Every day brought newcomers to the
Old Orchard, and early in the morning there were so
many voices to be heard that perhaps it is no wonder
if for some time Peter Rabbit failed to miss that of
one of his very good friends. Most unexpectedly
he was reminded of this as very early one morning
he scampered, lipperty-lipperty-lip, across a little
bridge over the Laughing Brook.
“Dear me! Dear me!
Dear me!” cried rather a plaintive voice.
Peter stopped so suddenly that he all but fell heels
over head. Sitting on the top of a tall, dead,
mullein stalk was a very soberly dressed but rather
trim little fellow, a very little larger than Bully
the English Sparrow. Above, his coat was of a
dull olive-brown, while underneath he was of a grayish-white,
with faint tinges of yellow in places. His head
was dark, and his bill black. The feathers on
his head were lifted just enough to make the tiniest
kind of crest. His wings and tail were dusky,
little bars of white showing very faintly on his wings,
while the outer edges of his tail were distinctly
white. He sat with his tail hanging straight
down, as if he hadn’t strength enough to hold
it up.
“Hello, Dear Me!” cried
Peter joyously. “What are you doing way
down here? I haven’t seen you since you
first arrived, just after Winsome Bluebird got here.”
Peter started to say that he had wondered what had
become of Dear Me, but checked himself, for Peter
is very honest and he realized now that in the excitement
of greeting so many friends he hadn’t missed
Dear Me at all.
Dear Me the Phoebe did not reply at
once, but darted out into the air, and Peter heard
a sharp click of that little black bill. Making
a short circle, Dear Me alighted on the mullein stalk
again.
“Did you catch a fly then?” asked Peter.
“Dear me! Dear me!
Of course I did,” was the prompt reply.
And with each word there was a jerk of that long hanging
tail. Peter almost wondered if in some way Dear
Me’s tongue and tail were connected. “I
suppose,” said he, “that it is the habit
of catching flies and bugs in the air that has given
your family the name of Flycatchers.”
Dear Me nodded and almost at once
started into the air again. Once more Peter heard
the click of that little black bill, then Dear Me
was back on his perch. Peter asked again what
he was doing down there.
“Mrs. Phoebe and I are living
down here,” replied Dear Me. “We’ve
made our home down here and we like it very much.”
Peter looked all around, this way,
that way, every way, with the funniest expression
on his face. He didn’t see anything of Mrs.
Phoebe and he didn’t see any place in which he
could imagine Mr. and Mrs. Phoebe building a nest.
“What are you looking for?” asked Dear
Me.
“For Mrs. Phoebe and your home,
declared Peter quite frankly. “I didn’t
suppose you and Mrs. Phoebe ever built a nest on the
ground, and I don’t see any other place around
here for one.”
Dear Me chuckled. “I wouldn’t
tell any one but you, Peter,” said he, “but
I’ve known you so long that I’m going to
let you into a little secret. Mrs. Phoebe and
our home are under the very bridge you are sitting
on.”
“I don’t believe it!” cried Peter.
But Dear Me knew from the way Peter
said it that he really didn’t mean that.
“Look and see for yourself,” said Dear
Me.
So Peter lay flat on his stomach and
tried to stretch his head over the edge of the bridge
so as to see under it. But his neck wasn’t
long enough, or else he was afraid to lean over as
far as he might have. Finally he gave up and
at Mr. Phoebe’s suggestion crept down the bank
to the very edge of the Laughing Brook. Dear
Me darted out to catch another fly, then flew right
in under the bridge and alighted on a little ledge
of stone just beneath the floor. There, sure
enough, was a nest, and Peter could see Mrs. Phoebe’s
bill and the top of her head above the edge of it.
It was a nest with a foundation of mud covered with
moss and lined with feathers.
“That’s perfectly splendid!”
cried Peter, as Dear Me resumed his perch on the old
mullein stalk. “How did you ever come to
think of such a place? And why did you leave
the shed up at Farmer Brown’s where you have
build your home for the last two or three years?”
“Oh,” replied Dear Me,
“we Phoebes always have been fond of building
under bridges. You see a place like this is quite
safe. Then, too, we like to be near water.
