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<h2> CHAPTER XXV. PETER RABBIT'S HEEDLESSNESS </h2>
<p>Heedlessness is just the twin<br/>
of thoughtlessness, you know,<br/>
And where you find them both at once,<br/>
there trouble's sure to grow.<br/>
Peter Rabbit.<br/></p>
<p>Peter Rabbit didn't mean to be heedless. No, indeed! Oh, my, no! Peter
thought so much of Mrs. Peter, he meant to be so thoughtful that she never
would have a thing to worry about. But Peter was heedless. He always was
heedless. This is the worst of a bad habit—you can try to let go of
it, but it won't let go of you.</p>
<p>So it was with Peter. He had been heedless so long that now he actually
didn't know when he was heedless.</p>
<p>When there was nobody but himself to think about, and no one to worry
about him, his heedlessness didn't so much matter. If anything had
happened to him then, there would have been no one to suffer. But now all
this was changed. You see, there was little Mrs. Peter. At first Peter had
been perfectly content to stay with her in the dear Old Briar-patch. He
had led her through all his private little paths, and they had planned
where they would make two or three more. He had showed her all his secret
hiding-places and the shortest way to the sweet-clover patch. He had
pointed out where the Lone Little Path came down to the edge of the Green
Forest and so out on to the Green Meadows. He had shown her where the
Crooked Little Path came down the hill. Little Mrs. Peter had been
delighted with everything, and not once had she complained of being
homesick for the Old Pasture.</p>
<p>But after a little while Peter began to get uneasy. You see in the days
before Old Man Coyote had come to live on the Green Meadows, Peter had
come and gone about as he pleased. Of course he had had to watch out for
Granny and Reddy Fox, but he had had to watch out for them ever since he
was a baby, so he didn't fear them very much in spite of their smartness.
He felt quite as smart as they and perhaps a little bit smarter. Anyway,
they never had caught him, and he didn't believe they ever would. So he
had come and gone as he pleased, and poked his nose into everybody's
business, and gossiped with everybody.</p>
<p>Of course it was quite natural that Peter should want to call on all his
old friends and visit the Green Forest, the Old Orchard, the Laughing
Brook, and the Smiling Pool. Probably Mrs. Peter wouldn't have worried
very much if it hadn't been for the warning left by Danny Meadow Mouse.</p>
<p>Danny had said that Old Man Coyote was more to be feared than all the Hawk
family and all the Fox family together, because he was smarter and slyer
than any of them. At first Peter had looked very serious, but after Danny
had gone back to his own home Peter had laughed at Danny for being so
afraid, and he began to go farther and farther away from the safe Old
Briar-patch.</p>
<p>One day he had ventured as far as halfway up the Crooked Little Path. He
was thinking so hard of a surprise he was planning for little Mrs. Peter
that he forgot to watch out and almost ran into Old Man Coyote before he
saw him. There was a hungry look, such a hungry look in Old Man Coyote's
eyes as he grinned and said “Good morning” that Peter didn't even stop to
be polite. He remembered that Jimmy Skunk's old house was near, and he
reached it just one jump ahead of Old Man Coyote.</p>
<p>“I thought you said that we were friends,” panted Peter, as he heard Mr.
Coyote sniffing at the doorway.</p>
<p>“So we were until I had paid my debt to you. Now that I've paid that, we
are even, and it is everybody watch out for himself,” replied Old Man
Coyote. “But don't forget that I always pay my debts, Peter Rabbit.”</p>
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