WHAT BLACKY THE CROW SAW
The greatest puzzle is simple
enough when you know the answer.
Bowser the Hound.
There were just two people to whom
the disappearance of that fat hen Reddy Fox had hidden
in the hollow stump was not a mystery. One of
them was Blacky the Crow. When the farmer and
Bowser the Hound had rushed out at the sound of Blacky’s
excited cawing, Blacky had flown to the top of a tall
tree from which he could see all that went on.
Everything had happened just as Blacky had hoped it
would. Bowser had taken the trail of Reddy Fox,
and Blacky felt sure that sooner or later Reddy would
lead him back home to Farmer Brown’s.
Blacky was doubly pleased with himself.
He was pleased to think that he had found a way of
getting Bowser back home, and he was quite as much
pleased because he had been smart enough to outwit
Reddy Fox. He didn’t wish Reddy any harm,
and he felt sure that no harm would come to him.
He didn’t even wish him to lose that dinner
Reddy had come so far to get, but he didn’t
care if Reddy did lose it, if only his plan worked
out as he hoped it would.
“I wonder what he’ll do
with that fat hen,” muttered Blacky, as he watched
Reddy race away with it thrown over his shoulders.
“He can’t carry that hen far and keep
out of the way of Bowser. I think I’ll
follow and see what he does with it.”
So Blacky followed, and his eyes twinkled
when he saw Reddy hide the fat hen in the hollow stump.
He knew that no matter how far Bowser might chase
Reddy, Reddy would come back for that fat hen, and
he was rather glad to think that Reddy would have
that good dinner after all.
“No one will ever think to look
in that hollow stump,” thought Blacky, “and
I certainly will not tell any one. Reddy has earned
that dinner. Now I think I’ll go get something
to eat myself.”
At that very instant Blacky’s
sharp eyes caught a glimpse of a gray form with broad
wings, and in a perfect panic of fear Blacky began
to fly as fast as he knew how for a thick spruce-tree
not far away. He plunged in among the branches
and hid in the thickest part he could find. With
little shivers of fear running all over him, he peeked
out and watched that big gray form. On broad
wings it sailed over to that hollow stump. Two
long legs with great curving claws reached down in,
and a moment later that fat hen was disappearing over
the tree tops. Blacky sighed with relief.
[Illustration: ON BROAD WINGS
IT SAILED OVER TO THAT HOLLOW STUMP. Page 199.]
“It’s a lucky thing for
me that robber, Mr. Goshawk, saw Reddy hide that fat
hen,” muttered Blacky. “If he hadn’t,
he might have caught me, for I didn’t see him
at all.”