roof, climbed into
the tree, looked sharply to make sure
that no one was about, particularly
Black Pussy, and then ran down the
tree and scurried across the road to the
safety of the old stone wall.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Ha!" said Reddy Fox, "I thought
so! Unless I am much, very, very much
mistaken, Chatterer can tell Sammy
Jay what caught him by the bill
yesterday morning and frightened him nearly
to death. I've wondered why he no
longer came to that new store-house of
his that he worked so hard to fill down
at the edge of the cornfield, and now I
know. My, but Chatterer is getting
fat! I think he will make me a very
good breakfast. I do, indeed!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Reddy licked his lips as if he could
already taste fat Red Squirrel, and then
slipped away in the other direction, for
it was getting so light that he dared
stay no longer so near to Farmer
Brown's house and Bowser the Hound.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>All the way to the Green Forest
Reddy grinned, partly at thought of the
sharp trick he was sure Chatterer had
played on Sammy Jay, and partly at
thought of the good breakfast he was
sure he would have one of these fine
mornings, for already he had thought of
a plan to catch Chatterer. But first he
would find Sammy Jay. He wanted to
see how foolish Sammy would look
when he found out that it wasn't a trap
of Farmer Brown's boy's at all that had
frightened him so.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="sammy-jay-spoils-the-plan-of-reddy-fox"><span class="bold large">XV</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">SAMMY JAY SPOILS THE PLAN OF REDDY FOX</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Reddy Fox found Sammy Jay
in a bad temper. Sammy had
missed his usual breakfast of
corn stolen from Farmer Brown's
corn-crib, and it had made him cross.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Good morning," said Reddy in his
politest manner, and no one can be more
polite than Reddy Fox when he sets out
to be.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Morning," mumbled Sammy Jay.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I found out something this morning
which may interest you," said Reddy,
taking no notice of Sammy's cross
looks.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It won't," replied Sammy
positively. "It won't. Nothing interests me."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Not even traps?" asked Reddy slyly.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What's that?" demanded Sammy,
looking at Reddy sharply.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, nothing much," replied Reddy,
quite as if the matter didn't interest
him especially, "only I found out
something this morning that I thought you
might like to see, if you wasn't such a
coward."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Who says I'm a coward?"
shrieked Sammy Jay, dancing about
with anger.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I do," replied Reddy. "You don't
dare go with me to-morrow morning
and see what is going on at Farmer
Brown's corn-crib."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It isn't true!" Sammy shrieked.
"I dare go wherever you dare go, so
there, Reddy Fox!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Then I dare you to meet me
to-morrow morning at the edge of the
Green Forest at sun-up and go with me
to watch Farmer Brown's corn-crib,"
Reddy replied.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I'll be there!" snapped Sammy.
"I'll have you to understand that you
don't dare do anything that I don't
dare do!" snapped Sammy, though to
tell the truth he had felt his heart sink
at the mere mention of Farmer Brown's
corn-crib, for you remember it was
there that he had had a terrible fright
only the morning before.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"All right, see that you are on hand
at sun-up sharp," replied Reddy and
trotted away grinning, for he was smart
enough to know that Sammy would risk
a great deal rather than be called a
coward, for no one likes to be called a
coward.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Early the next morning Reddy Fox
and Sammy Jay met at the edge of the
Green Forest.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Now," Reddy explained, "we will
go over by the fence back of the corn-crib.
I will hide there, just where I hid
yesterday morning, and you will hide in
the evergreen-tree close by. Watch the
roof of the corn-crib, and I think you
will see something that may explain
how you happened to be caught by the
bill the other morning. But whatever
you see, don't make a sound, not the
least bit of a sound."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Sammy promised, and they hurried
over to their hiding places. Hardly
had Sammy settled himself in the
evergreen-tree when he saw Chatterer jump
to the roof of the corn-crib from the
limb of the tree which overhung it.
Almost in a flash Chatterer had
disappeared through a hole just under the
edge of the roof. No sooner was he out
of sight, than Reddy Fox ran swiftly
across to the old stone wall at the edge
of the Old Orchard and hid behind it.
Right away Sammy Jay guessed that
Chatterer had had something to do with
the terrible fright he had had at the
corn-crib when his bill was caught as he
pecked at the corn between the cracks
in the wall.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It wasn't a trap at all, but
Chatterer!" thought Sammy and right away
grew so angry that he could hardly sit
still. But he wanted to see what
Chatterer would do next, so he bit his tongue
to keep it still. Pretty soon out came
Chatterer with his cheeks stuffed full
of corn. That was too much for Sammy
Jay. He forgot all about his promise
not to make a sound. He darted out of
his hiding place and flew at Chatterer
in a terrible rage, screaming at the top
of his voice and calling Chatterer every
bad thing he could think of. Of course
Chatterer couldn't reply, because his
cheeks were so stuffed with corn, but he
could run. Like a little red flash he was
in the tree that overhung the corn-crib
and dodging around the trunk.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Over behind the stone wall Reddy
Fox snarled, for with such a noise he
knew it wasn't safe to stay there any
longer.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="chatterer-and-sammy-jay-quarrel"><span class="bold large">XVI</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">CHATTERER AND SAMMY JAY QUARREL</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<!-- -->
<blockquote>
<div>
<div class="line-block outermost">
<div class="line"><span>When people lose their tempers</span></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>Oh what a sorry sight!</span></div>
</div>
<div class="line"><span>They call each other dreadful names,</span></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>And sometimes scratch and bite.</span></div>
</div>
<div class="line"><span>The Merry Little Breezes ran</span></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>And hid themselves away</span></div>
</div>
<div class="line"><span>When Chatterer his temper lost,</span></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>And so did Sammy Jay.</span></div>
<div class="line"> </div>
</div></div>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p class="pfirst"><span>It really was too dreadful! It quite
spoiled the day for all the little
people who were within sound of
their voices. You see, when Sammy
Jay discovered that it was Chatterer
and not a trap set by Farmer Brown's
boy that had given him such a fright at
Farmer Brown's corn-crib, right away
Sammy's temper just boiled right over.
