Green Meadow Stories Thornton W. Burgess (crime books to read .TXT) š
- Author: Thornton W. Burgess
Book online Ā«Green Meadow Stories Thornton W. Burgess (crime books to read .TXT) šĀ». Author Thornton W. Burgess
So as fast as he could, Happy Jack backed out of the hole and whirled around. Of course he expected to face a very angry little Chipmunk. But he didnāt. No, sir, he didnāt. Instead, he looked right into the angry face of his other cousin, Chatterer the Red Squirrel. And Chatterer was angry! Oh my, my, how angry Chatterer was! For a minute he couldnāt find his voice, because his anger fairly choked him. And when he did, how his tongue did fly!
āYou thief! You robber! What are you doing in my storehouse?ā he shrieked.
Happy Jack backed away hurriedly, for though he is much bigger than Chatterer, he has a very wholesome respect for Chattererās sharp teeth, and when he is very angry, Chatterer is a great fighter.
āIā āI didnāt know it was your storehouse,ā said Happy Jack, backing away still further.
āIt doesnāt make any difference if you didnāt; youāre a thief just the same!ā screamed Chatterer and rushed at Happy Jack. And what do you think Happy Jack did? Why, he just turned tail and ran, Chatterer after him, crying āThief! Robber! Coward!ā at the top of his lungs, so that everyone in the Green Forest could hear.
X Striped Chipmunkās Happy ThoughtWaste seems to me a dreadful sin;
It works to lose and not to win.
Thrift will win; it cannot lose.
Between them ātis for you to choose.
Striped Chipmunk sat on a mossy old log, laughing until his sides ached. āHa, ha, ha! Ho, ho, ho! Oh, dear! Oh, dear! Ho, ho, ho, ho, ho!ā laughed Striped Chipmunk, holding his sides. Over in the Green Forest he could still hear Chatterer the Red Squirrel crying āThief! Robber!ā as he chased his big cousin, Happy Jack, and every time he heard it, Striped Chipmunk laughed harder.
You see, Striped Chipmunk had known all the time that Happy Jack was spying on him, and he had had no end of fun fooling Happy Jack by suddenly disappearing and then bobbing into view. He had known that Happy Jack was following him so as to find out where his storehouse was. Then Striped Chipmunk had remembered the storehouse of Chatterer the Red Squirrel. He had filled the pockets in his cheeks with acorns and gone straight over to Chattererās storehouse and put them inside, knowing that Happy Jack would follow him and would think that that was his storehouse. And that is just what happened.
Then Striped Chipmunk had hidden himself where he could see all that happened. He had seen Happy Jack look all around, to make sure that no one was near, and then tear open the little round doorway of Chattererās storehouse until it was big enough for him to squeeze through. He had seen Chatterer come up, fly into a rage, and pull Happy Jack out by the tail. Indeed, he had had to clap both hands over his mouth to keep from laughing out loud. Then Happy Jack had turned tail and run away with Chatterer after him, shouting āThiefā and āRobberā at the top of his voice, and this had tickled Striped Chipmunk still more, for he knew that Chatterer himself is one of the greatest thieves in the Green Forest. So he sat on the mossy old log and laughed and laughed and laughed.
Finally Striped Chipmunk wiped the tears from his eyes and jumped up. āMy, my, this will never do!ā said he.
āIdle hands and idle feet
Never filled a storehouse yet;
But instead, so Iāve heard say,
Into mischief surely get.ā
āHere it is almost Thanksgiving andā āā Striped Chipmunk stopped and scratched his head, while a funny little pleased look crept into his face. āI wonder if Happy Jack and Chatterer would come to a Thanksgiving dinner,ā he muttered. āI believe Iāll ask them just for fun.ā
Then Striped Chipmunk hurried home full of his new idea and chuckled as he planned his Thanksgiving dinner. Of course he couldnāt have it at his own house. That wouldnāt do at all. In the first place, the doorway would be altogether too small for Happy Jack. Anyway, his home was a secret, his very own secret, and he didnāt propose to let Happy Jack and Chatterer know where it was, even for a Thanksgiving dinner. Then he thought of the big, smooth, mossy log he had been sitting on that very morning.
āThe very place!ā cried Striped Chipmunk, and scurried away to find Happy Jack Squirrel and Chatterer the Red Squirrel to invite them to his Thanksgiving dinner.
XI Striped Chipmunkās Thanksgiving DinnerThereās nothing quite so sweet in life
As making up and ending strife.
Striped Chipmunk jumped out of bed very early Thanksgiving morning. It was going to be a very busy day. He had invited Happy Jack the Gray Squirrel, and Chatterer the Red Squirrel, to eat Thanksgiving dinner with him, and each had promised to be there. Striped Chipmunk chuckled as he thought how neither of his guests knew that the other was to be there. He washed his face and hands, brushed his hair, and ate his breakfast. Then he scurried over to his splendid new storehouse, which no one knew of but himself, and stuffed the pockets in his cheeks with good things to eat. When he couldnāt stuff another thing in, he scurried over to the nice, mossy log on the edge of the Green Forest, and there he emptied his pockets, for that was to be his dining table.
Back and forth, back and forth between his secret storehouse and the smooth, mossy log hurried Striped Chipmunk. He knew that Happy Jack and the Chatterer have great appetites, and he wanted to be sure that there was plenty of good things
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