BLACKY IS MUCH PLEASED WITH HIMSELF
You cannot tell from a single
feather what a bird looks like,
nor from a lone hair how big
a dog is.
Bowser the Hound.
Straight away towards the farm where
Bowser the Hound was flew Blacky the Crow. Every
few minutes he would caw encouragement to Reddy Fox,
who, as you know, was following, but who of course
could not travel as fast as did Blacky. In between
times Blacky would chuckle to himself. He was
mightily pleased with himself, was Blacky.
In the first place his plan was working
beautifully. You know what he was after was to
get Reddy Fox over to that farm where Bowser was.
He hoped that if Reddy should catch one of those fat
hens, the farmer would put Bowser on Reddy’s
trail. He knew that Reddy would probably return
straight home, and Bowser, following Reddy’s
trail, would thus find his way back home to Farmer
Brown’s. Of course, it all depended on whether
Reddy would catch one of those fat hens and whether
Bowser would be allowed to hunt him. Blacky had
a plan for making sure that if Reddy did get one of
those hens the folks in the farmhouse would know it.
But what tickled Blacky most the knowledge
that Reddy Fox thought he was fooling Blacky.
You remember that Reddy had pretended to be very weak.
Blacky knew that Reddy was nothing of the kind.
At the very first opportunity Blacky stopped in the
top of a tall tree as if to rest. His real reason
for stopping was to have a chance to look back.
You see, while he was flying he couldn’t look
behind him.
Presently, just as he expected, he
saw in the distance a little red speck, and that little
red speck was moving very fast indeed. There was
nothing weak or feeble in the way that red speck was
coming across the snow-covered fields. Blacky
chuckled hoarsely.
Nearer and nearer came the red speck,
and of course the nearer it came the larger it grew.
Presently it stopped moving fast. It began to
move slowly and stop every once in a while, as if
to rest. Blacky laughed right out. He knew
then that Reddy Fox had discovered him sitting in the
top of that tall tree and was once more pretending.
It was a sort of a game, a game that Blacky thoroughly
enjoyed.
As soon as he knew that Reddy had
discovered him, he once more spread his black wings
and started on. The same thing happened over again.
In fact, Blacky did not fly far this time before once
more waiting. It was great fun to see Reddy suddenly
pretend that he was too weak to run. It was such
fun that Blacky quite forgot that he had had no breakfast.
Yes, Blacky the Crow was very much
pleased with himself. It looked very much as
if he would succeed in helping Bowser the Hound.
This pleased him. But it pleased him still more
to know that he was fooling clever Reddy Fox while
Reddy thought he was the one who was doing the fooling.