Chatterer had his mouth so full of corn
that he couldn't say a word, but he
could run; and run he did, scampering
across Farmer Brown's dooryard to the
shelter of the old stone wall at the edge
of the Old Orchard with Sammy after
him, screaming "Thief! thief! thief!"
at the top of his lungs.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"My gracious, what a racket!"
exclaimed Farmer Brown's boy, as he
opened the door. "That Jay is making
such a fuss that I should think there
was a fox about." He put his
milk-pails down and stepped back into the
house. In a minute he was out again,
with his terrible gun in his hands. He
went straight to the old stone wall
where only a few minutes before Reddy
Fox had been hiding, and it was well
for Reddy that he had slipped away the
minute Sammy Jay began to scream at
Chatterer. Farmer Brown's boy looked
disappointed when he saw no signs of
Reddy. Then he went over to the little
house of Bowser the Hound and
unchained Bowser.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Bowser wagged his tail and yelped
with delight when he saw the gun, for
he dearly loves to hunt. He ran ahead
back to the Old Orchard, and almost at
once his great, deep voice told all
within hearing that his wonderful nose
had found the tracks of Reddy Fox.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I thought so," said Farmer
Brown's boy. "I thought there had
been a fox here." Then he sighed, for
he would have liked nothing better than
to go hunt for Reddy. But there were
the empty milk-pails, and Farmer
Brown's boy is not the kind who run
away for pleasure when there is work
to be done.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Sammy Jay had flown away as soon
as he saw Farmer Brown's boy and his
terrible gun. Chatterer had hidden in
the old stone wall, where he safely
stored away the corn with which his
cheeks had been stuffed. As soon as
Farmer Brown's boy had gone to the
barn to milk the cows, Sammy Jay
slipped back to the Old Orchard to look
for Chatterer, and his temper hadn't
improved a bit. He soon saw Chatterer
running along the old wall and once
more began to scream "Thief! thief!" And
now that his mouth was empty,
Chatterer could reply, and you know
Chatterer has one of the worst tongues
of all the little people of the Green Forest.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Thief yourself!" he screamed
back. "Thief yourself! You stole my corn!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It isn't your corn any more than
it's mine!" screamed Sammy. "I told
you about it in the first place.
Thief! thief! thief!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And from that, they fell to calling
each other worse things. The Old
Orchard never had heard such a quarrel,
never. It was dreadful! All day long
they kept it up. Twice Farmer Brown's
boy came down to see if that fox had
come back, and scratched his head, and
wondered what all the fuss was about.
At last Sammy Jay had a thought.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I'm going straight over to the
Green Forest to tell Shadow the
Weasel where you are living!" he cried
suddenly. "When he finds you, you won't
steal any more corn or be so greedy that
you won't let other people have a share."</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="chatterer-and-sammy-jay-make-up"><span class="bold large">XVII</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">CHATTERER AND SAMMY JAY MAKE UP</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>When Chatterer heard Sammy
Jay say that he was going
straight to the Green Forest
to tell Shadow the Weasel that
Chatterer was living in the Old Orchard, a
great fear filled his heart. He forgot
his quarrel with Sammy. He forgot his
greed for all the corn in Farmer
Brown's corn-crib. He forgot
everything but his terrible fear of Shadow
the Weasel. It was because of Shadow
that Chatterer had left the Green
Forest to live in the Old Orchard. If
Shadow should find him here, he didn't
know what he could do or where he
could go. He knew that Sammy Jay
meant just what he said, for though it
would be a dreadful thing to do, people
do dreadful things when they are
angry, and Sammy Jay was very, very
angry indeed. He had already spread
his wings when Chatterer spoke.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Please don't do that, Sammy Jay,"
he begged, "I—I—I didn't mean all
the bad things I have said."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Sammy Jay's eyes snapped. He saw
right away that Chatterer was very
much frightened, and he knew that
hereafter so long as Shadow the Weasel
was anywhere around, Chatterer would
be so afraid that he would do anything
Sammy might want him to. You see,
Sammy Jay is very sharp.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Am I any more of a thief than you
are?" he demanded.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No-o-o," replied Chatterer slowly,
as if it were the hardest work to say it.</span></p>
<div class="align-center auto-scaled figure margin" style="width: 73%" id="figure-48">
<span id="no-o-o-replied-chatterer-slowly"></span><ANTIMG class="align-center block" style="display: block; width: 100%" alt=""No-o-o," replied Chatterer slowly." src="images/img-081.jpg" />
<div class="caption centerleft figure-caption margin">
<span class="italics">"No-o-o," replied Chatterer slowly.</span></div>
</div>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Will you play any more tricks on
me?" asked Sammy.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"No," replied Chatterer more
promptly this time.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Well, I'll think it over and make
up my mind in the morning," said
Sammy. "Perhaps I will and perhaps
I won't tell Shadow where you are
living. I'll think it over."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now Sammy knew perfectly well that
Chatterer wouldn't sleep a wink that
night for worrying. Already he had
