Jimmy Skunk - Peter Rabbit is Most Uncomfortable
by: Thorton Burgess
Rank: N/A
Jimmy Skunk was smiling as he
ambled towards the old house of Johnny Chuck near the foot of the
hill. There was no one near to see him, and this made him smile
still more. You see, the odor of that perfume which he had thrown at
Reddy Fox just a little while before was very, very strong there,
and Jimmy knew that until that had disappeared no one would come
near the place because it was so unpleasant for every one. To Jimmy
himself it wasn't unpleasant at all, and he couldn't understand why
other people disliked it so. He had puzzled over that a great deal.
He was glad that it was so, because on account of it every one
treated him with respect and took special pains not to quarrel with
him.
"I guess it's a good thing that Old Mother Nature didn't make us all
alike," said he to himself. "I think there must be something the
matter with their noses, and I suppose they think there is something
the matter with mine. But there isn't. Not a thing. Hello! There is
Johnny Chuck's old house just ahead of me. Now we will see what we
shall see."
He walked softly as he drew near to the old house. If Peter was way
down inside, it wouldn't matter how he approached. But if Peter
should happen to be only just inside the doorway, he might take it
into his head to run if he should hear footsteps, particularly if
those footsteps were not heavy enough to be those of Reddy or Granny
Fox or Old Man Coyote. Jimmy didn't intend to give Peter a chance to
do any such thing. If Peter once got outside that old house, his
long legs would soon put him beyond Jimmy's reach, and Jimmy knew
it. If he was to give Peter the fright that he had made up his mind
to give him, he would first have to get him where he couldn't run
away. So Jimmy walked as softly as he knew how and approached the
old house in such a way as to keep out of sight of Peter, should he
happen to be lying so as to look out of the doorway.
At last he reached a position where with one jump he could land
right on the doorstep. He waited a few minutes and cocked his head
on one side to listen. There wasn't a sound to tell him whether
Peter was there or not. Then lightly he jumped over to the doorstep
and looked in at the doorway. There was no Peter to be seen.
"If he is here, he is way down inside," thought Jimmy. "I wonder if
he really is here. I think I'll look about a bit before I go in."
Now the doorstep was of sand, as Johnny Chuck's doorsteps always
are. Almost at once Jimmy chuckled. There were Peter's tracks, and
they pointed straight towards the inside of Johnny Chuck's old
house. Jimmy looked carefully, but not a single track pointing the
other way could he find. Then he chuckled again. "The scamp is here
all right," he muttered. "He hid here and watched all that happened
and then decided to lie low and wait until he was sure that the way
was clear and no one would see him." In this Jimmy was partly right
and partly wrong, as you and I know.
He stared down the long dark doorway a minute. Then he made up his
mind. "I'll go down and make Peter a call, and I won't bother to
knock," he chuckled, and poked his head inside the doorway. But that
was as far as Jimmy Skunk went. Yes, Sir, that was just as far as
Jimmy Skunk went. You see, no sooner did he start to enter that old
house of Johnny Chuck's than he was met by a lot of those Yellow
Jackets, and they were in a very bad temper.
Jimmy Skunk knows all about Yellow Jackets and the sharp little
lances they carry in their tails; he has the greatest respect for
them. He backed out in a hurry and actually hurried away to a safe
distance. Then he sat down to think. After a little he began to
chuckle again. "I know what happened," said he, talking to himself.
"Peter Rabbit popped into that doorway. Those Yellow Jackets just
naturally got after him. He didn't dare come out for fear of Reddy
Fox and me, and so he went on down to Jimmy Chuck's old bedroom, and
he's down there now, wondering how ever he is to get out without
getting stung. I reckon I don't need to scare Peter to pay him for
that joke. I reckon he's been punished already."