XIX
THE MAJOR'S SCHEME
"I NEVER can run a
thousand miles through the tree-tops," Major Monkey told Jolly Robin in
a
tone of great disappointment. "I don't see how I can spend the
winter in
the South; and I certainly don't want to stay here, if it's as
cold as you
say." The poor Major looked so glum that Jolly Robin was sorry for him.
"Can't
you get a ride?" he asked.
"I could ride a horse,
if I had one," Major Monkey replied.
"That's not a bad
idea," Jolly Robin said. "But I'm afraid you'd have trouble finding
a horse. Farmer Green would scarcely
care to spare one of his horses for so long a trip."
"Well, I could ride a
dog," said Major Monkey. "There's that dog at the farmhouse –
old
Spot, as you call him. Surely Farmer Green wouldn't mind if I rode him
away, for he's nothing but a nuisance."
"Why don't you ask
Farmer Green?" Jolly Robin suggested.
But Major Monkey shook his
head.
"No!" he said.
"No! I don't want to do that yet. Before I speak to Farmer Green I
prefer
to make sure that old dog Spot is easy
to ride on."
Jolly Robin looked puzzled.
His mouth fell open. And for a few moments he stared at Major Monkey
without
saying a word.
When he finally spoke, it
was to ask Major Monkey how he was going to find out what he wanted to
know
about old dog Spot.
"There's only one
way," said Major Monkey. "There's only one way; and that's to
ride him and see."
Jolly Robin thought what a
bold fellow Major Monkey was. He entirely forgot the Major's flight
from the
picnic grove. Riding a dog was such a feat as Jolly Robin himself would
never,
never attempt. And he was sure that if Major Monkey really undertook it
there
could be no doubt of his bravery.
"How do you know"
– Jolly asked the Major timidly – "how do you know
that old dog Spot will
let you ride him?"
"Don't you worry about
that!" Major Monkey cried lightly, as he swaggered along a limb of the
apple tree where they were talking. "Leave that to me."
And Jolly Robin thought what
a stout heart beat beneath Major Monkey's red coat, and how fine it was
to be
one of his friends.
"I should like to see
you when you first ride old Spot," said Jolly Robin.
"Delighted, I'm
sure!" Major Monkey cried.
"And I hope you've no
objection to my bringing my wife along, too."
Major Monkey was not so sure
that he would care to have Mrs. Robin for an onlooker.
"Women are likely to be
timid," he remarked. "They sometimes scream at the wrong time.
And
if your wife happened to cry out just as I was about to drop on old
Spot's back,
he might jump. And that would spoil everything."
Jolly Robin decided that
Major Monkey knew best.
"We'll keep this affair
a secret," he whispered.
The Major nodded.
"And now" – Jolly
Robin asked him – "now where, and when are you going to ride
old Spot?"
Shutting his eyes tightly,
Major Monkey wrinkled his low forehead until Jolly Robin began
to fear that he
was in great pain.
"Are you ill?"
Jolly asked him.
"No!" said the
Major. "I was only thinking. And it seems to me that the other end of
the
orchard, toward the farmhouse, would be the best place to
begin my ride.... As
for the time," he added, "that will be when old Spot happens
to come
that way."
I'll be there, whenever that
may be," Jolly Robin assured him.
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