VI
TOO MANY DISPUTES
ON the
whole, Mr. Crow's
party would have been a great success if it hadn't been for Peter Mink
and
Tommy Fox.
As soon as
Major Monkey
showed himself, after throwing the apple at Mr. Crow, those
two began
whispering slyly together. And when the Major climbed a tree and hung
from a
limb by his tail they both jumped up and said to Mr. Crow:
"We saw
Major Monkey
before you ever did!"
Mr. Crow
promptly flew into
a rage. "You did not!" he squalled.
"Yes, we
did!"
they declared. "We told people several days ago that we had seen a
stranger hanging by his tail; and nobody believed us because you said
it wasn't
possible. You said nobody but a 'possum could do that, and that no
'possum
ever came as far north as Pleasant Valley."
Old Mr.
Crow was very angry.
Although he knew that Tommy and Peter were speaking the truth,
he did not care
to hear it. Certainly there was no use of his denying what they said.
But an
idea popped into his head.
"Which of
you saw the
Major first?" he asked.
"I did!"
they both
bawled at the same time. And then followed a terrible dispute: "You didn't! I did! I did! You
didn't!"
Now, that
was exactly what
Mr. Crow wanted. He had started Peter Mink and Tommy Fox to quarreling.
"They'll
never
agree," Mr. Crow cried. "Let's ask Major Monkey to settle the
dispute! Let's leave it to him!" And turning to his friend, the Major,
Mr.
Crow said: "Which of these two sharp-nosed rascals did you see
first?"
Major
Monkey took a bite out
of his apple while he looked closely at Peter Mink and Tommy Fox.
"I
never
saw either of them until I came to
this party," he declared. "And then I saw both at the same time,
because they were whispering together."
"There!"
Mr. Crow
shouted to the whole company. "You hear what my old friend the Major
says?"
Tommy Fox
and Peter Mink
stopped quarreling.
"You didn't
ask the
Major the proper question!" they objected. "We never said he
saw
us at
all! We said –
" But Mr. Crow waved them aside.
"If you
aren't too
hungry," he muttered to Major Monkey, "I'd suggest that you
let fly
with that red apple."
The Major
was only too
willing. With deadly aim he flung the apple at Peter Mink and Tommy
Fox. First
it hit Peter on the nose, and then it bounced off and struck Tommy on his nose.
And then
the party came to
an end in an awful uproar. For Peter and Tommy were very angry. Those
that
could fly flew away in a great hurry. And those that could run
scampered
quickly out of sight. As for the soldier, Major Monkey, he climbed a
tree and
hung by his tail from a limb, where he swung backwards and forwards and
made
faces at Tommy Fox and Peter Mink until their rage was terrible to see.
Mr. Crow
did not desert his
friend the Major. He remained in a tree near-by, to watch the fun. And
there's
no telling how long it would have lasted had not Major Monkey pulled
himself
suddenly up on a limb and laid a hand across the front of his red coat.
There
was a look of pain upon his face.
"What's the
matter?" Mr. Crow asked him. "Are you wounded?" he inquired.
Knowing that the Major was a soldier, he could think of nothing but a
wound
that would make him act as he did.
"I – I'm
not
sure," Major Monkey replied. "It may be that I've eaten too
many
apples."
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