Peter Rabbit was dozing. Yes,
sir, Peter was dozing. He didn’t mean to
doze, but whenever Peter sits still for a long time
and tries to think, he is pretty sure to go to sleep.
By and by he wakened with a start. At first he
didn’t know what had wakened him, but as he
sat there blinking his eyes, he heard a few rich notes
from the top of the nearest apple-tree. “It’s
Goldy the Oriole,” thought Peter, and peeped
out to see.
But though he looked and looked he
couldn’t see Goldy anywhere, but he did see
a stranger. It was some one of about Goldy’s
size and shape. In fact he was so like Goldy,
but for the color of his suit, that at first Peter
almost thought Goldy had somehow changed his clothes.
Of course he knew that this couldn’t be, but
it seemed as if it must be, for the song the stranger
was singing was something like that of Goldy.
The stranger’s head and throat and back were
black, just like Goldy’s, and his wings were
trimmed with white in just the same way. But the
rest of his suit, instead of being the beautiful orange
of which Goldy is so proud, was a beautiful chestnut
color.
Peter blinked and stared very hard.
“Now who can this be?” said he, speaking
aloud without thinking.
“Don’t you know him?”
asked a sharp voice so close to Peter that it made
him jump. Peter whirled around. There sat
Striped Chipmunk grinning at him from the top of the
old stone wall. “That’s Weaver the
Orchard Oriole,” Striped Chipmunk rattled on.
“If you don’t know him you ought to, because
he is one of the very nicest persons in the Old Orchard.
I just love to hear him sing.”
“Is—is—he
related to Goldy?” asked Peter somewhat doubtfully.
“Of course,” retorted
Striped Chipmunk. “I shouldn’t think
you would have to look at him more than once to know
that. He’s first cousin to Goldy.
There comes Mrs. Weaver. I do hope they’ve
decided to build in the Old Orchard this year.”
“I’m glad you told me
who she is because I never would have guessed it,”
confessed Peter as he studied the newcomer. She
did not look at all like Weaver. She was dressed
in olive-green and dull yellow, with white markings
on her wings.
Peter couldn’t help thinking
how much easier it must be for her than for her handsome
husband to hide among the green leaves.
As he watched she flew down to the
ground and picked up a long piece of grass. “They
are building here, as sure as you live!” cried
Striped Chipmunk. “I’m glad of that.
Did you ever see their nest, Peter? Of course
you haven’t, because you said you had never
seen them before. Their nest is a wonder, Peter.
It really is. It is made almost wholly of fine
grass and they weave it together in the most wonderful
way.”
“Do they have a hanging nest
like Goldy’s?” asked Peter a bit timidly.
“Not such a deep one,”
replied Striped Chipmunk. “They hang it
between the twigs near the end of a branch, but they
bind it more closely to the branch and it isn’t
deep enough to swing as Goldy’s does.”
Peter had just opened his mouth to
ask another question when there was a loud sniffing
sound farther up along the old stone wall. He
didn’t wait to hear it again. He knew that
Bowser the Hound was coming.
“Good-by, Striped Chipmunk!
This is no place for me,” whispered Peter and
started for the dear Old Briar-patch. He was in
such a hurry to get there that on his way across the
Green Meadows he almost ran into Jimmy Skunk before
he saw him.
“What’s your hurry, Peter?” demanded
Jimmy
“Bowser the Hound almost found
me up in the Old Orchard,” panted Peter.
“It’s a wonder he hasn’t found my
tracks. I expect he will any minute. I’m
glad to see you, Jimmy, but I guess I’d better
be moving along.”
“Don’t be in such a hurry,
Peter. Don’t be in such a hurry,”
replied Jimmy, who himself never hurries. “Stop
and talk a bit. That old nuisance won’t
bother you as long as you are with me.”
Peter hesitated. He wanted to
gossip, but he still felt nervous about Bowser the
Hound. However, as he heard nothing of Bowser’s
great voice, telling all the world that he had found
Peter’s tracks, he decided to stop a few minutes.
“What are you doing down here on the Green Meadows?”
he demanded.
Jimmy grinned. “I’m
looking for grasshoppers and grubs, if you must know,”
said he. “And I’ve just got a notion
I may find some fresh eggs. I don’t often
eat them, but once in a while one tastes good.”
