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    Chapter 21

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    TWO RASCALS CAUGHT



    THE moment Reddy Woodpecker stepped into the cold water he wanted to say "Ouch!" But Jimmy Rabbit put a finger on his mouth--meaning that Reddy must be still as a mouse.

    So the red-capped scamp managed to keep quiet, though it was such hard work that he began to feel terribly hungry. Jimmy Rabbit watched him for a short time, smiling and nodding his head, as if to say:

    "That's right! Just do as I say and all will be well." And then he waved a sort of farewell, before he disappeared.

    Though Reddy did not know it, Jimmy Rabbit stopped as soon as he was out of sight and crept behind a bush, from which hiding-place he could watch the cedar tree, without being seen by the two beechnut lovers who stood so still beside it--for there was Jasper Jay, standing in a puddle on one side of the big tree, and there was Reddy Woodpecker, standing in another puddle on the opposite side of the tree!

    And neither of them knew that the other was anywhere around!

    But there was one thing that they knew quite well: the water was almost colder than they could bear, at first. If their feet hadn't grown numb, after a time, so that there was no feeling in them at all, they wouldn't have been able to stand there so still and so long.

    They both wondered where Jimmy Rabbit was, and what he was doing, and why he didn't come back.

    But Jimmy Rabbit was waiting for something. As he had told Reddy Woodpecker, everything depended on the weather. Though the air was becoming sharper every minute, it was not yet cold enough to suit Jimmy Rabbit. What he wanted was freezing weather. And at last he was satisfied. When the sun hid itself behind a bank of clouds the ground began to stiffen with frost, which covered all the puddles and pools with a coating of ice.

    * * * * * * *

    It was almost dark when Jimmy Rabbit left the shelter of his bush and danced up and down to get warm. Soon he came with a hop, skip and a jump to the big cedar tree.

    "How are you?" he called.

    And two very sulky voices answered:

    "I'm cold--that's how I am!"

    "Well, why don't you dance around and get warm?" Jimmy asked.


    But both Reddy Woodpecker and Jasper Jay were caught fast by their feet in the frozen puddles. And as soon as they tried to move they began to squall loudly--because they were so frightened. They could no more have danced than the old cedar tree could have pulled up its roots and capered about in the forest. So far as they could see, they might as well have stepped into any of the traps that Johnnie Green set for Peter Mink.

    It was no wonder that they were alarmed--no wonder that they struggled to free themselves.

    "You seem to like to stay by that tree," said Jimmy Rabbit.

    Now, since Jasper and Reddy had wanted
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