Granny Fox couldn’t believe
her own eyes. No, Sir, she couldn’t believe
her own eyes, and she rubbed them two or three times
to make sure that she was seeing right. That
chicken certainly had disappeared, and left no trace
of where it had gone.
It was very queer. Old Granny
Fox sat down to think who would dare steal anything
from her. Then she walked in a big circle with
her nose to the ground, sniffing and sniffing.
What was she doing that for? Why, to see if she
could find the tracks of anyone who might have stolen
her chicken.
“Aha!” exclaimed old Granny
Fox, starting to run along the top of the hill, her
nose to the ground. “Aha! I’ll
catch him this time!”
In a few minutes she began to run
more slowly, and every two or three steps she would
look ahead. Suddenly her eyes snapped, and she
began to creep almost flat on her stomach, just as
she had crept for Peter Rabbit. But it wasn’t
Peter Rabbit this time. It was—who
do you think? Jimmy Skunk! Yes, Sir, it was
Jimmy Skunk. He was slowly ambling along, for
Jimmy Skunk never hurries. Every big stick or
stone that he could move, he would pull over or look
under, for Jimmy Skunk was hunting for beetles.
Old Granny Fox watched him. “He
must have a tremendous appetite to be hunting for
beetles after eating my chicken!” muttered she.
Then she jumped out in front of Jimmy Skunk, her eyes
snapping, her teeth showing, and the hair on her back
standing on end so as to make her look very fierce.
But all the time old Granny Fox took the greatest
care not to get too near to Jimmy Skunk.
“Where’s my chicken?”
snarled old Granny Fox, and she looked very, very
fierce.
Jimmy Skunk looked up as if very much
surprised. “Hello, Granny Fox!” he
exclaimed. “Have you lost a chicken?”
“You’ve stolen it!
You’re a thief, Jimmy Skunk!” snapped Granny
Fox.
“Words can never make black white;
Before you speak be sure you’re right,”
said Jimmy Skunk. “I’m not a thief.”
“You are!” cried Granny working herself
into a great rage.
“I’m not!”
“You are!”
All the time Jimmy Skunk was chuckling
to himself, and the more he chuckled the angrier grew
old Granny Fox. And all the time Jimmy Skunk
kept moving toward old Granny Fox and Granny Fox kept
backing away, for, like all the other little meadow
and forest people, she has very great respect for
Jimmy Skunk’s little bag of scent.
Now, backing off that way, she couldn’t
see where she was going, and the first thing she knew
she had backed into a bramble bush. It tore her
skirts and scratched her legs. “Ooch!”
cried old Granny Fox.
“Ha! ha! ha!” laughed
Jimmy Skunk. “That’s what you get
for calling me names.