"This stump," he said, "is hollow. As you can all see, there"s a small hole in it. We can put the money in there and n.o.body can get it out. It will be the same as in a bank."
Mr. Rabbit looked at the hole in the stump.
"I know _I_ can"t get through that hole," he said. "But what about you, young fellow?" he asked Peter.
"Oh, I can"t squeeze through such a small hole as this," said Peter.
"See!" He pushed his nose part way through the hole. And there his head seemed to stick. He could have squirmed through if he had really tried.
But n.o.body else seemed to know it.
"But how is the poor boy ever going to get his money?" Mr. Rabbit inquired.
"Oh, he"s very slim," Peter Mink said. "_He_ can get inside the stump.
Don"t you worry about _him_!"
Everybody seemed satisfied. So they dropped the money through the hole.
And then Mr. Rabbit said:
"When are you going to bring the poor boy to get the money?"
"To-morrow night would be a good time," Peter Mink said. "Would you all like to come here to-morrow night at this same hour?"
And everybody said, "Yes!"
[Ill.u.s.tration]
MR. RABBIT IS WORRIED
When Mr. Rabbit reached home, after Peter Mink"s lecture, and told his wife about the money that had been collected for the poor boy whom Peter Mink knew, she asked:
"Who has the money?"
"Oh, it"s safe," said Mr. Rabbit. "It"s hidden in an old stump. And the hole in the stump is so small that even Peter himself can"t crawl through it."
"How do you know he can"t?"
"He tried," said Mr. Rabbit.
"How do you know he tried as hard as he could?" Mrs. Rabbit asked.
That was what made Mr. Rabbit worry. So instead of going to bed, he hurried back to the place where Peter had given his famous lecture; and there he hid himself under a small pine.
Mr. Rabbit hadn"t waited long before he saw some one come out of the elderberry bushes and hurry up to the stump.
It was Peter Mink! He had a bag in his hand. And while Mr. Rabbit was watching, he squeezed through the hole in the stump. Even for Peter Mink the hole was almost too small. But he managed to squirm through, though it cost him a few groans; and he said some words that made Mr. Rabbit shake his head.
Well, as soon as Peter was inside the hole he began to push the money through it. And then what do you suppose Mr. Rabbit did? He crept up to the stump, picked up the bag, which Peter had left on the ground, and as fast as the money rolled out of the hole, Mr. Rabbit put it inside the bag.
The bag was almost full when the money stopped rolling out of the hole.
And Mr. Rabbit heard Peter Mink say to himself:
"That seems to be all!"
And as soon as he heard that, Mr. Rabbit hurried away, with the bag of money over his shoulder.
Peter Mink waited a bit, to see if he could find more money. But he had thrown it all out. So he squeezed through the hole again. Then he turned to pick up the bag. But it had vanished.
"That"s queer!" said Peter Mink. "I thought I left that bag right here."
He looked all around, but he couldn"t find it anywhere. So he took off his ragged coat and laid it on the ground. "I"ll put the money in this!"
Peter said.
But when he looked for the money he couldn"t find a single piece.
"That"s queer!" said Peter. "It must have rolled away from the stump."
And he began to search all about. But the money, too, had vanished completely. And Peter Mink couldn"t understand it.
The following night, when everybody came back again, expecting that Peter Mink would bring the poor boy with him to get the money, Peter never appeared at all.
Finally Mr. Rabbit jumped on top of the stump and told his friends what had happened the night before.
"And now," he said, "everybody can come right up here and get his money back, for there"s no doubt at all that Peter Mink was collecting it for himself. _He_ was the poor boy he told us about."
Everybody was surprised. But everybody was glad to get his money again.
In fact, there was only one person who grumbled; and that was Uncle Jerry Chuck. He hurried up to the stump ahead of all the rest, to get some money. And he seemed more surprised than ever when Mr. Rabbit said there was no money there for _him_.
"I was at the lecture last night," Uncle Jerry said.
"But you left before the money was collected," Mr. Rabbit replied.
Uncle Jerry admitted that that was so. But he claimed that he had made _less trouble_ for everybody, because no one had been obliged to handle the money that he hadn"t given.
But Mr. Rabbit told him he ought to be ashamed of himself. And every one will say that Peter Mink ought to have been ashamed of himself, too.
PETER"S BAD TEMPER
Peter Mink was always quarreling. And he seemed always ready to fight--to fight even people who were four times bigger than he was. And when he fought, Peter usually won. But there was one person Peter Mink was afraid of; and that was Fatty c.o.o.n. Fatty was almost too big for Peter Mink to whip. And his teeth were very sharp. And his claws were like thorns.
One day Peter and Fatty had a dispute. Fatty c.o.o.n had said that a hen made the finest meal in the world. But Peter Mink spoke up at once and said it wasn"t so.
"There"s nothing quite like a duck," he said.