NO ONE BELIEVES PETER RABBIT
Peter Rabbit sat in his secret place
in the middle of the Old Briar-patch. Peter was
doing some very hard thinking. He ought to have
been asleep, for he had been out the whole night long.
But instead of sleeping, he was wide awake and thinking
and thinking.
You see early the night before Boomer
the Nighthawk had told Peter that Sammy Jay was up
in the far-away Old Pasture. Boomer had seen him
going to bed there and had come straight down to tell
Peter. This was great news, and Peter could hardly
wait for Boomer to stop talking, he was so anxious
to spread the news over the Green Meadows and through
the Green Forest, for Peter is a great gossip and
cannot keep his tongue still.
So he had hurried this way and that
way, telling every one he met how Sammy Jay had moved
away to the Old Pasture. But no one believed him.
“Wait and see! Wait and see!” said
Jimmy Skunk.
“It’s just a trick,” said Bobby
Coon.
“But Boomer the Nighthawk saw
him up there going to bed and talked with him!”
cried Peter Rabbit.
“Perhaps he did and then again
perhaps he didn’t,” replied Bobby Coon,
carefully washing an ear of sweet milky corn that he
had brought down to the Laughing Brook from Farmer
Brown’s corn-field, for Bobby Coon is very,
very neat and always washes his food before eating.
“For my part,” he continued, “I
believe that Boomer the Nighthawk just made up that
story to help Sammy Jay fool us.”
“But that would be a wrong story,
and I don’t believe that Boomer would do anything
like that!” cried Peter.
Just then there was a shrill scream
of “Thief! thief! thief!” over in the
alder bushes. It certainly sounded like Sammy
Jay’s voice.
“What did I tell you? Now
what do you think?” cried Bobby Coon.
Peter didn’t know what to think,
and he said so. He left Bobby to eat his corn
and spent the rest of the night telling every one he
met what Boomer the Nighthawk had said, but of course
no one believed it, and every one laughed at him,
for hadn’t they heard Sammy Jay screaming that
very night?
So now Peter sat in the Old Briar-patch
thinking and thinking, when he should have been asleep.
Finally he yawned and stretched and then started along
one of his private little paths.
“I’ll just run up to the
Green Forest and try to find Sammy Jay,” he said.
So Peter hunted and hunted all through
the Green Forest for Sammy Jay, and asked everybody
he met if they had seen Sammy. But no one had,
though every one took pains to tell Peter that they
had heard Sammy in the night. At last Peter found
Sticky-toes the Tree Toad. He was muttering and
grumbling to himself, and he didn’t see Peter.
Peter stopped to listen, which was, of course, a very
wrong thing to do, and what he heard gave Peter an
idea.