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XXIII
A STRANGE MISTAKE
NOT wishing to be late at his
cousin’s party, which he understood was to begin at five o’clock, Rusty Wren
hurried along the bank of Black Creek, while Mr. Frog did his best to keep pace
with him. Somewhat out of breath, the two arrived
shortly at the home of Long Bill Wren. And, to their surprise, they saw not the
least sign of any other guests. “It looks as if we were the first to
get here,” Rusty Wren remarked, as they drew near Long Bill’s house in the
reeds. “Well, somebody has to be first, you
know,” the tailor observed easily. “I always like to be early at a party,” he
added, “because then I am sure of getting plenty of refreshments.” If there were no other guests to be
seen, neither was there any indication of a party about Long Bill’s home. There
was nothing to eat anywhere in sight; and no flag, nor gay Chinese lantern, nor
decoration of any other kind adorned his house. Rusty Wren had always thought his
cousin’s house a strange dwelling. Made of coarse grasses and reed stalks, it
was round, like a big ball, with a doorway in one side. This queer building was
fastened among the reeds a little distance above the ground. And it seemed to
Rusty Wren that it must be a damp and unhealthful place to live. “It’s odd that your cousin’s not
here to greet us,” Mr. Frog croaked. The
words were scarcely out of his
large mouth when Long Bill thrust his head and shoulders out of his
door — for he had heard the voices in his front yard. He had
on a shocking old coat —
not at all the sort one would choose to wear when one expected guests. “Well, well!” he exclaimed. “I’m
glad to see you, Cousin Rusty. And I’m certainly surprised, for it’s more than
a year since you’ve paid me a visit.” “Aren’t you glad to see me, too?”
Mr. Frog piped up a bit anxiously. “Certainly — to be sure!” said Long
Bill. “But I’m not so surprised — though I understand that you usually attend a
singing-party about this time o’ day.” “Yes!” said Mr. Frog. “But I’d much
prefer to come to yours.” “My what?” inquired Long Bill Wren,
as a puzzled look appeared upon his face. “Your party, of course!” Mr. Frog replied
with a wide smile. Now, Rusty Wren wished he had not
called at Mr. Frog’s shop at all. If he had only come straight to his cousin’s
house, he thought that he would have spared himself — and his cousin, too — a
good deal of trouble. And, since he didn’t know what to say, he kept still for
a few moments and let the others do all the talking. Meanwhile, Long Bill hopped briskly
outside his house, and joined them on the ground. “My party!” he cried. “Why, I know
of no party here! Somebody has made a mistake. I haven’t given a party for a
year — just a year ago to-day. . . . I invited you at that time,” he told
Rusty Wren, “but you didn’t come. And I never received any word from you about
the matter.” “That’s strange!” said Rusty. “This
is the first I ever heard of the affair.” “I engaged Mr. Crow to take your invitation
to Jolly Robin in the orchard and ask him to give it to you,” Long Bill informed
his bewildered cousin. “That’s just the way this invitation
reached me yesterday!” Rusty explained. “Ah! I see it all now,” said Long
Bill. And he began to laugh merrily. “Mr. Crow’s poor memory is to blame for
your mistake. He forgot to deliver the message last year. And he happened to
remember it only yesterday. So the news reached you just twelve months too
late.” Although Long Bill Wren continued to
laugh heartily, neither Mr. Frog nor Rusty could manage even a faint smile.
Having expected a merry time and plenty to eat, they were both disappointed. But Mr. Frog soon said that so far
as he was concerned, he still had a singing-party that he could attend, so he
didn’t feel sad very long. And, after all, Rusty was glad to see his cousin,
Long Bill Wren. They had a pleasant chat together for almost an hour. And Long
Bill invited Rusty to stay to dinner. Rusty thanked him and said, no! he
must hasten home, because he had to go to bed early, on account of having to
awaken Farmer Green at dawn the next morning. When he returned to the old cherry
tree Rusty had to answer a good many questions. His wife wanted to know what
had kept him so long, and what Mr. Frog said, and what color his new Sunday
coat was going to be. When she learned that her husband’s
visit to the tailor had been all in vain, she looked very suspicious and said
quickly: “You haven’t been at a party, have
you?” “No, indeed!” Rusty Wren replied. “I
haven’t gone to a party for more than a year.” And he seemed quite indignant that his wife should have such a strange idea in her head. THE END
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