made up his mind not to tell Shadow,
for like all the other little meadow and
forest people he hated Shadow. But of
course Chatterer couldn't know that he
had so made up his mind, and a great
fear that Sammy might tell clutched his
heart.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If you'll promise not to tell Shadow
where I am, you—you are welcome to
all the corn you want at Farmer
Brown's corn-crib," said Chatterer, in
a very meek voice.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Indeed!" replied Sammy. "How
very generous of you, seeing that it
doesn't belong to you, anyway, and I
have just as much right to it as you have."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"And—and—well, I'll help you get
it," continued Chatterer, his sharp wits
working their hardest to think of some
way to get Sammy to make that promise.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"How?" asked Sammy suspiciously.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Why, when you can't get it
between the cracks, I'll bring some out
for you and hide it in the stone wall
where you can find it," replied
Chatterer. But in his heart he said that he
would hide it so that Sammy would
have to hunt a long time to find it. It
seemed almost as if Sammy read that
thought, for cocking his head on one
side, he said:</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I'll promise not to tell Shadow, if
you'll promise to get me corn whenever
I want it and put it just where I tell
you to."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Chatterer didn't like that idea at all,
but what could he do? He thought it
over so long that Sammy Jay spread his
wings as if to start that very instant
for the Green Forest.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I promise!" cried Chatterer hastily.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And so these two scamps of the Green
Forest made up and planned how they
would live all winter on Farmer
Brown's corn.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="chatterer-has-to-keep-his-promise"><span class="bold large">XVIII</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">CHATTERER HAS TO KEEP HIS PROMISE</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Chatterer wished now that he
hadn't been quite so greedy.
If he had been content to let
Sammy Jay get what corn he could from
Farmer Brown's corn-crib, instead of
playing that sharp trick to frighten
him away, Chatterer wouldn't have had
to make that promise to get the corn
for Sammy and put it wherever Sammy
wanted it put. It wasn't much to do.
Chatterer really didn't mind doing the
thing itself; it was the thought that
Sammy could make him do it.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now Chatterer has sharp wits, and
Sammy Jay has sharp wits. Chatterer
had always thought his the sharpest,
and it hurt his pride to feel that Sammy
had got the best of him. He couldn't
think of anything else as he curled up
for the night in his snug bed in the old
home of Drummer the Woodpecker up
in the Old Orchard. He thought and
thought and thought and thought,
trying to find some way to wriggle out of
his promise, and just before he fell
asleep, an idea came to him. He would
go over to the corn-crib before Sammy
Jay was awake, eat his fill, and then
hide from Sammy.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Why didn't I think of that
before?" he murmured sleepily and
smiled to think how, after all, his wits
were sharper than those of Sammy Jay.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The next morning, very early,
Chatterer visited the corn-crib, ate a
hurried breakfast, and then hid in the old
stone wall to watch for Sammy Jay.
But Sammy didn't come at the time he
used to visit the corn-crib before
Chatterer had given him that terrible scare.
Chatterer waited and waited, but no
Sammy Jay. Chatterer began to get
impatient, but still he didn't dare leave
his hiding place for fear that Sammy
might come. At last Chatterer decided
that Sammy had gone somewhere else
that morning, so he came out of his
hiding place and frisked along the stone
wall at one edge of the Old Orchard.
After a while he forgot all about
Sammy Jay. Anyway, he was sure that
Sammy wouldn't think of going to the
corn-crib so late in the morning, for it
wouldn't be safe at all. Farmer
Brown's boy would be almost sure to
see him. So Chatterer forgot his
troubles and frisked about and had a splendid
time all by himself.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Right in the midst of it, Sammy Jay
arrived in the Old Orchard.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Good morning, Chatterer," said he.
"I fear I am a little late for breakfast."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Breakfast!" sneered Chatterer,
"Breakfast! Why, it's nearer dinner
time. I had my breakfast hours ago."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I thought likely," replied Sammy,
and there was a mischievous look in his
sharp black eyes, "but I was rather
tired this morning, and as long as I
hadn't got to go way over to the
corn-crib myself, I thought I wouldn't hurry.
I suppose you have plenty of corn ready
for me here."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Corn ready for you? I should say
not!" snapped Chatterer. "You
didn't say anything about getting corn
for you this morning."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Didn't I? Well, I guess I must
have forgotten to. Never mind—you
can run over there and get some for me
now," replied Sammy.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Go yourself!" snapped Chatterer.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I think I'd rather not," replied
Sammy. "Farmer Brown's boy is
chopping wood right close by the
corn-crib, so I prefer to have you go."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I won't!" Chatterer fairly
screamed and danced about in his rage.
