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XVII
CHATTERER AND SAMMY JAY MAKE UP WHEN
Chatterer
heard Sammy Jay say that he was going straight to the Green Forest to
tell
Shadow the Weasel that Chatterer was living in the Old Orchard, a great
fear
filled his heart. He forgot his quarrel with Sammy. He forgot his greed
for all
the corn in Farmer Brown's corn-crib. He forgot everything but his
terrible
fear of Shadow the Weasel. It was because of Shadow that Chatterer had
left the
Green Forest to live in the Old Orchard. If Shadow should find him
here, he
didn't know what he could do or where he could go. He knew that Sammy
Jay meant
just what he said, for though it would be a dreadful thing to do,
people do
dreadful things when they are angry, and Sammy Jay was very, very angry
indeed.
He had already spread his wings when Chatterer spoke. "Please
don't
do that, Sammy Jay," he begged, "I — I — I didn't mean all the bad
things I have said." Sammy
Jay's eyes
snapped. He saw right away that Chatterer was very much frightened, and
he knew
that hereafter so long as Shadow the Weasel was anywhere around,
Chatterer
would be so afraid that he would do anything Sammy might want him to.
You see,
Sammy Jay is very sharp. "Am I any
more
of a thief than you are?" he demanded. "No-o-o," replied Chatterer slowly, as if it were the hardest work to say it. "No-o-o," REPLIED CHATTERER SLOWLY "Will you
play
any more tricks on me?" asked Sammy. "No,"
replied Chatterer more promptly this time. "Well,
I'll
think it over and make up my mind in the morning," said Sammy.
"Perhaps I will and perhaps I won't tell Shadow where you are living.
I'll
think it over." Now Sammy
knew
perfectly well that Chatterer wouldn't sleep a wink that night for
worrying.
Already he had made up his mind not to tell Shadow, for like all the
other
little meadow and forest people he hated Shadow. But of course
Chatterer
couldn't know that he had so made up his mind, and a great fear that
Sammy
might tell clutched his heart. "If you'll
promise not to tell Shadow where I am, you — you are welcome to all the
corn
you want at Farmer Brown's corn-crib," said Chatterer, in a very meek
voice. "Indeed!"
replied Sammy. "How very generous of you, seeing that it doesn't belong
to
you, anyway, and I have just as much right to it as you have." "And — and
—
well, I'll help you get it," continued Chatterer, his sharp wits
working
their hardest to think of some way to get Sammy to make that promise. "How?"
asked Sammy suspiciously. "Why, when
you
can't get it between the cracks, I'll bring some out for you and hide
it in the
stone wall where you can find it," replied Chatterer. But in his heart
he
said that he would hide it so that Sammy would have to hunt a long time
to find
it. It seemed almost as if Sammy read that thought, for cocking his
head on one
side, he said: "I'll
promise
not to tell Shadow, if you'll promise to get me corn whenever I want it
and put
it just where I tell you to." Chatterer
didn't
like that idea at all, but what could he do? He thought it over so long
that
Sammy Jay spread his wings as if to start that very instant for the
Green
Forest. "I
promise!"
cried Chatterer hastily. And so
these two
scamps of the Green Forest made up and planned how they would live all
winter
on Farmer Brown's corn. |