The morning after gentle Sister South Wind arrived on the Green
Meadows, Peter Rabbit came hopping and skipping down the Lone Little
Path from the Green Forest. Peter was happy. He didn't know why. He
just was happy. It was in the air. Everybody else seemed happy, too.
Peter had to stop every few minutes just to kick up his heels and try
to jump over his own shadow. He had felt just that way ever since
gentle Sister South Wind arrived.
"I simply have to kick and dance!
I cannot help but gaily prance!
Somehow I feel it in my toes
Whenever gentle South Wind blows."
So sang Peter Rabbit as he hopped and skipped down the Lone Little
Path. Suddenly he stopped right in the middle of the verse. He sat up
very straight and stared down at Johnny Chuck's house. Some one was
sitting on Johnny Chuck's door-step. It looked like Johnny Chuck. No,
it looked like the shadow of Johnny Chuck. Peter rubbed his eyes and
looked again. Then he hurried as fast as he could, lipperty-lipperty-
lip. The nearer he got, the less like Johnny Chuck looked the one
sitting on Johnny Chuck's door-step. Johnny Chuck had gone to sleep
round and fat and roly-poly, so fat he could hardly waddle. This
fellow was thin, even thinner than Peter Rabbit himself. He waved a
thin hand to Peter.
"Hello, Peter Rabbit! I told you that I would see you in the spring.
How did you stand the long winter?"
That certainly was Johnny Chuck's voice. Peter was so delighted that
in his hurry he fell over his own feet. "Is it really and truly you,
Johnny Chuck?" he cried.
"Of course it's me; who did you think it was?" replied Johnny Chuck
rather crossly, for Peter was staring at him as if he had never seen
him before.
"I--I--I didn't know," confessed Peter Rabbit. "I thought it was you
and I thought it wasn't you. What have you been doing to yourself,
Johnny Chuck? Your coat looks three sizes too big for you, and when I
last saw you it didn't look big enough." Peter hopped all around
Johnny Chuck, looking at him as if he didn't believe his own eyes.
"Oh, Johnny's all right. He's just been living on his own fat," said
another voice. It was Jimmy Skunk who had spoken, and he now stood
holding out his hand to Johnny Chuck and grinning good-naturedly. He
had come up without either of the others seeing him.
Peter's big eyes opened wider than ever. "Do you mean to say that he
has been eating his own fat?" he gasped.
Johnny Chuck and Jimmy Skunk both laughed. "No," said Jimmy Skunk, "he
didn't eat it, but he lived on it just the same while he was asleep
all winter. Don't you see he hasn't got a particle of fat on him now?"
"But how could he live on it, if he didn't eat it?" asked Peter,
staring at Johnny Chuck as if he had never seen him before.
Jimmy Skunk shrugged his shoulders. "Don't ask me. That is one of Old
Mother Nature's secrets; you'll have to ask her," he replied.
"And don't ask me," said Johnny Chuck, "for I've been asleep all the
time. My, but I'm hungry!"
"So am I!" said another voice. There was Reddy Fox grinning at them.
Johnny Chuck dove into the doorway of his house with Peter Rabbit at
his heels, for there was nowhere else to go. Jimmy Skunk just stood
still and chuckled. He knew that Reddy Fox didn't dare touch him.