"I won't!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Oh, all right," replied Sammy,
yawning. "I saw Shadow the Weasel
down in the Green Forest this morning,
and he inquired for you. I think I'll go
look him up again."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Chatterer turned pale. He feared
Shadow the Weasel more than any one
else under the sun. He would rather
face Farmer Brown's boy. "I—I'll
go," he stammered weakly. There was
no way out of it; he just had to keep
his promise.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="chatterer-gets-sammy-jay-some-corn"><span class="bold large">XIX</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">CHATTERER GETS SAMMY JAY SOME CORN</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>In all his life Chatterer had never
felt so angry and so helpless. He
had thought himself so smart that
he could outwit Sammy Jay, and
instead Sammy had outwitted him. This
was bad enough in itself, but to make
matters worse he had to do something
which he felt was very dangerous. He
had to get Sammy some corn from
Farmer Brown's corn-crib right in
broad daylight, and there was Black
Pussy sitting on the doorstep of
Farmer Brown's house, and Farmer
Brown's boy himself was chopping
wood close by the corn-crib. But if he
didn't keep his promise, Sammy would
go tell Shadow the Weasel where he was
living, and Chatterer was more afraid
of Shadow than of Black Pussy and
Farmer Brown's boy. Wasn't it a
terrible position to be in? Chatterer
thought so. And all the time he knew
that it was all his own fault. If he
hadn't been so greedy and tried to scare
Sammy Jay away from the corn-crib,
he wouldn't be in such a fix now.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>He ran along the stone wall to the
end at the edge of Farmer Brown's
dooryard. Then he peeped out. Black
Pussy was dozing on the doorstep. Her
eyes were closed. Chatterer started
across for the tree close by the
corn-crib, and then his courage failed, and he
ran back to the stone wall. Three times
he did this, and each time he looked up
to see Sammy Jay grinning at him from
an apple-tree in the Old Orchard. It
was very plain to see that Sammy was
enjoying Chatterer's fright. Chatterer
almost cried with fear and anger.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>The fourth time he gritted his teeth
and kept on running as fast as he knew
how. He was almost past Black Pussy
when she opened her eyes. In a flash
she was after him. Chatterer reached
the tree first and was up it like a little
red streak. There he felt safe. At
least, he felt safe from Black Pussy, for
she wouldn't dare follow him out on the
small branches. But Farmer Brown's
boy had seen her rush across to the foot
of the tree, and now he stopped
chopping wood to watch Black Pussy
glaring up at Chatterer.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"What are you so interested in,
Puss?" asked Farmer Brown's boy.
He couldn't see Chatterer, because
Chatterer was smart enough to keep on
the other side of the tree trunk. "Is it
something you want me to see?" he
continued, and started to walk over to
the tree.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Chatterer's heart was beating
terribly with fright—thump, thump, thump!
At just that minute there was a great
racket over in the Old Orchard.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Thief! thief! thief!" screamed
Sammy Jay, making a great fuss.
Farmer Brown's boy turned to look in
that direction.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I wonder if that fox is prowling
around again," said he. And while he
was still looking and wondering,
Chatterer dropped to the roof of the
corn-crib and slipped inside, through the hole
he had found under the edge of the roof.
He gave a great sigh of relief.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I believe Sammy Jay did that
purposely to make Farmer Brown's boy
look over there instead of up in the
tree," he muttered. And he was right.
Sammy had no desire to have any real
harm come to Chatterer, and so at just
the right minute he had fooled Farmer
Brown's boy, just as he often had fooled
him before by screaming as if he saw
Reddy Fox, when Reddy wasn't there
at all.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>When Farmer Brown's boy was sure
that Reddy was not over in the Old
Orchard, he once more turned to Black
Pussy, who was still glaring up at the
place where Chatterer had been. He
looked up, too, but of course there was
no one to be seen.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I guess you must have dreamed you
saw something, Puss," said he, stooping
to stroke her gently. Then he went
back to his wood-chopping. Black
Pussy waited a few minutes longer and
then went over to the barn to try to
console herself with a mouse. Chatterer
watched his chance and got back to the
old stone wall safely, with his cheeks
stuffed full of corn for Sammy Jay.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="chatterer-remembers-something"><span class="bold large">XX</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">CHATTERER REMEMBERS SOMETHING</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Chatterer was disgusted with
himself, with all his neighbors,
and with the world in general,
which is to say that Chatterer was very
much put out about something. There
was no doubt about it. He couldn't see
anything cheerful in the sunshine nor
anything pleasant in the blue, blue sky,
and when any one fails to see cheerfulness
in the sunshine or to find something
pleasant in the blue, blue sky,
there is something wrong in his own
heart. That was the trouble with
Chatterer. There was a great deal
wrong in his heart.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>In the first place, it was filled with
anger, and anger, you know, will take
all the joy and pleasantness out of
anything. And then Chatterer was mortified.
