Two big white eggs in a tumbledown
nest, and snow and ice everywhere! Did ever
anybody hear of such a thing before?
“Wouldn’t believe it,
if I hadn’t seen it with my own eyes,”
muttered Blacky the Crow. “Have to believe
them. If I can’t believe them, it’s
of no use to try to believe anything in this world.
As sure as I sit here, that old nest has two eggs
in it. Whoever laid them must be crazy to start
housekeeping at this time of year. I must find
out whose eggs they are and then —”
Blacky didn’t finish, but there
was a hungry look in his eyes that would have told
any who saw it, had there been any to see it, that
he had a use for those eggs. But there was none
to see it, and he took the greatest care that there
should be none to see him when he once again started
for a certain lonesome corner of the Green Forest.
“First I’ll make sure
that the eggs are still there, ” thought he, and flew
high above the tree tops, so that as he passed over
the tree in which was the old nest of Red-tail the
Hawk, he might look down into it. To have seen
him, you would never have guessed that he was looking
for anything in particular. He seemed to be just
flying over on his way to some distant place.
If the eggs were still there, he meant to come back
and hide in the top of a near-by pine-tree to watch
until he was sure that he might safely steal those
eggs, or to find out whose they were.
Blacky’s heart beat fast with
excitement as he drew near that old tumble-down nest.
Would those two big white eggs be there? Perhaps
there would be three! The very thought made him
flap his wings a little faster. A few more wing
strokes and he would be right over the tree.
How he did hope to see those eggs! He could
almost see into the nest now. One stroke!
Two strokes! Three strokes! Blacky bit
his tongue to keep from giving a sharp caw of disappointment
and surprise.
There were no eggs to be seen.
No, Sir, there wasn’t a sign of eggs in that
old nest. There wasn’t because —
why, do you think? There wasn’t because
Blacky looked straight down on a great mass of feathers
which quite covered them from sight, and he didn’t
have to look twice to know that that great mass of
feathers was really a great bird, the bird to whom
those eggs belonged.
Blacky didn’t turn to come back
as he had planned. He kept right on, just as
if he hadn’t seen anything, and as he flew he
shivered a little. He shivered at the thought
of what might have happened to him if he had tried
to steal those eggs the day before and had been caught
doing it.
“I’m thankful I knew enough
to leave them alone, ” said he. “Funny
I never once guessed whose eggs they are. I
might have known that no one but Hooty the Horned
Owl would think of nesting at this time of year.
And that was Mrs. Hooty I saw on the nest just now.
My, but she’s big! She’s bigger
than Hooty himself! Yes, Sir, it’s a lucky
thing I didn’t try to get those eggs yesterday.
Probably both Hooty and Mrs. Hooty were sitting close
by, only they were sitting so still that I thought
they were parts of the tree they were in. Blacky,
Blacky, the sooner you forget those eggs the better.”
Some things are best forgotten As
soon as they are learned. Who never plays with
fire Will surely not get burned.