REDDY HIDES THE FAT HEN
Dishonesty will run away
Where Honesty will boldly
stay.
Bowser the Hound.
Reddy Fox was in a fix! He certainly
was in a fix! Here he was with the fat hen which
he had come such a long, long way to get, and no chance
to eat it, for Bowser the Hound was on his trail.
Ordinarily Reddy Fox can run faster than can Bowser,
but it is one thing to run with nothing to carry,
and another thing altogether to with a burden as heavy
as a fat hen. Reddy’s wits were working
quite as fast as his legs.
“I can’t carry this fat
hen far,” thought Reddy, “for Bowser will
surely catch me. I don’t want to drop it,
because I have come such a long way to get it, and
goodness knows when I will be able to catch another.
The thing for me to do is to hide it where I can come
back and get it after I get rid of that pesky dog.
Goodness, what a noise he makes!”
As he ran, Reddy watched sharply this
way and that way for a place to hide the fat hen.
He knew he must find a place soon, because already
that fat hen was growing very heavy. Presently
he spied the hollow stump of a tree. He didn’t
know it was hollow when he first saw it, but from
its looks he thought it might be. The top of it
was only about two feet above the ground. Reddy
stopped and stood up on his hind legs so as to see
if the top of that stump was hollow. It was.
With a quick look this way and that way to make sure
he wasn’t seen, he tossed the fat hen over into
the hollow and then, with a sigh of relief, darted
away.
With the weight of that fat hen off
his shoulders, and the worry about it off his mind,
Reddy could give all his attention to getting rid of
Bowser the Hound. He had no intention of running
any farther than he must. In the first place
he had traveled so far that he did not feel like running.
In the second place he wanted to get back to that hollow
stump and the fat hen just as soon as possible.
It wasn’t long before Reddy
realized that it was not going to be so easy to fool
Bowser the Hound. Bowser was too wise to be fooled
by common tricks such as breaking the trail by jumping
far to one side after running back on his own tracks
a little way; or by running along a fallen tree and
jumping from the end of it as far as he could.
Of course he tried these tricks, but each time Bowser
simply made a big circle with his nose to the ground
and picked up Reddy’s new trail.
Reddy didn’t know that country
about there at all, and little by little he began
to realize how much this meant. At home he knew
every foot of the ground for a long distance in every
direction. This made all the difference in the
world, because he knew just how to play all kinds of
tricks. But here it was different. It seemed
to him that all he could do was to run and run.