<div><h1 id='ch20'>CHAPTER XX<br/> <span class='sub-head'>WHY THE PLANS OF THE RATS FAILED</span></h1></div>
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<p class='line0'>Beware the coward and the sneak;</p>
<p class='line0'>He dares to face none but the weak.</p>
<p class='line0'>                    <span class='it'>Billy Mink.</span></p>
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<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>You</span> remember that the Rats in
the big barn had agreed that if
Billy Mink should return, they
would all attack him at once and
kill him or so frighten him that
he would leave and never return.
It was a perfectly good plan.
Billy was more than a match for
any single Rat. He might be
more than a match for any two
Rats. But if he had to fight all
the Rats at once, he wouldn’t have
the smallest chance in the world.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Those Rats had been very bold
and brave when they had met to
plan how they should get rid of
this new enemy. Especially bold
and brave had been the younger
Rats. They had agreed that the
instant they heard the signal, they
would rush to do their part in the
attack on Billy Mink.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Only the wise, gray old leader
had been doubtful. He had not
let the others know that he was
doubtful, for this would not have
done at all. But he knew what
the younger Rats did not know,
which was that born in every Rat
is great fear of all members of
Billy Mink’s family—a fear so
great that when it is aroused all
else is forgotten. He knew that
such fear becomes terror, and
terror destroys courage. It makes
cowards of even those who are
thought to be brave. So the gray
old leader was doubtful, and that
doubt increased the fear with which
the very thought of Billy Mink
filled him.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Now the gray old leader was
not a coward himself. He would
never have become a leader if he
had been a coward. When he heard
that dreaded danger signal, he
scrambled out of the nest where he
had been taking a nap and hurried
forth to lead his tribe in the great
fight they had planned. Almost
at once he met one of the loudest
boasters amongst the younger Rats,
and this fellow was running in the
opposite direction from the way he
should have been going. More
than this, he was squealing with
fright. Then another and another
and still another raced frantically
past, each squealing with terror.
He could not stop them. They
were frantic with fear and gave
him no heed.</p>
<p class='pindent'>In all directions he could hear
frightened squeaks and squeals and
the scampering of many feet. He
knew then that what he had most
feared had happened. The mere
presence of Billy Mink had awakened
that inborn fear, and each
Rat was thinking only of himself
and how he could escape. Sadly
the old leader turned and fled to
save his own life. He knew that
their plans for getting rid of Billy
Mink had failed and that he never
would be able to make the other
Rats stand and fight.</p>
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