Always there are many insects flying around where
there is water, so it is an easy matter to get plenty
to eat. I left the shed at Farmer Brown’s
because that pesky cat up there discovered our nest
last year, and we had a dreadful time keeping our
babies out of her clutches. She hasn’t
found us down here, and she wouldn’t be able
to trouble us if she should find us.”
“I suppose,” said Peter,
“that as usual you were the first of your family
to arrive.”
“Certainly. Of course,”
replied Dear Me. “We always are the first.
Mrs. Phoebe and I don’t go as far south in winter
as the other members of the family do. They go
clear down into the Tropics, but we manage to pick
up a pretty good living without going as far as that.
So we get back here before the rest of them, and usually
have begun housekeeping by the time they arrive.
My cousin, Chebec the Least Flycatcher, should be here
by this time. Haven’t you heard anything
of him up in the Old Orchard?”
“No,” replied Peter, “but
to tell the truth I haven’t looked for him.
I’m on my way to the Old Orchard now, and I certainly
shall keep my ears and eyes open for Chebec.
I’ll tell you if I find him. Good-by.”
“Dear me! Dear me!
Good-by Peter. Dear me!” replied Mr. Phoebe
as Peter started off for the Old Orchard.
Perhaps it was because Peter was thinking
of him that almost the first voice he heard when he
reached the Old Orchard was that of Chebec, repeating
his own name over and over as if he loved the sound
of it. It didn’t take Peter long to find
him. He was sitting out on the up of one of the
upper branches of an apple-tree where he could watch
for flies and other winged insects. He looked
so much like Mr. Phoebe, save that he was smaller,
that any one would have know they were cousins.
“Chebec! Chebec! Chebec!” he
repeated over and over, and with every note jerked
his tail. Now and then he would dart out into
the air and snap up something so small that Peter,
looking up from the ground, couldn’t see it
at all.
“Hello, Chebec!” cried
Peter. “I’m glad to see you back again.
Are you going to build in the Old Orchard this year?”
“Of course I am,” replied
Chebec promptly. “Mrs. Chebec and I have
built here for the last two or three years, and we
wouldn’t think of going anywhere else.
Mrs. Chebec is looking for a place now. I suppose
I ought to be helping her, but I learned a long time
ago, Peter Rabbit, that in matters of this kind it
is just as well not to have any opinion at all.
When Mrs. Chebec has picked out just the place she
wants, I’ll help her build the nest. It
certainly is good to be back here in the Old Orchard
and planning a home once more. We’ve made
a terribly long journey, and I for one am glad it’s
over.”
“I just saw your cousins, Mr.
and Mrs. Phoebe, and they already have a nest and
eggs,” said Peter.
“The Phoebes are a funny lot,”
replied Chebec. “They are the only members
of the family that can stand cold weather. What
pleasure they get out of it I don’t understand.
They are queer anyway, for they never build their
nests in trees as the rest of us do.”
“Are you the smallest in the
family?” asked Peter, for it had suddenly struck
him that Chebec was a very little fellow indeed.
Chebec nodded. “I’m
the smallest,” said he. “That’s
why they call me Least Flycatcher. I may be least
in size, but I can tell you one thing, Peter Rabbit,
and that is that I can catch just as many bugs and
flies as any of them.” Suiting action to
the word, he darted out into the air. His little
bill snapped and with a quick turn he was back on
his former perch, jerking his tail and uttering his
sharp little cry of, “Chebec! Chebec!
Chebec!” until Peter began to wonder which he
was the most fond of, catching flies, or the sound
of his own voice.
Presently they both heard Mrs. Chebec
calling from somewhere in the middle of the Old Orchard.
“Excuse me, Peter,” said Chebec, “I
must go at once. Mrs. Chebec says she has found
just the place for our nest, and now we’ve got
a busy time ahead of us. We are very particular
how we build a nest.”
“Do you start it with mud the
way Welcome Robin and your cousins, the Phoebes, do?”
asked Peter.
“Mud!” cried Chebec scornfully.
“Mud! I should say not! I would have
you understand, Peter, that we are very particular
about what we use in our nest. We use only the
finest of rootlets, strips of soft bark, fibers of
plants, the brown cotton that grows on ferns, and
perhaps a little hair when we can find it. We
make a dainty nest, if I do say it, and we fasten it
securely in the fork made by two or three upright
little branches. Now I must go because Mrs. Chebec
is getting impatient. Come see me when I’m
not so busy Peter.”