LONGLEGS VISITS THE SMILING POOL
Longlegs the Blue Heron watched Billy
Mink and Little Joe Otter disappear down the Laughing
Brook. As long as they were in sight, he sat
without moving, his head drawn down between his shoulders
just as if he had nothing more important to think
about than a morning nap. But if you had been
near enough to have seen his keen eyes, you would never
have suspected him of even thinking of a nap.
Just as soon as he felt sure that the two little brown-coated
scamps were out of sight, he stretched his long neck
up until he was almost twice as tall as he had been
a minute before. He looked this way and that
way to make sure that no danger was near, spread his
great wings, flapped heavily up into the air, and
then, with his head once more tucked back between his
shoulders and his long legs straight out behind him,
he flew out over the Green Meadows, and making a big
circle, headed straight for the Smiling Pool.
All this time Billy Mink and Little
Joe Otter had not been so far away as Longlegs supposed.
They had been hiding where they could watch him, and
the instant he spread his wings, they started back
up the Laughing Brook towards the Smiling Pool to
see what would happen there. You see they knew
perfectly well that Longlegs was flying up to the Smiling
Pool in the hope that he could catch Grandfather Frog
for his breakfast. They didn’t really mean
that any harm should come to Grandfather Frog, but
they meant that he should have a great fright.
You see, they were like a great many other people,
so heedless and thoughtless that they thought it fun
to frighten others.
“Of course we’ll waken
Grandfather Frog in time for him to get away with
nothing more than a great scare,” said Little
Joe Otter, as they hurried along. “It will
be such fun to see his big goggly eyes pop out when
he opens them and sees Longlegs just ready to gobble
him up! And won’t Longlegs be hopping mad
when we cheat him out of the breakfast he is so sure
he is going to have!”
They reached the Smiling Pool before
Longlegs, who had taken a roundabout way, and they
hid among the bulrushes where they could see and not
be seen.
“There’s the old fellow
just as I left him, fast asleep,” whispered
Billy Mink.
Sure enough, there on his big green
lily-pad sat Grandfather Frog with his eyes shut.
At least, they seemed to be shut. And over on
top of his big house sat Jerry Muskrat. Jerry
seemed to be too busy opening a fresh-water clam to
notice anything else; but the truth is he was watching
all that was going on. You see, he had suspected
that Billy Mink was going to play some trick on Grandfather
Frog, so he had warned him. When he had seen
Longlegs coming towards the Smiling Pool, he had given
Grandfather Frog another warning, and he knew that
now he was only pretending to be asleep.
Straight up to the Smiling Pool came
Longlegs the Blue Heron, and on the very edge of it,
among the bulrushes, he dropped his long legs and stood
with his toes in the water, his long neck stretched
up so that he could look all over the Smiling Pool.
There, just as Little Joe Otter had said, sat Grandfather
Frog on his big green lily-pad, fast asleep. At
least, he seemed to be fast asleep. The eyes of
Longlegs sparkled with hunger and the thought of what
a splendid breakfast Grandfather Frog would make.
Very slowly, putting each foot down as carefully as
he knew how, Longlegs began to walk along the shore
so as to get opposite the big green lily-pad where
Grandfather Frog was sitting. And over in the
bulrushes on the other side, Little Joe Otter and Billy
Mink nudged each other and clapped their hands over
their mouths to keep from laughing aloud.