MORE MISCHIEF
Mischief’s like
a snowball
Sent rolling down a
hill;
With every turn it bigger
grows
And bigger, bigger still.
Sammy Jay had started mischief by
telling Reddy Fox where Johnny Chuck’s new house
was. If you had asked him, Sammy Jay would have
said that he hadn’t told. All he had said
was that he had happened to be up in Farmer Brown’s
old orchard and so had called on Johnny Chuck in his
new house.
Now Reddy Fox is very sly, oh, very
sly. He had pretended to Sammy Jay that he knew
all the time where Johnny Chuck was living. When
he left Sammy Jay, he had started in the direction
of the Green Meadows, just as if he had no thought
of going over to Farmer Brown’s old orchard.
But Sammy Jay is just as sly as Reddy
Fox. He wasn’t fooled for one minute, not
one little minute. He chuckled to himself as he
started to look for Jimmy Skunk. Then he changed
his mind.
“I think I’ll go up to
the old orchard myself!” said Sammy Jay, and
away he flew.
He got there first and hid in the
top of a big apple-tree, where he could see all that
went on. It wasn’t long before he saw Reddy
Fox steal out from the Green Forest and over to the
old orchard. Reddy was nervous, very nervous.
You see, it was broad daylight, and the old orchard
was very near Farmer Brown’s house. Reddy
knew that he ought to have waited until night, but
he knew that then Johnny Chuck would be fast asleep,
Now, perhaps, Johnny Chuck, thinking that no one knew
where he lived, would not be on watch, and he might
be able to catch Johnny.
So Reddy, with one eye on Farmer Brown’s
house and one eye on the watch for some sign of Johnny
Chuck, stole into the old orchard. Every few
steps he would stop and look and listen. At every
little noise he would start nervously. Then Sammy
Jay would chuckle under his breath.
So Reddy Fox crept and tiptoed about
through the old orchard. Every minute he grew
more nervous, and every minute he grew more disappointed,
for he could find no sign of Johnny Chuck’s house.
He began to think that Sammy Jay had fooled him, and
the very thought made him grind his teeth. At
last he decided to give it up.
He was down in the far corner of the
old orchard, close by the old stone wall now, and
he got all ready to jump over the old stone wall,
when he just happened to look on the other side of
the big apple-tree he was under, and there was what
he was looking for—Johnny Chuck’s
new house! Johnny Chuck wasn’t in sight,
but there was the new house, and Johnny must be either
inside or not far away. Reddy grinned. It
was a sly, wicked, hungry grin. He flattened himself
out in the grass behind the big apple-tree.
“I’ll give Johnny Chuck
the surprise of his life!” muttered Reddy Fox
under his breath.
Now Sammy Jay had been watching all
this time. He knew that Johnny Chuck was safely
inside his house, for Johnny had seen Reddy when he
first came into the old orchard. And Sammy knew
that Johnny Chuck knew that when Reddy found that
new house, he would hide just as he had done.
“Johnny Chuck won’t come
out again to-day, and there won’t be any excitement
at all,” thought Sammy Jay in disappointment,
for he had hoped to see a fight between Reddy Fox
and Johnny Chuck. Just then Sammy looked over
to Farmer Brown’s house, and there was Farmer
Brown’s boy getting ready to saw wood. The
imp of mischief under Sammy’s pert cap gave
him an idea. He flew over to the old apple-tree,
just over Reddy’s head, and began to scream at
the top of his lungs.
Farmer Brown’s boy stopped work
and looked over towards the old orchard.
“When a jay screams like that
there is usually a fox around,” he muttered,
as he unfastened Bowser the Hound.