FARMER BROWN’S BOY MAKES A DISCOVERY
Reddy Fox glared up at Sammy Jay.
“What’s the matter with you?” snarled
Reddy Fox. “Why don’t you mind your
own affairs, instead of making trouble for other people?”
You see, Reddy was afraid that Johnny Chuck would
hear Sammy Jay and take warning.
“Hello, Reddy Fox! I thought
you had gone down to the Green Meadows!” Sammy
said this as if he was very much surprised to see Reddy
there. He wasn’t, for you know he had been
watching Reddy hunt for Johnny Chuck’s new house,
but Reddy had pretended that he was going down to
the Green Meadows early that morning, and so now Sammy
pretended that he had thought that Reddy really had
gone.
“I changed my mind!” he
snapped. “What are you screaming so for?”
“Just to exercise my lungs,
so as to be sure that I can scream when I want to,”
replied Sammy, screaming still louder.
“Well, go somewhere else and
scream; I want to sleep,” said Reddy crossly.
Now Sammy Jay knew perfectly well
that Reddy Fox had no thought of taking a nap but
was hiding there to try to catch Johnny Chuck.
And Sammy knew that Farmer Brown’s boy could
hear him scream, and that he knew that when Sammy
screamed that way it meant there was a fox about.
Sitting in the top of the apple-tree, Sammy could see
Farmer Brown’s boy starting for the old orchard,
with Bowser the Hound running ahead of him.
Farmer Brown’s boy had no gun,
so Sammy knew that no harm would come to Reddy, but
that Reddy would get a dreadful scare; and that is
what Sammy wanted, just out of pure mischief.
So he screamed louder than ever.
Reddy Fox lost his temper. He
sat up and called Sammy Jay all the bad names he could
think of. He forgot where he was. He told
Sammy Jay what he thought of him and what he would
do to him if ever he caught him.
Sammy Jay kept right on screaming.
He made such a noise that Reddy didn’t hear
footsteps coming nearer and nearer. Suddenly there
was a great roar right behind him. “Bow,
wow, wow! Bow, wow, wow, wow!”—
just like that.
Reddy was so frightened that he didn’t
even look to see where he was jumping, and bumped
his head against the apple-tree. Then he started
for the Green Forest, with Bowser the Hound at his
heels.
Sammy Jay laughed till he lost his
breath and nearly tumbled off his perch. Then
he flew away, still laughing. He thought it the
greatest joke ever.
Farmer Brown’s boy had followed
Bowser the Hound into the old orchard.
“I wonder what a fox was doing
up here in broad daylight,” said he, talking
to himself. “Perhaps one of my hens has
stolen her nest down here, and he has found it.
I’ll have a look, anyway.”
So he walked on down to the far corner
of the old orchard, straight to the place from which
he had seen Reddy Fox jump. When he got there,
of course he saw Johnny Chuck’s new house right
away.
“Ho!” cried Farmer Brown’s
boy. “Brer Fox was hunting Chucks.
I’ll keep my eye on this, and if Mr. Chuck makes
any trouble in my garden, I’ll know where to
catch him.”