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<h2> CHAPTER XIX. OLD MAN COYOTE PAYS A DEBT </h2>
<p>Some little seeds of goodness<br/>
You'll find in every heart,<br/>
To sprout and keep on growing<br/>
When once they get a start.<br/>
Peter Rabbit.<br/></p>
<p>Matters went from bad to worse with Peter Rabbit and little Miss
Fuzzytail. Peter would have made up his mind to go back to his old home in
the dear Old Briar-patch on the Green Meadows, but he felt that he just
couldn't leave little Miss Fuzzytail, and little Miss Fuzzytail couldn't
make up her mind to go with Peter, because she felt that she just couldn't
leave the Old Pasture, which always had been her home. So Peter spent his
days and nights ready to jump and run from Jed Thumper, the gray old
Rabbit who thought he owned the Old Pasture, and who had declared that he
would drive Peter out.</p>
<p>Now Peter, as you know, had an old friend in the Old Pasture, Tommy Tit
the Chickadee. One day Tommy took it into his head to fly down to the
Green Meadows. There he found everybody wondering what had become of Peter
Rabbit, for you remember Peter had stolen away from the dear Old
Briar-patch in the night and had told no one where he was going.</p>
<p>Now one of the first to ask Tommy Tit if he had seen Peter Rabbit was Old
Man Coyote. Tommy told him where Peter was and of the dreadful time Peter
was having, Old Man Coyote asked a lot of questions about the Old Pasture
and thanked Tommy very politely as Tommy flew over to the Smiling Pool to
call on Grandfather Frog and Jerry Muskrat.</p>
<p>That night, after jolly, round, red Mr. Sun had gone to bed behind the
Purple Hills, and the Black Shadows had crept over the Green Meadows, Old
Man Coyote started for the Old Pasture, Now, he had never been there
before, but he had asked so many questions of Tommy Tit, and he is so
smart anyway, that it didn't take him long to go all through the Old
Pasture and to find the bull-briar castle of Old Jed Thumper, who was
making life so miserable for Peter Rabbit, He wasn't at home, but Old Man
Coyote's wonderful nose soon found his tracks, and he followed them
swiftly, without making a sound. Pretty soon he came to a bramble-bush,
and under it he could see Old Jed Thumper. For just a minute he chuckled,
a noiseless chuckle, to himself. Then he opened his mouth and out came
that terrible sound which had so frightened all the little people on the
Green Meadows when Old Man Coyote had first come there to live.</p>
<p>“Ha, ha, ha! Ho, ho, ho! Hee, hee, hee! Ha, ho, hee, ho!”</p>
<p>Old Jed Thumper never had heard anything like that before. It frightened
him so that before he thought what he was doing he had jumped out from
under the bramble-bush. Of course this was just what Old Man Coyote
wanted. In a flash he was after him, and then began such a race as the Old
Pasture never had seen before. Round and round, this way and that way,
along the cow paths raced Old Jed Thumper with Old Man Coyote at his
heels, until at last, out of breath, so tired that it seemed to him he
couldn't run another step, frightened almost out of his senses, Old Jed
Thumper reached his bull-briar castle and was safe.</p>
<p>Then Old Man Coyote laughed his terrible laugh once more and trotted over
to the tumble-down stone-wall in which his keen nose told him Peter Rabbit
was hiding.</p>
<p>“One good turn deserves another, and I always pay my debts, Peter Rabbit,”
said he. “You did me a good turn some time ago down on the Green Meadows,
when you told me how Granny and Reddy Fox were planning to make trouble
for me by leading Bowser the Hound to the place where I took my daily nap,
and now we are even. I don't think that old gray Rabbit will dare to poke
so much as his nose out of his bull-briar castle for a week. Now I am
going back to the Green Meadows, Good night, Peter Rabbit, and don't
forget that I always pay my debts.”</p>
<p>“Good night, and thank you, Mr. Coyote,” said Peter, and then, when Old
Man Coyote had gone, he added to himself in a shame-faced way: “I didn't
believe him when he said that he guessed we would be friends.”</p>
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