Drummer the Woodpecker was pounding
out his danger signal so fast and so hard that his
red head flew back and forth almost too fast to see.
Rat-a-tat-tat-a-tat-tat, beat Drummer on the old tree
trunk on the edge of the Green Forest. When he
stopped for breath, he looked down into the scowling
face of Farmer Brown’s boy, who was hiding behind
the old tree trunk.
Drummer didn’t like the looks
of that scowl, not a bit. And he didn’t
like the looks of the gun which Farmer Brown’s
boy had. He knew that Farmer Brown’s boy
was hiding there to shoot Reddy Fox, but Drummer was
beginning to be afraid that Farmer Brown’s boy
might guess what all that drumming meant—that
it was a warning to Reddy Fox. And if Farmer
Brown’s boy did guess that, why—why—anyway,
on the other side of the tree there was a better place
to drum. So Drummer the Woodpecker crept around
to the other side of the tree and in a minute was
drumming harder than ever. Whenever he stopped
for breath, he looked out over the Green Meadows to
see if Reddy Fox had heard his warning.
But if Reddy had heard, he hadn’t
heeded. Just to show off before all the little
meadow and forest people, Reddy had waited until Bowser
the Hound had almost reached him. Then, with a
saucy flirt of his tail, Reddy Fox started to show
how fast he could run, and that is very fast indeed.
It made Bowser the Hound seem very slow, as, with
his nose to the ground, he came racing after Reddy,
making a tremendous noise with his great voice.
Now Reddy Fox had grown as careless
as he had grown bold. Instead of looking sharply
ahead, he looked this way and that way to see who
was watching and admiring him. So he took no note
of where he was going and started straight for the
old tree trunk on which Drummer the Woodpecker was
pounding out his warning of danger.
Now Reddy Fox has sharp eyes and very
quick ears. My, my, indeed he has! But just
now Reddy was as deaf as if he had cotton stuffed
in his ears. He was chuckling to himself to think
how he was going to fool Bowser the Hound and how
smart everyone would think him, when all of a sudden,
he heard the rat-a-tat-tata-tat-tat of Drummer the
Woodpecker and knew that that meant “Danger!”
For just a wee little second it seemed
to Reddy Fox that his heart stopped beating.
He couldn’t stop running, for he had let Bowser
the Hound get too close for that. Reddy’s
sharp eyes saw Drummer the Woodpecker near the top
of the old tree trunk and noticed that Drummer seemed
to be looking at something down below. Reddy
Fox gave one quick look at the foot of the old tree
trunk and saw a gun pointed at him and behind the gun
the freckled face of Farmer Brown’s boy.
Reddy Fox gave a little gasp of fright and turned
so suddenly that he almost fell flat. Then he
began to run as never in his life had he run before.
It seemed as though his flying feet hardly touched
the grass. His eyes were popping out with fright
as with every jump he tried to run just a wee bit
faster.
Bang! Bang! Two flashes
of fire and two puffs of smoke darted from behind
the old tree trunk. Drummer the Woodpecker gave
a frightened scream and flew deep into the Green Forest.
Peter Rabbit flattened himself under a friendly bramble
bush. Johnny Chuck dived headfirst down his doorway.
Reddy Fox gave a yelp, a shrill little
yelp of pain, and suddenly began to go lame.
But Farmer Brown’s boy didn’t know that.
He thought he had missed and he growled to himself:
“I’ll get that fox yet for stealing my
pet chicken!”