THE HUNT FOR MR. QUACK
In spite of her hopelessness in regard
to Mr. Quack, there is no doubt that Mrs. Quack felt
better that night after she had eaten the corn left
among the rushes of the Smiling Pool by Farmer Brown’s
boy. Now she had that very comfortable feeling
that goes with a full stomach, she could think better.
As the Black Shadows crept across the Smiling Pool,
she turned over in her mind Sammy Jay’s plan
for helping her the next day. The more she thought
about it, the better it seemed, and she began to feel
a little ashamed that she had not appeared more grateful
to Sammy when he told her. At the time she had
been tired and hungry and discouraged. Now she
was beginning to feel rested, and she was no longer
hungry. These things made all the difference
in the world. As she thought over Sammy’s
plan, she began to feel a little hope, and when at
last she put her head under her wing to go to sleep,
she had made up her mind that the plan was worth trying,
and that she would do her part.
Bright and early the next morning,
Sammy Jay and Blacky the Crow were in the Big Hickory-tree
near the Smiling Pool ready to start for the Big River
to hunt for Mr. Quack. Peter Rabbit had been so
afraid that he would miss something that he had stayed
near the Smiling Pool all night, so he was on hand
to see the start.
It had been agreed that Mrs. Quack
was to go to a certain place on the Big River and
then swim up as far as she thought it would be of
any use. She was to stay in the middle of the
river, where she would be quite safe from hunters
with terrible guns, and where also these same hunters
would be sure to see her and so not be tempted to
shoot at Blacky the Crow if he happened to fly over
them. You see, they would hope that Mrs. Quack
would swim in near enough to be shot and so would
not risk frightening her by shooting at Blacky.
When Mrs. Quack had finished her breakfast,
she started for the Big River, and her stout wings
moved so swiftly that they made a whistling sound.
Sammy Jay and Blacky the Crow followed her, but though
they flew as fast as they could, Mrs. Quack had reached
the Big River before they had gone half the way.
When they did get there, they saw Mrs. Quack out in
the middle, swimming about and watching for them.
Blacky flew across the river and pretended to be hunting
for food along the farther bank, just as every hunter
knows he often does. Sammy Jay did the same thing
on the other bank.
Mrs. Quack swam slowly up the Big
River, keeping in the middle, and Blacky and Sammy
followed along up the two banks, all the time using
their sharp eyes for all they were worth to find Mr.
Quack hiding among the broken-down rushes or under
the bushes in the water, for the Big River had overflowed
its banks, and in some places bushes and trees were
in the water.
Now Sammy Jay dearly loves to hunt
for things. Whenever he knows that one of his
neighbors in the Green Forest has hidden something,
he likes to hunt for it. It isn’t so much
that he wants what has been hidden, as it is that
he wants to feel he is smart enough to find it.
When he does find it, he usually steals it, I’m
sorry to say. But it is the fun of hunting that
Sammy enjoys most. So now Sammy thoroughly enjoyed
hunting for Mr. Quack. He peered into every likely
hiding-place and became so interested that he quite
forgot about the hunters who might be waiting along
the bank.
So it happened that he didn’t
see a boat drawn in among the bushes until he was
right over it. Sitting in it was a man with a
terrible gun, very intently watching Mrs. Quack out
in the middle of the Big River. Sammy was so
startled that before he thought he opened his mouth
and screamed “Thief! thief! thief!” at
the top of his lungs, and flew away with all his might.
Mrs. Quack heard his scream and understood just what
it meant.
A little later Blacky the Crow discovered
another hunter hiding behind the bushes on his side.
“Caw! caw! caw!” shouted Blacky, flying
out over the water far enough to be safe from that
terrible gun he could see.
“Quack! quack!” replied
Mrs. Quack, which meant that she understood.
And so the hunt went on without a sign of poor Mr.
Quack.