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<h2> CHAPTER VI: Farmer Brown's Boy Is Puzzled </h2>
<p>Farmer Brown's boy was whistling merrily as he tramped down across the
Green Meadows. The Merry Little Breezes saw him coming, and they raced
over to the Smiling Pool to tell Billy Mink. Farmer Brown's boy was coming
to visit his traps. He was very sure that he would find Billy Mink or
Little Joe Otter, or Jerry Muskrat, or perhaps Bobby Coon.</p>
<p>Billy Mink was sitting on top of the Big Rock. He saw the Merry Little
Breezes racing across the Green Meadows, and behind them he saw Farmer
Brown's boy. Billy Mink dived head first into the Smiling Pool. Then he
swam over to Jerry Muskrat's house and warned Jerry. Together they hunted
up Little Joe Otter, and then the three little scamps in brown hid in the
bulrushes, where they could watch Farmer Brown's boy.</p>
<p>The first place Farmer Brown's boy visited was Jerry Muskrat's old log.
Very cautiously he peeped over the edge of the bank. The trap was gone!</p>
<p>“Hurrah!” shouted Farmer Brown's boy. He was very much excited, as he
caught hold of the end of the chain, which fastened it to the old log. He
was sure that at last he had caught Jerry Muskrat. When he pulled the trap
up, it was empty. Between the jaws were a few hairs and a little bit of
skin, which Jerry Muskrat had left there when he sprung the trap with his
tail.</p>
<p>Farmer Brown's boy was disappointed. “Well, I'll get him to-morrow,
anyway,” said he to himself. Then he went on to his next trap; it was
nowhere to be seen. When he pulled the chain he was so excited that he
trembled. The trap did not come up at once. He pulled and pulled, and then
suddenly up it came, all covered with mud. In it was one little claw from
Little Joe Otter. Very carefully Farmer Brown's boy set the trap again. If
he could have looked over in the bulrushes and have seen Little Joe Otter
and Billy Mink and Jerry Muskrat watching him and tickling and laughing,
he would not have been so sure that next time he would catch Little Joe
Otter.</p>
<p>All around the Smiling Pool and then up and down the Laughing Brook Farmer
Brown's boy tramped, and each trap he found sprung and buried in the mud.
He had stopped whistling by this time, and there was a puzzled frown on
his freckled face. What did it mean? Could some other boy have found all
his traps and played a trick by springing all of them? The more he thought
about it, the more puzzled he became. You see, he did not know anything
about the busy day the Minks and the Otters and the Muskrats and the Coons
had spent the day before.</p>
<p>Old Grandfather Frog, sitting on his big green lily-pad, smoothed down his
white and yellow waistcoat and winked up at jolly, round, red Mr. Sun as
Farmer Brown's boy tramped off across the Green Meadows.</p>
<p>“Chugarum!” said Grandfather Frog, as he snapped up a foolish green fly.
“Much good it will do you to set those traps again!”</p>
<p>Then Grandfather Frog called to Billy Mink and sent him to tell all the
other little people of the Smiling Pool and the Laughing Brook that they
must hurry and spring all the traps again as they had before.</p>
<p>This time it was easy, because they knew just where the traps were, so all
day long they dropped sticks and stones into the traps and once more
sprung them. Then they prepared for a grand feast of the good things to
eat which Farmer Brown's boy had left, scattered around the traps.</p>
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