JIMMY SKUNK TAKES WORD TO MRS. PETER
When old Granny Fox found Prickly
Porky, with his thousand little spears all pointing
at her, standing between her and Peter Rabbit, she
was the angriest old Fox ever seen. She didn’t
dare touch Prickly Porky, for she knew well enough
what it would mean to get one of those sharp, barbed
little spears in her skin. To think that she actually
had caught Peter Rabbit and then lost him was too provoking!
It was more than her temper, never of the best, could
stand. In her anger she dug up the leaves and
earth with her hind feet, and all the time her tongue
fairly flew as she called Prickly Porky, Jimmy Skunk,
and Unc’ Billy Possum everything bad she could
think of. Her yellow eyes snapped so that it
seemed almost as if sparks of fire flew from them.
It made Peter shiver just to look at her.
Unc’ Billy Possum, who, by slipping
up behind her and biting one of her heels, had made
her let go of Peter, grinned down at her from a safe
place in a tree. Jimmy Skunk stood grinning at
her in the most provoking manner, and she couldn’t
do a thing about it, because she had no desire to
have Jimmy use his little bag of perfume. So she
talked herself out and then with many parting threats
of what she would do, she started for home. Unc’
Billy noticed that she limped a little with the foot
he had nipped so hard, and he couldn’t help
feeling just a little bit sorry for her.
When she had gone, the others turned
to Peter Rabbit to see how badly he had been hurt.
They looked him all over and found that he wasn’t
much the worse for his rough experience. He was
rather stiff and lame, and the back of his neck was
very sore where Granny Fox had seized him, but he
would be quite himself in a day or two.
“I must get home now,”
said he in a rather faint voice. “Mrs. Peter
will be sure that something has happened to me and
will be worried almost to death.”
“No, you don’t!”
declared Jimmy Skunk. “You are going to
stay right here where we can take care of you.
It wouldn’t be safe for you to try to go to
the Old Briar-patch now, because if you should meet
Old Man Coyote or Reddy Fox or Whitetail the Marshhawk,
you would not be able to run fast enough to get away.
I will go down and tell Mrs. Peter, and you will make
yourself comfortable in the old house behind that
stump where I was hiding.”
Peter tried to insist on going home,
but the others wouldn’t hear of it, and Jimmy
Skunk settled the matter by starting for the dear Old
Briar-patch. He found little Mrs. Peter anxiously
looking towards the Green Forest for some sign of
Peter.
“Oh!” she cried, “you
have come to bring me bad news. Do tell me quickly
what has happened to Peter!”
“Nothing much has happened to
Peter,” replied Jimmy promptly. Then in
the drollest way he told all about the fright of Granny
Fox when she first saw the terrible creature rolling
down the hill and all that happened after, but he
took great care to make light of Peter’s escape,
and explained that he was just going to rest up there
on Prickly Porky’s hill for that day and would
be home the next night. But little Mrs. Peter
wasn’t wholly satisfied.
“I’ve begged him and begged
him to keep away from the Green Forest,” said
she, “but now if he is hurt so that he can’t
come home, he needs me, and I’m going straight
up there myself!”
Nothing that Jimmy could say had the
least effect, and so at last he agreed to take her
to Peter. And so, hopping behind Jimmy Skunk,
timid little Mrs. Peter Rabbit actually went into
the Green Forest of which she was so much afraid,
which shows how brave love can be sometimes.