"You are very poor hunters if you can"t catch a rabbit when he"s dancing the Fox Trot." And I guess he was right, for Slyboots and Bushy Tail were so ashamed that they didn"t dare look in their mother"s looking-gla.s.s for two days and three nights.
And in the next story if Billy Bunny gets out of that hollow stump before I see him, I"ll ask Robbie Redbreast to tell me what he does so that I can write to-morrow"s story for you to read.
STORY XVIII.
BILLY BUNNY AND RAGGED RABBIT.
Robbie Redbreast told me this morning he saw Billy Bunny hop out of the hollow stump where he had hidden with the little lady bunny, you remember in the last story, to escape from the two bad foxes.
Well, after he had looked all around to make sure they were gone, he said good-by to Miss Rabbit. And then, so Robbie Redbreast told me, he looked at his gold watch and chain, which his dear, kind Uncle Lucky had given him for a birthday present, and it was just thirteen o"clock.
"That"s my lucky number," exclaimed the little rabbit; "maybe I"ll find my fortune to-day." And he looked all about him, under a stone and behind a bush, but there wasn"t any fortune in sight, not even a twenty-dollar gold piece. So he wound his watch and started off again; and by and by, not so very far, he came to a castle where lived a giant bunny whose name was "Ragged Rabbit" because he always wore torn and tattered clothes.
And when he saw Billy Bunny hopping along, he said, "Ha, ha. Ho, hum, I"ll eat that little bunny as sure as I"m a foot high!" And as he was twenty-one feet high less or more, he surely thought he would.
"What did you say?" asked Billy Bunny, for his quick ears had caught the sound of the Ragged Rabbit"s voice, but not the words.
"Oh, never mind," answered the Ragged Giant Rabbit. "Come and I"ll show you my castle." And, oh, dear me. Billy hopped in and the big Giant Rabbit closed the door with a bang, and all the pictures on the walls almost fell down and the chandelier rattled like a milk wagon full of empty cans. But the little rabbit wasn"t frightened. And could you guess what he did if I let you guess until to-morrow night?
Well, sir, that brave little bunny took his popgun out of his knapsack and shot it off, and it made a dreadful loud pop, and the big Ragged Rabbit said, "Oh, my! Was that a cannon?"
And then he laughed so loud that he broke a window pane and had to telephone right away to the plumber to have one put in.
"That"s my pop-gun, Mr. Giant," said Billy Bunny, "and if you try to hurt me I"ll shoot you." And then the Ragged Giant Rabbit laughed again, and this time the picture of his grandfather fell down and made a big dent in the floor.
"If you don"t stop laughing," said the little rabbit, "you"ll deafen me. Please only giggle." So the Giant Rabbit grew very polite indeed and only smiled, and then of course nothing was broken.
"Tell me who you are and where you are going and what time it is," he said, "and then I"ll give you something to eat."
But before the little rabbit could reply a loud knocking came at the door, and so you"ll have to wait to hear who was there until to-morrow, for I"ve no more room in this story.
STORY XIX.
BILLY BUNNY AND TAILOR BIRD.
You remember in the last story somebody was knocking at the door of the Ragged Rabbit"s castle, don"t you? The Giant Rabbit, who always wore torn and tattered clothes because he had no wife to mend them and wouldn"t pay his tailor"s bills?
Well, who do you suppose was on the other side of that door? Just wait until the Giant Rabbit opens it and you shall see. Now open your eyes, if you have shut them, and see Uncle Lucky, as sure as I am writing this story and you are reading it.
Yes, sir. There stood the dear old gentleman rabbit, and oh, dear me, didn"t he look worried? I suppose he thought he"d find Billy Bunny inside the giant. But when he saw Billy Bunny standing there, safe and sound and happy, with his popgun in his hand and a smile on his face, he began to laugh.
