Green Meadow Stories Thornton W. Burgess (crime books to read .TXT) đ

- Author: Thornton W. Burgess
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âIt was nothing,â he muttered.
âIt was a very great deal,â replied Granny. And then she changed the subject. âHow would you like to eat a dinner of Bowser the Houndâs?â she asked.
XVII Granny Fox Promises Reddy Bowserâs DinnerTo give her children what each needs
To get the most from life he can,
To work and play and live his best,
Is wise Old Mother Natureâs plan.
Old Granny Fox asked Reddy how he would like to eat a dinner of Bowser the Houndâs, Reddy looked at her sharply to see if she were joking or really meant what she said. Granny looked so sober and so much in earnest that Reddy decided she couldnât be joking, even though it did sound that way.
âI certainly would like it, Granny. Yes, indeed, I certainly would like it,â said he. âYouâ âyou donât suppose he will give us one, do you?â
Granny chuckled. âNo, Reddy,â said she. âBowser isnât so generous as all that, especially to Foxes. He isnât going to give us that dinner; we are going to take it away from him. Yes, sir, we just naturally are going to take it away from, him.â
Reddy didnât for the life of him see how it could be possible to take a dinner away from Bowser the Hound. That seemed to him almost as impossible as it was for him to climb or fly or dive. But he had great faith in Grannyâs cleverness. He remembered how she had so nearly caught Quacker the Duck. He knew that all the time he had been away trying to find something for them to eat, old Granny Fox had been doing more than just rest her tired old bones. He knew that not for one single minute had her sharp wits been idle. He knew that all that time she had been studying and studying to find some way by which they could get something to eat. So great was his faith in Granny just then that if she had told him she would get him a slice of the moon he would have believed her.
âIf you say we can take a dinner away from Bowser the Hound, I suppose we can,â said Reddy, âthough I donât see how. But if we can, letâs do it right away. Iâm hungry enough to dare almost anything for the sake of something to put in my stomach. It is so empty that little bit of fish we divided is shaking around as if it were lost. Gracious, I could eat a million fish the size of that one! Have you thought of Farmer Brownâs hens, Granny?â
âOf course, Reddy! Of course! What a silly question!â replied Granny. âWe may have to come to them yet.â
âI wish I was at them right now,â interrupted Reddy with a sigh.
âBut you know what I have told you,â went on Granny. âThe surest way of getting into trouble is to steal hens. Iâm not feeling quite up to being chased by Bowser the Hound just now, and if we came right home we would give away the secret of where we live and might be smoked out, and that would be the end of us. Besides, those hens will be hard to get this weather, because they will stay in their house, and there is no way for us to get in there unless we walk right in, in broad daylight, and that would never do. It will be a great deal better to take Bowserâs dinner away from him. In the first place, if we are careful, no one but Bowser will know about it, and as long as he is chained up, we will have nothing to worry about from him. Besides, we will enjoy getting even with him for the times he has spoiled our chances of catching a fat chicken and for the way he has hunted us. Most decidedly it will be better and safer to try for Bowserâs dinner than to try for one of those hens.â
âJust as you say, Granny; just as you say,â returned Reddy. âYou know best. But how under the sun we can do it beats me.â
âIt is very simple,â replied Granny, âvery simple indeed. Most things are simple enough when you find out how to do them. Neither of us could do it alone, but together we can do it without the least bit of risk. Listen.â
Granny went close to Reddy and whispered to him, although there wasnât a soul within hearing. A slow grin spread over Reddyâs face as he listened. When she had finished, he laughed right out.
âGranny, you are a wonder!â he exclaimed admiringly. âI never should have thought of that. Of course we can do it. My, wonât Bowser be surprised! And how mad heâll be! Come on, letâs be starting!â
âAll right,â said Granny, and the two started towards Farmer Brownâs.
XVIII Why Bowser the Hound Didnât Eat His DinnerThe thing youâve puzzled most about
Is simple once youâve found it out.
Bowser the Hound dearly loves to hunt just for the pleasure of the chase. It isnât so much the desire to kill as it is the pleasure of using that wonderful nose of his and the excitement of trying to catch someone, especially Granny or Reddy Fox. Farmer Brownâs boy had put away his dreadful gun because he no longer wanted to kill the little people of the Green Forest and the Green Meadows, but rather to make them his friends. Bowser had missed the exciting hunts he used
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