Paddy Beaver - Paddy and Sammy Jay Work Together
by: Thorton Burgess
Rank: N/A
Jerry Muskrat had been home at
the Smiling Pool for several days. But he couldn't stay there long.
Oh, my, no! He just had to get back to see what his big cousin,
Paddy the Beaver, was doing. So as soon as he was sure that
everything was all right at the Smiling Pool he hurried back up the
Laughing Brook to Paddy's pond, deep in the Green Forest. As soon as
he was in sight of it, he looked eagerly for Paddy. At first he
didn't see him. Then he stopped and gazed over at the place where
Paddy had been cutting aspen-trees for food. Something was going on
there, something unusual. He couldn't make it out.
Just then Sammy Jay came flying over.
"What's Paddy doing?" Jerry asked.
Sammy Jay dropped down to the top of an alder-tree and fluffed out
all his feathers in a very important way. "Oh," said he, "Paddy and
I are building something!"
"You! Paddy and you! Ha, ha! Paddy and you building something!"
Jerry laughed.
"Yes, me!" snapped Sammy angrily. "That's what I said; Paddy and I
are building something."
Jerry had begun to swim across the pond by this time, and Sammy was
flying across. "Why don't you tell the truth, Sammy, and say that
Paddy is building something and you are making him all the trouble
you can?" called Jerry.
Sammy's eyes snapped angrily, and he darted down at Jerry's little
brown head. "It isn't true!" he shrieked. "You ask Paddy if I'm not
helping!"
Jerry ducked under water to escape Sammy's sharp bill. When he came
up again, Sammy was over in the little grove of aspen-trees where
Paddy was at work. Then Jerry discovered something. What was it? Why
a little water-path led right up to the aspen-trees, and there, at
the end of the little water-path, was Paddy the Beaver hard at work.
He was digging and piling the earth on one side very neatly. In
fact, he was making the water-path longer. Jerry swam right up the
little water-path to where Paddy was working. "Good morning, Cousin
Paddy," said he. "What are you doing?"
"Oh," replied Paddy, "Sammy Jay and I are building a canal."
Sammy Jay looked down at Jerry in triumph, and Jerry looked at Paddy
as if he thought that he was joking.
"Sammy Jay? What's Sammy Jay got to do about it?" demanded Jerry.
"A whole lot," replied Paddy. "You see, he keeps watch while I work.
If he didn't, I couldn't work, and there wouldn't be any canal. Old
Man Coyote has been trying to catch me, and I wouldn't dare work on
shore if it wasn't that I am sure that the sharpest eyes in the
Green Forest are watching for danger."
Sammy Jay looked very much pleased indeed and very proud. "So you
see it takes both of us to make this canal; I dig while Sammy
watches. So we are building it together," concluded Paddy with a
twinkle in his eyes.
"I see," said Jerry slowly. Then he turned to Sammy Jay. "I beg your
pardon, Sammy," said he. "I do, indeed."
"That's all right," replied Sammy airily. "What do you think of our
canal?"
"I think it is wonderful," replied Jerry.
And indeed it was a very fine canal, straight, wide, and deep enough
for Paddy to swim in and float his logs out to the pond. Yes,
indeed, it was a very fine canal.