Buster Bear - Buster Bear Becomes a Hero
by: Thorton Burgess
Rank: N/A
The news that Little Joe Otter
told at the Smiling Pool,—how Farmer Brown's boy had run away from
Buster Bear without even seeing him,—soon spread all over the Green
Meadows and through the Green Forest, until every one who lives
there knew about it. Of course, Peter Rabbit helped spread it. Trust
Peter for that! But everybody else helped too. You see, they had all
been afraid of Farmer Brown's boy for so long that they were tickled
almost to pieces at the very thought of having some one in the Green
Forest who could make Farmer Brown's boy feel fear as they had felt
it. And so it was that Buster Bear became a hero right away to most
of them.
A few doubted Little Joe's story. One of them was Blacky the Crow.
Another was Reddy Fox. Blacky doubted because he knew Farmer Brown's
boy so well that he couldn't imagine him afraid. Reddy doubted
because he didn't want to believe. You see, he was jealous of Buster
Bear, and at the same time he was afraid of him. So Reddy pretended
not to believe a word of what Little Joe Otter had said, and he
agreed with Blacky that only by seeing Farmer Brown's boy afraid
could he ever be made to believe it. But nearly everybody else
believed it, and there was great rejoicing. Most of them were afraid
of Buster, very much afraid of him, because he was so big and
strong. But they were still more afraid of Farmer Brown's boy,
because they didn't know him or understand him, and because in the
past he had tried to catch some of them in traps and had hunted some
of them with his terrible gun.
So now they were very proud to think that one of their own number
actually had frightened him, and they began to look on Buster Bear
as a real hero. They tried in ever so many ways to show him how
friendly they felt and went quite out of their way to do him favors.
Whenever they met one another, all they could talk about was the
smartness and the greatness of Buster Bear.
"Now I guess Farmer Brown's boy will keep away from the Green
Forest, and we won't have to be all the time watching out for him,"
said Bobby Coon, as he washed his dinner in the Laughing Brook, for
you know he is very neat and particular.
"And he won't dare set any more traps for me," gloated Billy Mink.
"Ah wish Brer Bear would go up to Farmer Brown's henhouse and scare
Farmer Brown's boy so that he would keep away from there. It would
be a favor to me which Ah cert'nly would appreciate," said Unc'
Billy Possum when he heard the news.
"Let's all go together and tell Buster Bear how much obliged we are
for what he has done," proposed Jerry Muskrat.
"That's a splendid idea!" cried Little Joe Otter. "We'll do it right
away."
"Caw, caw caw!" broke in Blacky the Crow. "I say, let's wait and see
for ourselves if it is all true."
"Of course it's true!" snapped Little Joe Otter. "Don't you believe
I'm telling the truth?"
"Certainly, certainly. Of course no one doubts your word," replied
Blacky, with the utmost politeness. "But you say yourself that
Farmer Brown's boy didn't see Buster Bear, but only his footprint.
Perhaps he didn't know whose it was, and if he had he wouldn't have
been afraid. Now I've got a plan by which we can see for ourselves
if he really is afraid of Buster Bear."
"What is it?" asked Sammy Jay eagerly.
Blacky the Crow shook his head and winked. "That's telling," said
he. "I want to think it over. If you meet me at the Big Hickory-tree
at sun-up to-morrow morning, and get everybody else to come that you
can, perhaps I will tell you."