Farmer Brown's boy sat on the bank of the Big River in a brown
study. That means that he was thinking very hard. Blacky the Crow
sat in the top of a tall tree a short distance away and watched
him. Blacky was silent now, and there was a knowing look in his
shrewd little eyes. In calling Farmer Brown's boy over there, he had
done all he could, and he was quite satisfied to leave the matter to
Farmer Brown's boy.
"A hunter has made that blind to shoot Black Ducks from," thought
Farmer Brown's boy, "and he has been baiting them in here by
scattering corn for them. Black Ducks are about the smartest Ducks
that fly, but if they have been coming in here every evening and
finding corn and no sign of danger, they probably think it perfectly
safe here and come straight in without being at all
suspicious. To-night, or some night soon, that hunter will be
waiting for them.
"I guess the law that permits hunting Ducks is all right, but there
ought to be a law against baiting them in. That isn't hunting. No,
Sir, that isn't hunting. If this land were my father's, I would know
what to do. I would put up a sign saying that this was private
property and no shooting was allowed. But it isn't my father's land,
and that hunter has a perfect right to shoot here. He has just as
much right here as I have. I wish I could stop him, but I don't see
how I can."
A frown puckered the freckled face of Farmer Brown's boy. You see,
he was thinking very hard, and when he does that he is very apt to
frown.
"I suppose," he muttered, "I can tear down his blind. He wouldn't
know who did it. But that wouldn't do much good; he would build
another. Besides, it wouldn't be right. He has a perfect right to
make a blind here, and having made it, it is his and I haven't any
right to touch it. I won't do a thing I haven't a right to do. That
wouldn't be honest. I've got to think of some other way of saving
those Ducks."
The frown on his freckled face grew deeper, and for a long time he
sat without moving. Suddenly his face cleared, and he jumped to his
feet. He began to chuckle. "I have it!" he exclaimed. "I'll do a
little shooting myself!" Then he chuckled again and started for
home. Presently he began to whistle, a way he has when he is in good
spirits.
Blacky the Crow watched him go, and Blacky was well satisfied. He
didn't know what Farmer Brown's boy was planning to do, but he had a
feeling that he was planning to do something, and that all would be
well. Perhaps Blacky wouldn't have felt so sure could he have
understood what Farmer Brown's boy had said about doing a little
shooting himself.
As it was, Blacky flew off about his own business, quite satisfied
that now all would be well, and he need worry no more about those
Ducks. None of the little people of the Green Forest and the Green
Meadows knew Farmer Brown's boy better than did Blacky the
Crow. None knew better than he that Farmer Brown's boy was their
best friend. "It is all right now," chuckled Blacky. "It is all
right now." And as the cheery whistle of Farmer Brown's boy floated
back to him on the Merry Little Breezes, he repeated it: "It is all
right now."