BUSTER BEAR GIVES IT ALL AWAY
It was very clear that Old Man Coyote
wasn’t thinking about his stomach just then,
but about his legs and how fast they could go.
He had been half-way up the hill when he first saw
the terrible creature without head, tail, or legs
rolling down straight at him. He stopped only
long enough for one good look and then he started for
the bottom of the hill as fast as he could make his
legs go. Now, it is a very bad plan to run fast
down-hill. Yes, Sir, it is a very bad plan.
You see, once you are started, it is not the easiest
thing in the world to stop. And then again, you
are quite likely to stub your toes.
This is what Old Man Coyote did.
He stubbed his toes and turned a complete somersault.
He looked so funny that the little scamps watching
him had all they could do to keep from shouting right
out. Old Granny Fox and Reddy Fox, looking on
from a safe distance, did laugh. You know they
had not been friendly with Old Man Coyote since he
came to live on the Green Meadows, and as they had
themselves had a terrible fright when they first saw
the strange creature, they rejoiced in seeing him
frightened.
But Old Man Coyote didn’t stop
for a little thing like a tumble. Oh, my, no!
He just rolled over on to his feet and was off again,
harder than before. Now there are very few people
who can see behind them without turning their heads
as Peter Rabbit can, and Old Man Coyote is not one
of them. Trying to watch behind him, he didn’t
see where he was going, and the first thing he knew
he ran bump into—guess who! Why, Buster
Bear, to be sure.
Where Buster had come from nobody
knew, but there he was, as big as life. When
Old Man Coyote ran into him, he growled a deep, provoked
growl and whirled around with one big paw raised to
cuff whoever had so nearly upset him. Old Man
Coyote, more frightened than ever, yelped and ran
harder than before, so that by the time Buster Bear
saw who it was who had run into him, he was safely
out of reach and still running.
Then it was that Buster Bear first
saw, rolling down the hill, the strange creature which
had so frightened Old Man Coyote. Unc’ Billy
Possum, Jimmy Skunk, Sammy Jay, Peter Rabbit and Mrs.
Peter, watching from safe hiding places, wondered
if Buster would run too. If he did, it would
be almost too good to be true. But he didn’t.
He looked first at the strange creature rolling down
the hill, then at Old Man Coyote running as hard as
ever he could, and his shrewd little eyes began to
twinkle. Then he began to laugh.
“Ha, ha, ha! Ho, ho, ho!
Ha, ha, ho! I see you are up to your old tricks,
Prickly Porky!” he shouted, as the strange creature
rolled past, almost over his toes and brought up against
a little tree at the foot of the hill.
[Illustration: “I see you
are up to your old tricks, Prickly Porky!” he
shouted. Page 114.]
Old Man Coyote heard him and stopped
short and turned to see what it meant. Very slowly
the strange creature unrolled and turned over.
There was a head now and a tail and four legs.
It was none other than Prickly Porky himself!
There was no doubt about it, though he still looked
very strange, for he was covered with dead leaves which
clung to the thousand little spears hidden in his
coat. Prickly Porky grinned.
“You shouldn’t have given
me away, Buster Bear, just because you have seen me
roll down hill before in the Great Woods where we both
came from,” said he.
“I think it was high time I
did,” replied Buster Bear, still chuckling.
“You might have scared somebody to death down
here where they don’t know you.”
Then everybody came out of their hiding
places, laughing and talking all at once, as they
told Buster Bear of the joke they had played on Old
Man Coyote, and how it had all grown out of the fright
Peter Rabbit had received when he just happened along
as Prickly Porky was rolling down hill just for fun.
As for Old Man Coyote, he sneaked away, grinding his
teeth angrily. Like a great many other people,
he couldn’t take a joke on himself.
So Prickly Porky made himself at home
in the Green Forest and took his place among the little
people who live there. In just the same way Old
Man Coyote came as a stranger to the Green Meadows
and established himself there. In the next book
you may read all about how he came to the Green Meadows
and of some of his adventures there and in the Green
Forest.