Perhaps ’tis just as well
that we
Can’t see ourselves as others
see.
— Old Granny
Fox.
“Just as I thought,” muttered
Reddy Fox as he peeped through the bushes on the bank
of the Big River and saw Quacker swimming about in
the water where it ran too swiftly to freeze.
“We’ve got just as much chance of catching
him as I have of jumping over the moon. That’s
what I’ll tell Granny.”
He crept back carefully so as not
to be seen by Quacker, and when he had reached the
place where Granny was waiting for him, his face wore
a very impudent look.
“Well,” said Granny Fox,
“what shall we do to catch him?”
“Learn to swim like a fish and
fly like a bird,” replied Reddy in such a saucy
tone that Granny had hard work to keep from boxing
his ears.
“You mean that you think he
can’t be caught?” said she quietly.
“I don’t think anything
about it; I know he can’t!” snapped Reddy.
“Not by us, anyway,” he added.
“I suppose you wouldn’t even try?”
retorted Granny.
“I’m old enough to know
when I’m wasting my time,” replied Reddy
with a toss of his head.
“In other words you think I’m
a silly old Fox who has lost her senses,” said
Granny sharply.
“No-o. I didn’t
say that,” protested Reddy, looking very uncomfortable.
“But you think it,” declared
Granny. “Now look here, Mr. Smarty, you
do just as I tell you. You creep back there where
you can watch Quacker and all that happens, and mind
that you keep out of his sight. Now go.”
Reddy went. There was noth-ing
else to do. He didn’t dare disobey.
Granny watched until Reddy had readied his hiding-place.
Then what do you think she did? Why, she walked
right out on the little beach just below Reddy and
in plain sight of Quacker! Yes, Sir, that is
what she did!
Then began such a queer performance
that it is no wonder that Reddy was sure Granny had
lost her senses. She rolled over and over.
She chased her tail round and round until it made Reddy
dizzy to watch her. She jumped up in the air.
She raced back and forth. She played with a
bit of stick. And all the time she didn’t
pay the least attention to Quacker the Duck.
Reddy stared and stared. Whatever
had come over Granny? She was crazy. Yes,
Sir, that must be the matter. It must be that
she had gone without food so long that she had gone
crazy. Poor Granny! She was in her second
childhood. Reddy could remember how he had done
such things when he was very young, just by way of
showing how fine he felt. But for a grown-up
Fox to do such things was undignified, to say the
least. You know Reddy thinks a great deal of
dignity. It was worse than undignified; it was
positively disgraceful. He did hope that none
of his neighbors would happen along and see Granny
cutting up so. He never would hear the end of
it if they did.
Over and over rolled Granny, and around
and around she chased her tail. The snow flew
up in a cloud. And all the time she made no sound.
Reddy was just trying to decide whether to go off and
leave her until she had regained her common sense,
or to go out and try to stop her, when he happened
to look out in the open water where Quacker was.
Quacker was sitting up as straight as he could.
In fact, he had his wings raised to help him sit up
on his tail, the better to see what old Granny Fox
was doing.
“As I live,” muttered
Reddy, “I believe that fellow is nearer than
he was!”
Reddy crouched lower than ever, and
instead of watching Granny he watched Quacker the
Duck.