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VII HOW CHATTERER HAD FOOLED PETER RABBIT CHATTERER THE RED
SQUIRREL is a
scamp himself and not to be trusted. Nobody in the Green Forest or on
the Green
Meadows trusts him. And people who cannot be trusted themselves never
trust any
one else. Chatterer never does. He is always suspicious. So when Peter
Rabbit
had said good-by and started for the dear Old Briar-patch without
knowing where
Chatterer's new house was, Chatterer had made up his mind right away
that Peter
would never be satisfied until he knew, or thought he knew, where that
new
house was. You see, he knew all about Peter's dreadful curiosity. He watched Peter out of
sight, then
he slipped down out of sight himself between the stones of the old
wall.
"I know what Peter will do," said he to himself. "Peter will
come sneaking back, and hide where he can watch me, and so find out
where my
new house is. I'll just stay here long enough to give him a chance to
hide, and
then I'll fool him." You see, Chatterer knew
that if he
had been in Peter's place, he would have done just that thing. So he
waited a
little while and then went back to the place where Peter had left him.
There he
sat and pretended to be looking in the direction in which Peter had
gone, as if
to make sure that Peter was really on his way home. But all the time
Chatterer
was watching out of the corners of his eyes to see if Peter was hiding
anywhere
near. He didn't see Peter, but he didn't have the least doubt that
Peter was
somewhere about. After a while, he ran
over to a hole
between the stones of the old wall and pretended to be very busy there,
just as
if it really were the new house he had found. He kept popping in and
out and
looking around as if afraid that some one was watching him. He even got
some
dry leaves and took them inside, as if to make a bed. All the time,
although he
hadn't seen a sign of Peter, he didn't have the least doubt in the
world that
Peter was watching him. When he grew tired, a new idea popped into his
shrewd
little head. He popped out of the hole and sat up on the wall. Then he
said
aloud that verse which had made Peter's ears burn so. He had meant to
make
Peter's ears burn. 1He said that verse just as if he really did believe
that
Peter was not spying on him and was glad of it. When he had finished,
he
whisked out of sight again to give Peter a chance to get away. But this
time
Chatterer did some peeking himself. He hid where Peter couldn't see
him, but
where he himself could see both ways along the old stone wall, and so
it was
that he saw Peter crawl out from under the little bush where he had
been hiding
and sneak away in the direction of the Old Briar-patch. And he knew
that this
time Peter had gone for good. Then Chatterer laughed
and laughed
to think how he had fooled Peter Rabbit, and wished that he could pat
himself
on the back for being so smart. He didn't once think of how dishonest
and mean
it was of Peter to spy on him, because, you see, he would have done the
same
thing himself. "One has to have one's wits very sharp these days to
keep a
secret," chuckled Chatterer. But over in the old
Briar-patch that
afternoon Peter Rabbit sat very thoughtful and very much ashamed. The
thought
that he had found out where Chatterer's new house was didn't give him
the
pleasure that he had thought it would. His ears still burned, for he
thought
that Chatterer supposed him honest when he wasn't. "I believe I'll go over
to-morrow and tell Chatterer all about it and how mean I have been,"
said
he at last. And when he had made up his mind to do this, he felt
better. And all the time he hadn't found Chatterer's new house at all. You see, it was the old home of Drummer the Woodpecker in an old apple-tree which Chatterer had decided to live in. |