HAPPY JACK SQUIRREL MAKES AN UNEXPECTED CALL
Happy Jack Squirrel likes the snow.
He always has liked the snow. It makes him feel
frisky. He likes to run and jump in it and dig
little holes in it after nuts, which he hid under
the leaves before the snow fell. When his feet
get cold, all he has to do is to scamper up a tree
and warm them in his own fur coat. So the big
snowstorm which made so much trouble for Unc’
Billy Possum just suited Happy Jack Squirrel, and
he had a whole lot of fun making his funny little tracks
all through that part of the Green Forest in which
he lives.
Happy Jack didn’t know anything
about Unc’ Billy Possum’s troubles.
He supposed that Unc’ Billy was safe at home
in his own big hollow tree, fast asleep, as he had
been most of the winter. Happy Jack couldn’t
understand how anybody could want to sleep such fine
weather, but that was their own business, and Happy
Jack had learned a long time ago not to worry about
other people’s business.
After frisking about he would stop
to rest. Then he would sit up very straight and
fold his hands across his breast, where they would
get nice and warm in the fur of his coat. His
beautiful, great gray tail would be arched up over
his back. His bright eyes would snap and twinkle,
and then he would shout just for joy, and every time
he shouted he jerked his big tail. Farmer Brown’s
boy called it barking, but it was Happy Jack’s
way of shouting.
“I love to romp! I love
to play!
I’m happy, happy, all
the day!
I love the snow, so soft and
white!
I love the sun that shines
so bright!
I love the whole world, for,
you see,
The world is very good to
me!”
By and by Happy Jack came to the hollow
tree that Farmer Brown’s boy had cut down because
he thought that Unc’ Billy Possum was inside
of it.
“Hello!” exclaimed Happy
Jack. “That’s one of the old storehouses
of my cousin, Chatterer the Red Squirrel! I’ve
got an old storehouse near here, and I guess I’ll
see if I have left any nuts in it.”
He scampered over to another hollow
tree standing near. He scampered up the tree
as only Happy Jack can and whisked in at the open doorway
of the hollow. Now Happy Jack had been in that
hollow tree so often that he didn’t once think
of looking to see where he was going, and he landed
plump on something that was soft and warm! Happy
Jack was so surprised that he didn’t know what
to do for a second. And then all in a flash that
something soft and warm was full of sharp claws and
sharper teeth, and an angry growling tilled the hollow
tree.
Happy Jack was so frightened that
he scrambled out as fast as he could. When he
was safely outside, he grew very angry to think that
any one should be in his storehouse, even if it was
an old one. He could hear a very angry voice
inside, and in a minute who should appear at the doorway
but Unc’ Billy Possum.
Unc’ Billy had been waked out
of a sound sleep, and that was enough to make any
one cross. Besides, he had been badly frightened,
and that made him crosser still.
“What do yo’ mean by trying
to frighten honest people?” snapped Unc’
Billy, when he caught sight of Happy Jack.
“What do you mean by stealing
into other folk’s houses?” demanded Happy
Jack, just as angrily.