Old Mr. Crow stepped forward quickly.
"I object!" he cried. "The less said about corn, the better!"
Aunt Polly Woodchuck hastened to explain that she meant no offense to anyone.
"I merely wondered," she said, "whether you gave your guests corn to eat at your party."
"Certainly not!" Mr. Crow exploded. "Certainly not!" And he glared at the old lady as if to say: "Change the subject--for pity"s sake!"
"You"re a stranger in these parts, I take it," Aunt Polly said, turning once more to Major Monkey. "No doubt you"ve been used to eating different food from what you get hereabouts."
"That"s so," the Major admitted. "I"ve been living mostly on boiled rice, with a baked potato now and then."
"Ah! Cooked food!" said Aunt Polly. "And if you had that sort of fare, you must have been living with _men_."
The Major looked uneasy.
"I don"t care to talk about my past," he murmured. "Just you give me something to warm my stomach a bit. That"s all I ask of you."
Well, Aunt Polly Woodchuck handed him some peppermint leaves.
"Chew these," she directed him. "And if you don"t feel better to-morrow I"ll lose my guess."
Major Monkey put the leaves into his mouth and made a wry face.
"Haven"t you a lump of sugar to make this dose taste better?" he asked her.
"There!" Aunt Polly cried. "You"ve been fed by _men_! I knew it all the time."
Major Monkey made no comment on her remark. And settling his cap firmly on his head he said that he must be going.
So he and Mr. Crow went off.
"Where are you going to spend the night?" Mr. Crow asked him as soon as they were out of Aunt Polly"s hearing.
"That haystack is a good place," said the Major. "I believe I"ll live there as long as I stay in Pleasant Valley."
"It"s not far from the farmhouse," Mr. Crow observed. "Perhaps you could steal--er--I mean _find_ a little cooked food there now and then."
"That"s an idea," Major Monkey told him. But he did not explain whether he thought it a good one or not.
VIII
A Secret
When Major Monkey awoke the following morning his pain had left him.
Creeping from the haystack where he had slept, he cast longing eyes at the red apples in the tree near-by. But he remembered his trouble of the evening before. And he remembered likewise what Mr. Crow had said about "finding" something to eat at the farmhouse.
But for some reason the Major wanted to avoid Farmer Green"s house. To be sure, he would have enjoyed sitting down with the family at the breakfast table. But he was afraid something might prevent his leaving after he had eaten.
Luckily Major Monkey was a person who could usually find a way out of any difficulty. And now he made up his mind that a light meal of eggs was the very thing he needed in order to begin the day right. So he went straight to the woods and climbed the first tree he came to--a pine tree just beyond the fence.
There Major Monkey found exactly what he was looking for. In a warbler"s nest, a dozen feet from the ground, he beheld five speckled eggs.
The owners of the nest were not at home. But knowing that one or the other would soon return, the Major did not care to linger long over their treasures.
He noticed that one of the eggs was bigger than the others.
"Really there are too many eggs here for this small nest," the Major said to himself. "If I take the big one I"ll be doing the owners a favor."
So he picked up the big egg, and holding it carefully in one hand he hurried away.
When he had put some distance between himself and the nest, Major Monkey stopped to enjoy his breakfast. He was just on the point of opening the egg, when who should come up but old Mr. Crow.
The Major quickly hid his breakfast behind his back.
"Good morning!" said Mr. Crow. "I hope you are feeling better to-day."
"Oh, yes--thank you!" said Major Monkey. "I"m quite well again."
Mr. Crow"s sharp eyes pierced him through and through.
"What are you holding behind you?" he asked bluntly.
The Major saw that he was caught.
"It"s my breakfast," he confessed, giving Mr. Crow a quick glance at what was in his hand. "I--I found it," he said. "Wasn"t I lucky?"
"A bird"s egg!" Mr. Crow exclaimed disapprovingly. "What kind is it?"
"It"s nothing but a Warbler"s egg," Major Monkey replied.
The old gentleman smiled knowingly. And feeling more comfortable, Major Monkey opened his hand and gave Mr. Crow a good look at his prize.
"That"s too big for a Warbler"s egg!" Mr. Crow cried.
"I found it in a Warbler"s nest," Major Monkey insisted.
"Were there any more like this one in the nest?" Mr. Crow asked.
"Oh, yes!" the Major answered.
"Were they as big as this egg?" Mr. Crow inquired.