Something had to be done. Jerry
Muskrat said so. Grandfather Frog said so.
Billy Mink said so. Little Joe Otter said so.
Even Spotty the Turtle said so. The Laughing
Brook couldn’t laugh, and the Smiling Pool couldn’t
smile. You see, there wasn’t water enough
in either of them to laugh or smile, and nobody knew
if there ever would be again. Nobody had ever
known anything like it before, and so nobody knew
what to think or do. And yet they all felt that
something must be done.
“What do you think, Billy Mink?” asked
Grandfather Frog.
Billy Mink looked down from the top
of the Big Rock into the little pool of water that
was all there was left of the Smiling Pool. He
could see a dozen fat trout in it, and he knew that
he could catch them just as easily as not, because
there was no place for them to swim away from him.
But somehow he didn’t want to catch them.
He knew that they were frightened almost to death
already by the running away of nearly all the water
from the Laughing Brook and the Smiling Pool, and
somehow he felt sorry for them.
“I think that the best thing
we can do is to move down to the Big River. I’ve
been down there, and that’s all right,”
said Billy Mink.
“That’s what I think,
” said Little Joe Otter. “There’s
no danger that the Big River will go dry.”
“How do you know?” asked
Jerry Muskrat. “The Laughing Brook and
the Smiling Pool never went dry before.”
“It’s a long, long way
down to the Big River,” broke in Spotty the
Turtle, who travels very, very slowly and carries his
house with him.
“Chugarum! I, for one,
don’t want to leave the Smiling Pool without
finding out what the trouble is.
“There’s nothing happens, as you
know,
But has a cause to make it so.
“Now there must be some cause,
some reason, for this terrible trouble with the Smiling
Pool, and if we can find that out, perhaps we shall
know better what to do,” said Grandfather Frog.
Jerry Muskrat nodded his head.
“Grandfather Frog is right,” said he.
“Of course there must be a cause, but where are
we to look for it? I’ve been all over the
Smiling Pool, and I’m sure it isn’t there.”
Grandfather Frog actually smiled.
“Chugarum!” said he. “Of course
the cause of all the trouble isn’t in the Smiling
Pool. Any one would know that!”
“Well, if you know so much,
tell us where it is then!” snapped Jerry Muskrat.
“In the Laughing Brook, of course,”
replied Grandfather Frog.
“No such thing!” said
Billy Mink. “I’ve been all the way
down the Laughing Brook to the Big River, and I didn’t
find a thing.”
“Have you been all the way up
the Laughing Brook to the place it starts from?”
asked Grandfather Frog.
“No-o,” replied Billy Mink.
“Well, that’s where the
cause of all the trouble is,” said Grandfather
Frog, just as if he knew all about it. “It’s
the water that comes down the Laughing Brook that
makes the Smiling Pool, and the Smiling Pool never
could dry up if the Laughing Brook didn’t first
stop running.”
“That’s so! I never
had thought of that,” cried Little Joe Otter.
“I tell you what, Billy Mink and I will go way
up the Laughing Brook and see what we can find.”
“Chugarum! Let us all go,” said
Grandfather Frog.
Then the five put their heads together
and decided that they would go up the Laughing Brook
to hunt for the trouble.