SAMMY JAY DELIVERS HIS MESSAGE
Sammy Jay has been the bearer of so
many messages that no one knows better than he how
to deliver one. He knows when to be polite, and
no one can be more polite than he. First he went
over to the home of Reddy and Granny Fox and invited
them to come over to the hill where Prickly Porky
lives and see the terrible creature which had frightened
them so give Old Man Coyote a scare. Both Reddy
and Granny promptly said they would do nothing of
the kind, that probably Sammy was engaged in some
kind of mischief, and that anyway they knew that there
was no such creature without head, legs, or tail, and
though they had been fooled once, they didn’t
propose to be fooled again.
“All right,” replied Sammy,
quite as if it made no difference to him. “You
admit that smart as you are you were fooled, and we
thought you might like to see the same thing happen
to Old Man Coyote.”
With this he flew on his way to the
Green Meadows to look for Old Man Coyote, and as he
flew he chuckled to himself. “They’ll
be there,” he muttered. “I know them
well enough to know that nothing would keep them away
when there is a chance to see some one else frightened,
especially Old Man Coyote. They’ll try to
keep out of sight, but they’ll be there.”
Sammy found Old Man Coyote taking
a sun-bath. “Good morning, Mr. Coyote.
I hope you are feeling well,” said Sammy in his
politest manner.
“Fairly, fairly, thank you,”
replied Old Man Coyote, all the time watching Sammy
sharply out of the corners of his shrewd eyes.
“What’s the news in the Green Forest?”
“There isn’t any, that
is, none to amount to anything,” declared Sammy.
“I never did see such a dull summer. Is
there any news down here on the Green Meadows?
I hear Danny Meadow Mouse has found his lost baby.”
“So I hear,” replied Old
Man Coyote. “I tried to find it for him.
You know I believe in being neighborly.”
Sammy grinned, for as he said this,
Old Man Coyote had winked one eye ever so little,
and Sammy knew very well that if he had found that
lost baby, Danny Meadow Mouse would never have seen
him again. “By the way,” said Sammy
in the most matter-of-fact tone, “as I was coming
through the Green Forest, I saw Peter Rabbit over on
the hill where Prickly Porky lives, and Peter seems
to have been in some kind of trouble. He was
so lame that he said he didn’t dare try to go
home to the Old Briar-patch for fear that he might
meet some one looking for a Rabbit dinner, and he
knew that, feeling as he did, he wouldn’t be
able to save himself. Peter is going to come to
a bad end some day if he doesn’t watch out.”
“That depends on what you call
a bad end,” replied Old Man Coyote with a sly
grin. “It might be bad for Peter and at
the same time be very good for some one else.”
Sammy laughed right out. “That’s
one way of looking at it,” said he. “Well,
I should hate to have anything happen to Peter, because
I have lots of fun quarreling with him and should
miss him dreadfully. I think I’ll go up
to the Old Orchard and see what is going on there.”
Off flew Sammy in the direction of
the Old Orchard, and once more he chuckled as he flew.
He had seen Old Man Coyote’s ears prick up ever
so little when he had mentioned that Peter was over
in the Green Forest so lame that he didn’t dare
go home. “Old Man Coyote will start for
the Green Forest as soon as I am out of sight,”
thought Sammy. And that is just what Old Man
Coyote did.