II
NO 'POSSUM
AT first old Mr. Crow could
scarcely believe his eyes. He stared and stared. Certainly it
was no 'possum
that he saw. And yet the stranger was hanging by his tail.
There could be no doubt
about that. Even as Mr. Crow watched him he waved both hands at Mr.
Crow, and
swung by his tail alone.
The old gentleman was
terribly
upset. During all the summers he had spent in Pleasant Valley he had
never seen
any such person there before.
For a moment Mr. Crow was
worried about himself. He wondered if he was not ill. He knew he had
eaten a
good deal of corn that day. And he half hoped that that was the trouble
– that
perhaps he saw something that wasn't really in the tree at all.
Then
he remembered the blow on his back. Had the
queer person in the tree-top struck him?... Mr. Crow grew angry.
"Did
you hit me?" he called.
"I'm not sure,"
said the stranger. "But
I think
I did,
for I saw you jump."
"Then
you threw something at me! " Mr.
Crow screamed.
"Oh, no!" the
other replied. "I didn't throw anything at you, sir. I merely dropped
something on your back."
Mr. Crow choked. Perhaps it
was as well that he could not speak just then. He coughed and
spluttered and
swallowed and swayed back and forth, trying to get his breath. And he
had
begun, at last to feel better, when – biff!
– something
struck him again and all but knocked him over.
The stranger gave a shrill
whistle.
"I threw something that time!" he
jeered.
Old Mr. Crow felt that he
had been terribly insulted. He looked as dignified as he
could. And he would
have turned his back on the stranger – had he dared.
While he was wondering
whether he had better fly away, or stay and quarrel with the rude
person who
had pelted him, the boorish stranger leaped from the tall tree into the
smaller
one where Mr. Crow was sitting. Then, dropping nimbly from limb to
limb, with
the help of his hands and his feet and his tail, he stopped at last
when he had
reached Mr. Crow's level.
One thing was certain. The
stranger was bold as brass. He looked Mr. Crow up and down. And then he
said:
"You're a gay old bird!
What's your name?"
Now, no doubt some people
would have been angry. But Mr. Crow rather liked to be called gay,
because he
couldn't help looking solemn. And most people knew he was very old. And
everybody was aware he was a bird. So he said hoarsely:
"My name is Mister Crow
– and please don't forget the Mister."
The
stranger put on his flat-topped red cap and
touched the visor smartly with his right hand, in a military manner.
Old Mr. Crow couldn't help
admiring the newcomer's clothes. He wore a red coat trimmed with gold
braid,
and bright blue trousers.
"That's a handsome suit
that you have on," Mr. Crow observed. "I shouldn't mind having one
like it myself."
The stranger seemed pleased.
And he touched his cap again.
"I'm afraid you can't
have a suit like this," he said. "It's a uniform
– that's what
it is. And, of course, a plain
Mister like
you can't wear a uniform. But I wear one because I'm a soldier."
Old Mr. Crow was
disappointed. But he soon brightened up. Though he wasn't a soldier
himself, at
least it was pleasant to know one. So he decided to forget that he had
been
angry with the stranger.
"What's your
name?" he asked.
"Major Monkey,"
said the newcomer, knocking off his cap with one hand and catching it
with the
other as it fell. "When you speak to me, please don't forget the Major," he
added.
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