Johnny Chuck came running up to the edge of the Old Briarpatch
quite out of breath. You see, he is so round and fat and
roly-poly that to run makes him puff and blow. Johnny Chuck's
eyes danced with excitement as he peered into the Old
Briar-patch, trying to see Peter Rabbit.
"Peter! Peter Rabbit! Oh, Peter!" he called. No one answered.
Johnny Chuck looked disappointed. It was the middle of the
morning, and he had thought that Peter would surely be at home
then. He would try once more. "Oh, you Peter Rabbit!" he shouted
in such a high-pitched voice that it was almost a squeal.
"What you want?" asked a sleepy voice from the middle of the Old
Briar-patch.
Johnny Chuck's face lighted up. "Come out here, Peter, where I
can look at you," cried Johnny.
"Go away, Johnny Chuck! I'm sleepy," said Peter Rabbit, and his
voice sounded just a wee bit cross, for Peter had been out all
night, a habit which Peter has.
"I've got some news for you, Peter," called Johnny Chuck eagerly.
"How do you know it's news to me?" asked Peter, and Johnny
noticed that his voice wasn't quite so cross.
"I'm almost sure it is, for I've just heard it myself, and I've
hurried right down here to tell you because I think you'll want
to know it," replied Johnny Chuck.
"Pooh!" said Peter Rabbit, "it's probably as old as the hills to
me. You folks who go to bed with the sun don't hear the news
until it's old. What is it?"
"It's about Reddy Fox," began Johnny Chuck, but Peter Rabbit
interrupted him.
"Shucks, Johnny Chuck! You are slow! Why, it was all over Green
Meadows last night how Reddy Fox had been shot by Farmer Brown's
boy!" jeered Peter Rabbit. "That's no news. And here you've waked
me up to tell me something I knew before you went to bed last
night! Serves Reddy Fox right. Hope he'll be lame for a week,"
added Peter Rabbit.
"He can't walk at all!" cried Johnny Chuck in triumph, sure now
that Peter Rabbit hadn't heard the news.
"What's that?" demanded Peter, and Johnny Chuck could hear him
begin to hop along one of his little private paths in the heart
of the Old Briar-patch. He knew now that Peter Rabbit's curiosity
was aroused, and he smiled to himself.
In a few minutes Peter thrust a sleepy-looking face out from the
Old Briar-patch and grinned rather sheepishly. "What was that you
were saying about Reddy Fox?" he asked again.
"I've a good mind not to tell you, Mr. Know-it-all," exclaimed
Johnny Chuck.
"Oh, please, Johnny Chuck," pleaded Peter Rabbit.
Finally Johnny gave in. "I said that Reddy Fox can't walk. Aren't
you glad, Peter?"
"How do you know?" asked Peter, for Peter is very suspicious of
Reddy Fox, and has to watch out for his tricks all the time.
"Jimmy Skunk told me. He was up by Reddy's house early this
morning and saw Reddy try to walk. He tried and tried and
couldn't. You won't have to watch out for Reddy Fox for some
time, Peter. Serves him right, doesn't it?''
"Let's go up and see if it really is true!" said Peter suddenly.
"All right," said Johnny Chuck, and off they started.