You’ll find as on through
life you go
The thing you want may prove to
be
The very thing you shouldn’t
have.
Then seeming loss is gain, you see.
— Old Granny
Fox.
If ever two folks were mad away through,
those two were Granny and Reddy Fox as they watched
Old Man Coyote gobble up the dinner they had so cleverly
stolen from Bowser the Hound. It was bad enough
to lose the dinner, but it was worse to see some one
else eat it after they had worked so hard to get it.
“Robber!” snarled Granny. Old Man
Coyote stopped eating long enough to grin.
“Thief! Sneak! Coward!”
snarled Reddy. Once more Old Man Coyote grinned.
When that dinner had disappeared down his throat to
the last and smallest crumb, he licked his chops and
turned to Granny and Reddy.
“I’m very much obliged
for that dinner,” said he pleasantly, his eyes
twinkling with mischief. “It was the best
dinner I have had for a long time. Allow me
to say that that trick of yours was as smart a trick
as ever I have seen. It was quite worthy of a
Coyote. You are a very clever old lady, Granny
Fox. Now I hear some one coming, and I would
suggest that it will be better for all concerned if
we are not seen about here.”
He darted off behind the barn like
a gray streak, and Granny and Reddy followed, for
it was true that some one was coming. You see
Bowser the Hound had discovered that something was
going on around the corner of the shed, and he made
such a racket that Mrs. Brown had come out of the
house to see what it was all about. By the time
she got around there, all she saw was the empty pan
which had held Bowser’s dinner. She was
puzzled. How that pan could be where it was she
couldn’t understand, and Bowser couldn’t
tell her, although he tried his very best. She
had been puzzled about that pan two or three times
before.
Old Man Coyote lost no time in getting
back home, for he never felt easy near the home of
man in broad daylight. Granny and Reddy Fox went
home too, and there was hate in their hearts, —
hate for Old Man Coyote. But once they reached
home, Old Granny Fox stopped growling, and presently
she began to chuckle.
“What are you laughing at?” demanded Reddy.
“At the way Old Man Coyote stole that dinner
from us,” replied Granny.
“I hate him! He’s a sneaking robber!”
snapped Reddy.
“Tut, tut, Reddy! Tut,
tut!” retorted Granny. “Be fair-minded.
We stole that dinner from Bowser the Hound, and Old
Man Coyote stole it from us. I guess he is no
worse than we are, when you come to think it over.
Now is he?”
“I — I —
well, I don’t suppose he is, when you put it
that way, ” Reddy admitted grudgingly.
“And he was smart, very smart,
to outwit two such clever people as we are,”
continued Granny. “You will have to agree
to that.”
“Y-e-s,” said Reddy slowly.
“He was smart enough, but—”
“There isn’t any but,
Reddy,” interrupted Granny. “You
know the law of the Green Meadows and the Green Forest.
It is everybody for himself, and anything belongs
to one who has the wit or the strength to take it.
We had the wit to take that dinner from Bowser the
Hound, and Old Man Coyote had the wit to take it from
us and the strength to keep it. It was all fair
enough, and you know there isn’t the least use
in crying over spilled milk, as the saying is.
We simply have got to be smart enough not to let him
fool us again. I guess we won’t get any
more of Bowser’s dinners for a while. We’ve
got to think of some other way of filling our stomachs
when the hunting is poor. I think if I could
have just one of those fat hens of Farmer Brown’s,
it would put new strength into my old bones.
All summer I warned you to keep away from that henyard,
but the time has come now when I think we might try
for a couple of those hens.”
Reddy pricked up his ears at the mention
of fat hens. “I think so too,” said
he. “When shall we try for one?”
“To-morrow morning,” replied
Granny. “Now don’t bother me while
I think out a plan.”