“If you ask me, it’s a
funny place to be looking for eggs down here on the
Green Meadows,” replied Peter. “When
I want a thing; I look for it where it is likely to
be found.”
“Just so, Peter; just so,”
retorted Jimmy Skunk, nodding his head with approval.
“That’s why I am here.”
Peter looked puzzled. He was
puzzled. But before he could ask another question
a rollicking song caused both of them to look up.
There on quivering wings in mid-air was the singer.
He was dressed very much like Jimmy Skunk himself,
in black and white, save that in places the white
had a tinge of yellow, especially on the back of his
neck. It was Bubbling Bob the Bobolink. And
how he did sing! It seemed as if the notes fairly
tumbled over each other.
Jimmy Skunk raised himself on his
hind-legs a little to see just where Bubbling Bob
dropped down in the grass. Then Jimmy began to
move in that direction. Suddenly Peter understood.
He remembered that Bubbling Bob’s nest is always
on the ground. It was his eggs that Jimmy Skunk
was looking for.
“You don’t happen to have
seen Mrs. Bob anywhere around here, do you, Peter?”
asked Jimmy, trying to speak carelessly.
“No,” replied Peter.
“If I had I wouldn’t tell you where.
You ought to be ashamed, Jimmy Skunk, to think of
robbing such a beautiful singer as Bubbling Bob.”
“Pooh!” retorted Jimmy.
“What’s the harm? If I find those
eggs he and Mrs. Bob could simply build another nest
and lay some more. They won’t be any the
worse off, and I will have had a good breakfast.”
“But think of all the work they
would have to do to build another nest,” replied
Peter.
“I should worry,” retorted
Jimmy Skunk. “Any one who can spend so
much time singing can afford to do a little extra work.”
“You’re horrid, Jimmy
Skunk. You’re just horrid,” said Peter.
“I hope you won’t find a single egg, so
there!”
With this, Peter once more headed
for the dear Old Briar-patch, while Jimmy Skunk continued
toward the place where Bubbling Bob had disappeared
in the long grass. Peter went only a short distance
and then sat up to watch Jimmy Skunk. Just before
Jimmy reached the place where Bubbling Bob had disappeared,
the latter mounted into the air again, pouring out
his rollicking song as if there were no room in his
heart for anything but happiness. Then he saw
Jimmy Shrunk and became very much excited. He
flew down in the grass a little farther on and then
up again, and began to scold.
It looked very much as if he had gone
down in the grass to warn Mrs. Bob. Evidently
Jimmy thought so, for he at once headed that way.
When Bubbling Bob did the same thing all over again.
Peter grew anxious. He knew just how patient Jimmy
Skunk could be, and he very much feared that Jimmy
would find that nest. Presently he grew tired
of watching and started on for the dear Old Briar-patch.
Just before he reached it a brown bird, who reminded
him somewhat of Mrs. Redwing and Sally Sly the Cowbird,
though she was smaller, ran across the path in front
of him and then flew up to the top of a last year’s
mullein stalk. It was Mrs. Bobolink. Peter
knew her well, for he and she were very good friends.
“Oh!” cried Peter.
“What are you doing here? Don’t you
know that Jimmy Skunk, is hunting for your nest over
there? Aren’t you worried to death?
I would be if I were in your place.”
Mrs. Bob chuckled. “Isn’t
he a dear? And isn’t he smart?” said
she, meaning Bubbling Bob, of course, and not Jimmy
Skunk. “Just see him lead that black-and-white
robber away.”
Peter stared at her for a full minute.
“Do you mean to say,” said he “that
your nest isn’t over there at all?”
Mrs. Bob chuckled harder than ever.
“Of course it isn’t over there,”
said she.
“Then where is it?” demanded Peter.
“That’s telling,”
replied Mrs. Bob. “It isn’t over there,
and it isn’t anywhere near there. But where
it is is Bob’s secret and mine, and we mean
to keep it. Now I must go get something to eat,”
and with a hasty farewell Mrs. Bobolink flew over to
the other side of the dear Old Briar-patch.
Peter remembered that he had seen
Mrs. Bob running along the ground before she flew
up to the old mullein stalk. He went back to
the spot where he had first seen her and hunted all
around in the grass, but without success. You
see, Mrs. Bobolink had been quite as clever in fooling
Peter as Bubbling Bob had been in fooling Jimmy Skunk.