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I CHATTERER THE RED SQUIRREL RUNS FOR CHATTERER
THE RED SQUIRREL had been
scolding because there was no excitement. He had even tried to make
some
excitement by waking Bobby Coon and making him so angry that Bobby had
threatened to eat him alive. It had been great fun to dance around and
call
Bobby names and make fun of him. Oh, yes, it had been great fun. You
see, he
knew all the time that Bobby couldn't catch him if he should try. But now things were
different.
Chatterer had all the excitement that he wanted. Indeed, he had more
than he
wanted. The truth is, Chatterer was. running for his life, and he knew
it. It is a terrible thing, a
very
terrible thing to have to run for one's life. Peter Rabbit knows all
about it.
He has run for his life often. Sometimes it has been Reddy Fox behind
him,
sometimes Bowser the Hound, and once or twice Old Man Coyote. Peter has
known
that on his long legs his life has depended, and more than once a
terrible fear
has filled his heart. But Peter has also known that if he could reach
the old
stone wall or the dear Old Briar-patch first, he would be safe, and he
always
has reached it. So when he has been running with that terrible fear in
his
heart, there has always been hope there, too. But Chatterer the Red
Squirrel was
running without hope. Yes, Sir, there was nothing but fear, terrible
fear, in
his heart, for he knew not where to go. The hollow tree or the holes in
the old
stone wall where he would be safe from any one else, even Farmer
Brown's boy,
offered him no safety now, for the one who was following him with
hunger in his
anger-red eyes could go anywhere that he could go — could go into any
hole big
enough for him to squeeze into. You see, it was Shadow the Weasel from
whom
Chatterer was running, and Shadow is so slim that he can slip in and
out of
places that even Chatterer cannot get through. Chatterer knew all this,
and so,
because it was of no use to run to his usual safe hiding places, he ran
in just
the other direction. He didn't know where he was going. He had just one
thought:
to run and run as long as he could and then, well, he would try to
fight,
though he knew it would be of no use. "Oh, dear! Oh, dear!" he
sobbed, as he ran out on the branch of a tree and leaped across to the
next
tree, "I wish I had minded my own business! I wish I had kept my tongue
still. Shadow the Weasel wouldn't have known where I was if he hadn't
heard my
voice. Oh, dear! oh, dear me! What can I dog What can I do?" Now in his great fright Chatterer had run and jumped so hard that he was beginning to grow very tired. Presently he found that he must make a very long jump to reach the next tree. He had often made as long a jump as this and thought nothing of it, but now he was so tired that the distance looked twice as great as it really was. He didn't dare stop to run down the tree and scamper across. So he took a long breath, ran swiftly along the branch, and leaped. His hands just touched the tip of the nearest branch of the other tree. He tried his very best to hold on, but he couldn't. Then down, down, down he fell. He spread himself out as flat as he could, and that saved him a little, but still it was a dreadful fall, and when he landed, it seemed for just a minute as if all the breath was gone from his body. But it wasn't quite, and in another minute he was scrambling up the tree. |