He was both angry and mortified
because Sammy Jay had proved to have
smarter wits than he had. So, as soon
as he could do so without being seen, he
slipped into his new home in the old
house of Drummer the Woodpecker in
an apple-tree in the Old Orchard, and
there he sulked for the rest of the day.
You see, Sammy Jay had made him go
over to Farmer Brown's corn-crib and
get him some corn right in broad
daylight, and he had very narrowly escaped
being seen by Farmer Brown's boy.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"If only I hadn't promised to get
him corn whenever he asks me to!" he
said over and over to himself, as he
sulked in his home in the apple-tree.
"If only I hadn't! And yet I couldn't
help myself—I just had to. Now whenever
he feels like it, he'll make me do as
he did to-day and perhaps I won't
always be so lucky. Oh, dear; oh, dear;
I've got myself into a dreadful mess,
and I've just got to think of some way
out of it."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So all the rest of the day he thought
and thought, and the more he thought
the more unhappy he grew. It wasn't
until just as he was going out for a
breath of air before going to bed for the
night that the great idea came to him.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Stupid, stupid, stupid!" he
muttered, meaning himself. "Why didn't
I remember it before? You won't see
me going over to that corn-crib again,
Mr. Jay! I'll get you the corn if I must,
but you won't have the fun of laughing
at me trying to dodge Black Pussy and
Farmer Brown's boy. You're smart,
Mr. Jay! You're smart, but you've got
to get up early in the morning to play
such a trick on Chatterer twice."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Right away he felt so much better in
his mind that he had a brisk run along
the old stone wall and then turned in
for a good night's sleep. The next day
Sammy Jay appeared in the middle of
the forenoon and demanded more corn.
Chatterer pretended that he didn't dare
go for it, but when Sammy insisted that
he must, he suddenly started for—where
do you think? Why, for that
store-house of his in the hollow rail at
the edge of the cornfield. It was a long
way to go, but that was better than
running the risk of being seen by
Farmer Brown's boy. It took him some
time, but at last he was back with his
cheeks stuffed with corn. Sammy Jay
pretended to be cross because he had
been kept waiting so long and grumbled
all the time he was eating. He
pretended to think that the corn was not as
good as that from Farmer Brown's
corn-crib and mumbled something
about telling Shadow the Weasel if
Chatterer didn't get him some corn
from the crib the next day.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"You can't!" cried Chatterer in
triumph. "You promised not to tell
Shadow if I kept my promise and got
you corn whenever you asked for it; but
I didn't say where I would get it," and
he chuckled to think that he had been
smarter than Sammy Jay.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Sammy ate every grain and then
went off, but as he went, Chatterer
thought he heard something very like a
chuckle. It made him thoughtful and
a little uneasy, but he couldn't think of
any way Sammy could get the best of
him now, so he soon forgot it, and all
the rest of the day he thought of how
lucky it was that he had remembered
that store-house in the hollow rail.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="sammy-jay-makes-a-call"><span class="bold large">XXI</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">SAMMY JAY MAKES A CALL</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Sammy Jay hadn't had so much
fun for a long time as he was
having at the expense of Chatterer
the Red Squirrel. No, Sir, Sammy
hadn't had so much fun for as long as
he could remember. You see, he and
Chatterer never had been very good
friends and always had played sharp
tricks on each other whenever they had
the chance. Sammy had not forgotten
how Chatterer had stolen the eggs of
Drummer the Woodpecker in the spring
and then laid the blame on him, so that
all the birds of the Old Orchard had
driven him out until they discovered
who the real thief was. Sammy had
never forgotten or forgiven that sharp,
mean trick. And now he was getting
even. Right down in his heart he didn't
want any real harm to come to
Chatterer, but he did love to see him
frightened. But his greatest fun was in
matching his wits against those of
Chatterer, for you know both have very
sharp wits, as scamps are very apt to have.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now all the time he had been mumbling
and finding fault with the corn
Chatterer had brought from his storehouse
in the hollow rail on the edge of
the cornfield Sammy had only been
pretending. Yes, Sir, he had simply been
pretending. You see, he had thought of
that store-house before Chatterer had
and had thought Chatterer very stupid
not to have remembered it in the first
place. Now that Chatterer had
remembered it, Sammy was glad, although he
pretended not to be. Why was he glad?
Well, you see, he knew that Chatterer
was greatly tickled inside because he
thought that he had proved himself
smarter than Sammy, and all the time
Sammy saw another chance to prove to
Chatterer that he wasn't so smart as
he thought himself.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>When he left Chatterer, he flew
straight to the Green Forest and from
there to the edge of the Green Meadows.
His sharp eyes searched the Green
Meadows until they saw his cousin,
Blacky the Crow. Sammy flew straight
over to where Blacky was sitting. For
a few minutes they talked together, and
then both looked over to a tall, lone tree
out in the middle of the Green
Meadows, in the top of which sat a black
form very straight and very still. In
fact, to eyes less sharp than those of
Sammy Jay and Blacky the Crow, it
would have looked very much like a
part of the tree. It was Roughleg the
Hawk watching for Danny Meadow Mouse.</span></p>
<div class="align-center auto-scaled figure margin" style="width: 73%" id="figure-49">
<span id="sammy-flew-straight-over-to-where-blacky-was-sitting"></span><ANTIMG class="align-center block" style="display: block; width: 100%" alt="Sammy flew straight over to where Blacky was sitting." src="images/img-102.jpg" />
<div class="caption centerleft figure-caption margin">
<span class="italics">Sammy flew straight over to where Blacky was sitting.</span></div>
</div>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Will you do it?" asked Sammy.
