The thing you’ve puzzled most
about
Is simple once you’ve found
it out.
— Old Granny
Fox.
Bowser The Hound dearly loves to hunt
just for the pleasure of the chase. It isn’t
so much the desire to kill as it is the pleasure of
using that wonderful nose of his and the excitement
of trying to catch some one, especially Granny or
Reddy Fox. Farmer Brown’s boy had put
away his dreadful gun because he no longer wanted to
kill the little people of the Green Forest and the
Green Meadows, but rather to make them his friends.
Bowser had missed the exciting hunts he used to enjoy
so much with Farmer Brown’s boy. So Bowser
had formed the habit of slipping away alone for a hunt
every once in a while. When Farmer Brown’s
boy discovered this, he got a chain and chained Bowser
to his little house to keep him from running away
and hunting on the sly.
Of course Bowser wasn’t kept
chained all the time. Oh, my, no! When
his master was about, where he could keep an eye on
Bowser, he would let him go free. But whenever
he was going away and didn’t want to take Bowser
with him, he would chain Bowser up. Now Bowser
always had one good big meal a day. To be sure,
he had scraps or a bone now and then besides, but
once a day he had one good big meal served to him
in a large tin pan. If he happened to be chained,
it was brought out to him. If not, it was given
to him just outside the kitchen door.
Granny Fox knew all about this.
Sly old Granny makes it her business to know the
affairs of other people around her because there is
no telling when such knowledge may be of use to her.
So Granny had watched Bowser the Hound when he and
his master had no idea at all that she was anywhere
about, and she had found out his ways, the usual hour
for his dinner and just how far that chain would allow
him to go. It was such things which she had stored
away in that shrewd old head of hers that made her
so sure she and Reddy could take Bowser’s dinner
away from him. It was just about Bowser’s
dinner-time when Granny and Reddy trotted across the
snow-covered fields and crept behind the barn until
they could peep around the corner. No one was
in sight, not even Bowser, who was inside his warm
little house at the end of the long shed back of Farmer
Brown’s house. Granny saw that he was chained
and a sly grin crept over her face.
“You stay right here and watch
until his dinner is brought out to him,” said
she to Reddy. “As soon as whoever brings
it has gone back to the house you walk right out where
Bowser will see you. At the sight of you, he’ll
forget all about his dinner. Sit right down
where he can see you and stay there until you see that
I have got that dinner, or until you hear somebody
coming, for you know Bowser will make a great racket.
Then slip around back of the barn and join me back
of that shed.”
So Reddy sat down to watch, and Granny
left him. By and by Mrs. Brown came out of the
house with a pan full of good things. She put
it down in front of Bowser’s little house and
called to him. Then she turned and hurried back,
for it was very cold. Bowser came out of his
little house, yawned and stretched lazily.
It was time for Reddy to do his part.
Out he walked and sat down right in front of Bowser
and grinned at him. Bowser stared for a minute
as if he doubted his own eyes. Such impudence!
Bowser growled. Then with a yelp he sprang towards
Reddy.
Now the chain that held him was long,
but Reddy had taken care not to get too near, and
of course Bowser couldn’t reach him. He
tugged with all his might and yelped and barked frantically,
but Reddy just sat there and grinned in the most provoking
manner. It was great fun to tease Bowser this
way.
Meanwhile old Granny Fox had stolen
out from around the corner of the shed behind Bowser.
Getting hold of the edge of the pan with her teeth
she pulled it back with her around the corner and out
of sight. If she made any noise, Bowser didn’t
hear it. He was making too much noise himself
and was too excited. Presently Reddy heard the
sound of an opening door. Mrs. Brown was coming
to see what all the fuss was about. Like a flash
Reddy darted behind the barn, and all Mrs. Brown saw
was Bowser tugging at his chain as he whined and yelped
excitedly.
“I guess he must have seen a
stray cat or something,” said Mrs. Brown and
went back in the house. Bowser continued to whine
and tug at his chain for a few minutes. Then
he gave it up and, growling deep in his throat, turned
to eat his dinner. But there wasn’t any
dinner! It had disappeared, pan and all!
Bowser couldn’t understand it at all.
Back of the shed Granny and Reddy
Fox licked that pan clean; licked it until it was
polished. Then, with little sighs of satisfaction,
and every once in a while a chuckle, they trotted
happily home.