WHAT DID HAPPEN TO MR. QUACK
“When did you last see Mr. Quack?”
asked Jerry Muskrat, who had been listening while
Mrs. Quack told Peter Rabbit about her terrible journey.
“Early yesterday morning,”
replied Mrs. Quack, the tears once more filling her
eyes. “We had reached the Big River over
there, just six of us out of the big flock that had
started from the sunny Southland. How we got
as far as that I don’t know. But we did,
and neither Mr. Quack nor I had lost a feather from
those terrible guns that had banged at us all the
way up and that had killed so many of our friends.
“We were flying up the Big River,
and everything seemed perfectly safe. We were
in a hurry, and when we came to a bend in the Big
River, we flew quite close to shore, so as not to have
to go way out and around. That was where Mr.
Quack made a mistake. Even the smartest people
will make mistakes sometimes, you know.”
Peter Rabbit nodded, “I know,”
said he. “I’ve made them myself.”
And then he wondered why Jerry Muskrat laughed right
out.
“Yes,” continued Mrs.
Quack, “that is where Mr. Quack made a mistake,
a great mistake. I suppose that because not a
single gun had been fired at us that morning he thought
perhaps there were no hunters on the Big River.
So to save time he led us close to shore. And
then it happened. There was a bang, bang of a
terrible gun, and down fell Mr. Quack just as we had
seen so many fall before. It was awful.
There was Mr. Quack flying in front of me on swift,
strong wings, and there never was a swifter, stronger
flier or a handsomer Duck than Mr. Quack, and then
all in the wink of an eye he was tumbling helplessly
down, down to the water below, and I was flying on
alone, for the other Ducks turned off, and I don’t
know what became of them. I couldn’t stop
to see what became of Mr. Quack, because if I had,
that terrible gun would have killed me. So I kept
on a little way and then turned and went back, only
I kept out in the middle of the Big River. I
dropped down on the water and swam about, calling
and calling, but I didn’t get any answer, and
so I don’t know what has become of Mr. Quack.
I am afraid he was killed, and if he was, I wish I
had been killed myself.”
Here Mrs. Quack choked up so that
she couldn’t say another word. Peter’s
own eyes were full of tears as he tried to comfort
her. “Perhaps,” said he, “Mr.
Quack wasn’t killed and is hiding somewhere
along the Big River. I don’t know why I
feel so, but I feel sure that he wasn’t killed,
and that you will find him yet.”
“That’s why I’ve
waited instead of going on,” replied Mrs. Quack
between sobs, “though it wouldn’t have
been of any use to go on without my dear mate.
I’m going back to the Big River now to look
for him. The trouble is, I don’t dare go
near the shore, and if he is alive, he probably is
hiding somewhere among the rushes along the banks.
I think I’ll be going along now, but I’ll
be back to-night if nothing happens to me. You
folks who can always stay at home have a great deal
to be thankful for.”
“It’s lucky for me that
Mrs. Peter wasn’t here to hear her say that,”
said Peter, as he and Jerry Muskrat watched Mrs. Quack
fly swiftly towards the Big River. “Mrs.
Peter is forever worrying and scolding because I don’t
stay in the dear Old Briar-patch. If she had
heard Mrs. Quack say that, I never would have heard
the last of it. I wish there was something we
could do for Mrs. Quack. I’m going back
to the dear Old Briar-patch to think it over, and I
guess the sooner I start the better, for that looks
to me like Reddy Fox over there, and he’s headed
this way.”
So off for home started Peter, lipperty-lipperty-lip,
as fast as he could go, and all the way there he was
turning over in his mind what Mrs. Quack had told
him and trying to think of some way to help her.