"I don't dare to myself because he
might have a notion that a fat Jay like
me would make him a good dinner."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Of course I'll do it," replied
Blacky. "Old Roughleg never bothers
me, and it will be a great joke."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"All right," replied Sammy. "Be
on hand where you can see what
happens to-morrow morning." And with
that, Sammy Jay flew back to the Green
Forest where he could watch.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>In a few minutes Blacky the Crow
flew over near the tree in which sat
Roughleg the Hawk. Presently Sammy
heard Blacky's harsh voice.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Caw, caw, caw," said Blacky.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Sammy smiled. It was a signal, and
he knew that Blacky had done as he had
said he would. Then Sammy flew off
to look for some new mischief with
which to amuse himself for the rest of
the day.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="chatterer-has-a-dreadful-day"><span class="bold large">XXII</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">CHATTERER HAS A DREADFUL DAY</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Chatterer was feeling quite
like himself, his saucy,
impudent self, as he peeped out of his
doorway at daylight. He felt that he
had got the best of Sammy Jay the day
before. To be sure he had to get corn
for Sammy, but he did not have to go to
Farmer Brown's corn-crib for it, and he
knew that it was the fun of seeing him
take that risk that Sammy wanted more
than he did the corn. He felt that he
had been smarter than Sammy, and the
feeling made him quite like his old self.</span></p>
<blockquote>
<div>
<div class="line-block outermost">
<div class="line"><span>"Chickaro and chickaree,</span></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>Who is there as smart as me?</span></div>
</div>
<div class="line"><span>Chickaro and chickaree,</span></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>Sharper wits you'll never see."</span></div>
<div class="line"> </div>
</div></div>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Now that was boasting; and boasting
is one of the most foolish habits in the
world. But Chatterer always was a
boaster and probably always will be.
So he whisked in and out of the old
stone wall and said this over and over,
while he waited for Sammy Jay to
appear. He had not gone over to Farmer
Brown's corn-crib this morning for his
breakfast, because he felt sure that
Sammy would come and send him for
corn, and he knew that he would have
to go. But he meant to go down to his
own store-house in the hollow rail on
the edge of the cornfield and he could
eat his fill there. So he scampered
about and wished that Sammy would
hurry up, for he was hungry.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>At last Sammy came, and just as
Chatterer expected, he demanded the
corn that Chatterer had promised to get
for him whenever he should ask for it.
Right away Chatterer started for the
cornfield, running along the fences.
He always did like to run along fences,
and though it was a long way down
there, he didn't mind, for it was a sharp,
cold morning and the run made him feel
fine. As he ran, he kept chuckling to
himself to think how smart he had been
to think of that store-house and a way
to keep his promise to Sammy Jay
without running any risk to himself. He
was whisking along the fence on the
edge of the cornfield and had almost
reached the hollow rail where he had
stored the corn. He stopped to sit up
on a fence-post and boast once more.</span></p>
<blockquote>
<div>
<div class="line-block outermost">
<div class="line"><span>"Chickaro and chickaree!</span></div>
<div class="inner line-block">
<div class="line"><span>Who is there as smart—"</span></div>
<div class="line"> </div>
</div></div>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p class="pfirst"><span>He didn't finish. Instead his tongue
seemed to stick to the roof of his mouth
and his little black eyes looked as if
they would pop out of his head. Sitting
on a post close to the hollow rail was a
straight, black form watching him with
cruel, hungry-looking eyes. It was
Roughleg the Hawk! Chatterer gave a
little gasp of fright. He whirled
around and started back along the fence
as fast as he could make his legs
go. Instantly Roughleg spread his
great wings and sailed after him.
Chatterer hadn't gone the length of
two rails before Roughleg was over
him. With his great, cruel claws
spread wide, he suddenly swooped
down. Chatterer dodged to the under
side of the rail just in time, the very
nick of time. Roughleg screamed with
disappointment, and that scream had
such a fierce sound that Chatterer
shivered all over.</span></p>
<div class="align-center auto-scaled figure margin" style="width: 73%" id="figure-50">
<span id="chatterer-gave-a-little-gasp-of-fright"></span><ANTIMG class="align-center block" style="display: block; width: 100%" alt="Chatterer gave a little gasp of fright." src="images/img-108.jpg" />
<div class="caption centerleft figure-caption margin">
<span class="italics">Chatterer gave a little gasp of fright.</span></div>
</div>
<p class="pnext"><span>How he ever got back to the Old
Orchard he hardly knew himself. Ever
so many times he just managed to dodge
those great claws. But he did get there
at last, out of breath and tired and
frightened. There sat Sammy Jay,
waiting for his corn. He pretended to
be very angry because Chatterer had
none and threatened to go straight to
the Green Forest and tell Shadow the
Weasel where Chatterer was living.