"Whew!" exclaimed the old gentleman rabbit, greatly relieved, which means to feel much better. "I"m glad to see you, my dear nephew. And also to make your acquaintance, Mr. Ragged Rabbit Giant. My name is Mr. Lucky Lefthindfoot. Howdy!" and he put out his right front paw and shook hands with the giant, who had to lean way down to reach Uncle Lucky"s paw.
"But, goodness me!" said the old gentleman rabbit after looking at the giant for some moments, "you need a tailor. Let me call the Tailor Bird to mend your clothes. You are too nice a rabbit not to be well dressed."
And kind Uncle Lucky went to the telephone and told the Tailor Bird to bring a spool of thread a mile long and a needle as big as a spear for he had a giant customer for him with holes in his clothes as big as a circus ring. The Tailor Bird said he"d try to, but wouldn"t promise unless he could send in a bill as big as a newspaper spread out flat.
"Will that be all right?" asked Uncle Lucky after he had explained matters to the ragged Giant Rabbit.
"Certainly," said the Giant Rabbit with a grin, "and tell him I"ll pay him with a dollar bill as big as a Turkish rug or a crex carpet."
And then they all sat down and told funny stories, and Billy Bunny sang a song that went something like this, only much nicer, but I can"t quite remember it all:
"Oh, you"re a raggerty, taggerty man, In a castle big and old, And I"m a Billy Bunny boy With a heart that"s brave and bold.
You can"t scare me with your thunder laugh Or your club like a telegraph pole, So you"d better allow the Tailor Bird To sew up each raggerty hole."
And then the Tailor Bird commenced and it took him until half-past fourteen o"clock to mend that Giant Rabbit"s clothes. "I might just as well have made you a new suit," he said, as the last inch of the mile-long spool of thread was used up. "I declare I never had such a job before."
And I guess he spoke the truth, for I never met a Giant Rabbit in my tailor"s shop, although I once had a giant bill from my tailor.
STORY XX.
BILLY BUNNY AND PARSON CROW.
Well, after the Tailor Bird got his money from the Ragged Giant Rabbit for mending his clothes, he thanked Billy Bunny and Uncle Lucky and said he must be going for he had to make a suit of clothes right away for Parson Crow.
"If you"ll wait a minute you can go with us," said kind Uncle Lucky; "we"ll take you home in the automobile."
Of course the Tailor Bird was only too anxious to get a ride, although he did have a good pair of wings. But the needle was pretty heavy and, anyway, Tailor Birds don"t often have the opportunity to ride in automobiles.
Well, after a little ways, not so very far, the Luckymobile came to a stop and, of course, Billy Bunny had to get out to see what was the matter, and he hunted and hunted all over the machine, but couldn"t find out what was wrong. By and by he saw one of the numbers had dropped off the little license plate that hung down from the rear axle.
So he hopped back, and by and by, just as he was going to give up looking for it, Parson Crow flew by, and when he saw Billy Bunny he stopped and said: "What are you looking for, little rabbit?"
And when Billy Bunny told him, he took the number 7 out of his pocket and handed it to the little bunny. "Here"s your number," cawed the black crow, although I never heard of a white one except once, and that was a bad bird who had been whitewashed by a colored painter because he ate up all the corn.
"That"s my lucky number," said Billy Bunny. And then the crow said in a mournful voice:
"It"s mine, too, and I just hate to give it up."
"Well, if you can get me another number, I don"t care if you keep it,"
said the little rabbit. And then what do you think that crow did? Why, he got a nice smooth little chip and made a lovely number 3 on it with a red pencil and handed it to the little rabbit.
And as soon as he had tied it on the Luckymobile, would you believe it if I didn"t say so, that Luckymobile started to go all by itself. And if Billy Bunny hadn"t been mighty quick he would have been left behind.
"Where are you two rabbits going?" asked the crow as he flew alongside of the Luckymobile. "Because if you are not in a hurry, why don"t you come with me to the meeting house to-night and hear me preach?"