There was nothing for Chatterer to do
but to go over to the corn-crib as soon
as he had rested a little.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"It's been a dreadful day, a perfectly
dreadful day," said Chatterer to
himself, as he curled up in bed for the
night. "I wonder—I wonder how old
Roughleg happened to be sitting on
that fence-post this morning."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>But Sammy Jay didn't wonder; he knew.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="chatterer-hits-on-a-plan-at-last"><span class="bold large">XXIII</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">CHATTERER HITS ON A PLAN AT LAST</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Each time that Chatterer thought
himself smarter than Sammy
Jay, he found that he wasn't as
smart as he thought he was, and this
always made him feel mortified. He
just couldn't admit even to himself that
Sammy was the smartest, and yet here
he was every day bringing corn for
Sammy from Farmer Brown's
corn-crib whenever Sammy told him to, and
running the risk of being seen by
Farmer Brown's boy, all because he
hadn't been able to think of some way
to outwit Sammy. Once more after he
had such a narrow escape from old
Roughleg the Hawk, he had tried going
down to his store-house at the edge of
the cornfield, but he had found
Roughleg on watch and had turned back.
From the way Sammy Jay had grinned
when he saw Chatterer coming back,
Chatterer had made up his mind that
Sammy knew something about how old
Roughleg happened to have found out
about that store-house and so been on
the watch.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now all this time, Sammy Jay was
having a great deal of fun out of
Chatterer's trouble. Each time that
Chatterer thought of a plan to outwit
Sammy, he would find that Sammy had
already thought of it and a way to make
the plan quite useless. You see, Sammy
used to spend a great deal of his time
when he was alone in the Green Forest
pretending that he was in the same fix
as Chatterer and then trying to think of
some way out of it. So it was that
Chatterer never could think of a plan
that Sammy hadn't already thought of.
And yet there was a way to cheat
Sammy out of his fun, though not out
of his corn, and it really was the fun of
seeing Chatterer so worried that
Sammy cared most about. Sammy had
thought of it almost at once, and it
seemed to him that Chatterer was very,
very stupid not to think of it, too.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"He will think of it some day, and
I don't see any way to upset such a
simple plan," said Sammy to himself
and then fell to studying some new way
to torment Chatterer.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And at last Chatterer did think of it.
It was such a simple plan! Probably
that was why he hadn't thought of it
before. All he had to do was to go over
to Farmer Brown's corn-crib at break
of day, before any one in Farmer
Brown's house was awake, just as he
had been doing, only make two or three
trips and store a lot of corn in a safe
hiding place in the old stone wall.
Then, when Sammy Jay demanded
corn, he could get it without trouble or
danger. He tried it, and it worked
splendidly. Sammy Jay got his corn,
but he didn't get any fun, and he cared
more for the fun of seeing Chatterer in
trouble than he did for the corn. So,
after two or three mornings, Sammy
didn't come up to the Old Orchard, and
Chatterer chuckled as he stored up the
corn, not in one place, but in several
places.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now, while Sammy Jay seemed to
have grown tired of corn, he was doing
a lot of thinking. He had no idea of
leaving Chatterer alone. He had just
got to think of some way of upsetting
Chatterer's simple plan. It was Reddy
Fox who finally gave him the idea. He
saw Reddy trotting down the Lone
Little Path through the Green Forest, and
right away the idea came to him. He
would tell Reddy where Chatterer was
storing the corn in the old stone wall,
and Reddy would hide close by.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Of course I don't want Reddy to
catch Chatterer, but I can prevent that
by warning him just in time. But he
will be so frightened that he won't dare
go to that place for corn again in a
hurry, and so will have to go to the
corn-crib for it," thought Sammy, and
hurried to tell Reddy Fox about the
place half way along the old stone wall
where Chatterer had hidden his corn.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst" id="chatterer-has-his-turn-to-laugh"><span class="bold large">XXIV</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold medium">CHATTERER HAS HIS TURN TO LAUGH</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="pfirst"><span>Sammy Jay had not been up to
the Old Orchard for several days,
and Chatterer the Red Squirrel
was beginning to wonder if Sammy had
grown tired of corn. But Chatterer had
learned that it is always best to be
prepared, and so every morning, when he
had visited Farmer Brown's corn-crib,
he had brought a generous supply back
to the Old Orchard and hidden it in
several secret places in different parts of
the stone wall and some in a certain
hollow in an old apple-tree. Chatterer
couldn't quite believe that Sammy had
given up all hope of making him more
trouble, so he meant to be prepared.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>So when Sammy did appear early one
morning, Chatterer was not in the least
surprised. He pretended to be glad to
see Sammy. In fact, he was almost
glad. You see, Sammy had so many
times proved his wits to be sharper
than Chatterer's, that Chatterer wanted
to get even. There was a sparkle of
mischief in Sammy's eyes. Chatterer
saw it right away, and he guessed that
Sammy had some new plan under that
pert cap of his.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Good morning, Sammy Jay," said
Chatterer, pretending to be polite. "I
had begun to think that you were tired
of corn. I have some very nice corn
ready for you, the very best I could find
in Farmer Brown's corn-crib. Will you
have some this morning?"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"I believe I will," replied Sammy,
also pretending to be very polite. "It
is very nice of you to pick out the best
corn for me, and the very thought of it
makes me hungry. I believe I would
like some this very minute."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>As he spoke, he turned his head to
hide a grin, for, thought he, "of course
Chatterer will go straight to that
hiding place in the stone wall and then we
shall see some fun." He glanced
hastily in that direction, and he saw a
patch of red half hidden behind the
wall, and he knew that it was the red
coat of Reddy Fox. Reddy was hiding
just where Sammy had told him to.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>Now Chatterer had been doing some
quick thinking. He remembered the
sharp tricks Sammy had played on him
before, and he didn't have the least
doubt that Sammy had planned
another. "Of course, he expects me to go
straight to that place where he knows
I have hidden corn for him, and if he
has planned any trouble for me, that is
where it will be," thought Chatterer.
"I think I'll get the corn from one of
the hiding places he doesn't know about."</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>With that Chatterer ran swiftly out
along a branch of the tree he was in,
leaped across to another tree and then
to a third, the one in which was the
hollow in which he had put some of the
corn. In a few minutes he was back,
with his cheeks stuffed full. Sammy
Jay pretended to be very much pleased,
but he ate it as if he had lost his
appetite, as indeed he had. You see, he was
wondering what he should say to Reddy
Fox, to whom he had promised a chance
to catch Chatterer. He knew that
Reddy would think that it was all one
of Sammy's tricks. So without waiting
to finish all the corn, Sammy politely
said good-by and flew away to the
deepest part of the Green Forest.</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>"Ha, ha, ha! Ho, ho, ho!" laughed
Chatterer, as his sharp eyes spied
Reddy Fox, trying to creep away
without being seen. "Ha, ha, ha! Ho, ho,
ho! It's my turn to laugh. Ha, ha, ha!
Ho, ho, ho!"</span></p>
<p class="pnext"><span>And so for the time being Chatterer
had the last laugh, though Sammy Jay
knew well that his turn would come
again, if only he were patient. But he
had other things to think of. You see,
he was very much interested in the
adventures of Buster Bear. And if you
are interested in them too, you may
read all about them in another book
devoted wholly to the things that
happened when Buster came to live in the
Green Forest.</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span>THE END</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span>* * * * * * * *</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 4em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">BOOKS BY</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="bold large">THORNTON W. BURGESS</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">BEDTIME STORY-BOOKS</span></p>
<p class="center pnext"><span class="medium">THE ADVENTURES OF:</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span>1. REDDY FOX
<br/>2. JOHNNY CHUCK
<br/>3. PETER COTTONTAIL
<br/>4. UNC' BILLY POSSUM
<br/>5. MR. MOCKER
<br/>6. JERRY MUSKRAT
<br/>7. DANNY MEADOW MOUSE
<br/>8. GRANDFATHER FROG
<br/>9. CHATTERER, THE RED SQUIRREL
<br/>10. SAMMY JAY
<br/>11. BUSTER BEAR
<br/>12. OLD MR. TOAD
<br/>13. PRICKLY PORKY
<br/>14. OLD MAN COYOTE
<br/>15. PADDY THE BEAVER
<br/>16. POOR MRS. QUACK
<br/>17. BOBBY COON
<br/>18. JIMMY SKUNK
<br/>19. BOB WHITE
<br/>20. OL' MISTAH BUZZARD</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">MOTHER WEST WIND SERIES</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span>1. OLD MOTHER WEST WIND
<br/>2. MOTHER WEST WIND'S CHILDREN
<br/>3. MOTHER WEST WIND'S ANIMAL FRIENDS
<br/>4. MOTHER WEST WIND'S NEIGHBORS
<br/>5. MOTHER WEST WIND "WHY" STORIES
<br/>6. MOTHER WEST WIND "HOW" STORIES
<br/>7. MOTHER WEST WIND "WHEN" STORIES
<br/>8. MOTHER WEST WIND "WHERE" STORIES</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">GREEN MEADOW SERIES</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span>1. HAPPY JACK
<br/>2. MRS. PETER RABBIT
<br/>3. BOWSER THE HOUND
<br/>4. OLD GRANNY Fox</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">GREEN FOREST SERIES</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span>1. LIGHTFOOT THE DEER
<br/>2. BLACKY THE CROW
<br/>3. WHITEFOOT THE WOOD MOUSE
<br/>4. BUSTER BEAR'S TWINS</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="center pfirst"><span class="bold medium">WISHING-STONE SERIES</span></p>
<p class="noindent pnext"><span>1. TOMMY AND THE WISHING-STONE
<br/>2. TOMMY'S WISHES COME TRUE
<br/>3. TOMMY'S CHANGE OF HEART</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 2em"></div>
<p class="noindent pfirst"><span>THE BURGESS BIRD BOOK FOR CHILDREN
<br/>THE BURGESS ANIMAL BOOK FOR CHILDREN
<br/>THE BURGESS FLOWER BOOK FOR CHILDREN</span></p>
<div class="vspace" style="height: 6em"></div>
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