<h2><SPAN name="IX" id="IX"></SPAN>IX</h2>
<h3>LOCKED IN!</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">Poor</span> Daddy Longlegs! Buried as he was
under dozens of shoes—all of them many
times bigger than he was—he couldn't
help being alarmed when he heard Jimmy
Rabbit walk out of the shoe shop and
lock the door behind him.</p>
<p>Daddy wished that he had told Mrs.
Ladybug in the beginning that he
wouldn't help Farmer Green with his
harvesting. Then he would never have
started on his long journey to the oat
field and worn out his shoes. And if he
hadn't worn out his shoes, of course he
would never have visited Jimmy Rab<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_43" id="p_43"></SPAN></span>bit's
shoe shop and got himself into such
terrible trouble.</p>
<p>He soon saw that he might call for help
until his voice was cracked worse than
ever without its
doing him the least bit
of good. So he stopped shouting and began
to climb out of the pile of shoes that
surrounded him. And he was very glad,
then, that he had eight long legs to help
him. But when he found himself free of
the shoes he seemed but little better off
than before. There he was, a prisoner in
the shoe shop! And the daylight was
fast fading.</p>
<p>If Daddy Longlegs had been half as
wise as his neighbors believed him he
wouldn't have stayed in his prison two
minutes. But after trying the door and
the two windows and finding that he
couldn't open them he made up his mind
that there was nothing for him to do ex<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_44" id="p_44"></SPAN></span>cept
to wait until Jimmy Rabbit came
back the following day.</p>
<p>And there was the chimney all the
time! Daddy Longlegs could have
crawled up it just as easily as Santa
Claus could have crept down it! But because
he had never left anybody's house
or shop by way of the chimney, Daddy
Longlegs never once thought of doing
such a thing.</p>
<p>And his thinking that Jimmy Rabbit
wouldn't come back until the next morning
shows that Daddy knew very little
about the ways of his neighbors. Almost
anybody else would have been sure that
Jimmy Rabbit would keep his shoe shop
open at night, because he was always
wider awake after dark. And many
others of the field-people were exactly like
him in that respect.</p>
<p>Daddy Longlegs had been sleeping<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_45" id="p_45"></SPAN></span>
soundly for some time—inside the toe
of a shoe—when the sound of voices
awakened him. At first he kept very still.
Being naturally a timid person he did
not want to show himself until he was
sure he was safe from harm.</p>
<p>And then, before he realized what was
happening, he felt himself picked up—shoe
and all—and he heard Jimmy Rabbit
say, "Try on this shoe, Peter Mink!"</p>
<p>Since there was no doubt—the next instant—that
Peter Mink was thrusting
his foot into Daddy's hiding-place, there
was only one thing for Daddy to do.
Knowing that he was in great danger of
being crushed, he withdrew into the very
tip of the shoe. And luckily for him,
Peter Mink's toes did not quite reach
him.</p>
<p>After that Daddy Longlegs could hear
nothing more; nor did he know what was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_46" id="p_46"></SPAN></span>
happening. But to make a long story
short, Jimmy Rabbit gave Peter Mink
another shoe—for Peter's other foot—and
bowed his customer politely out of
his shop.</p>
<p>After that Jimmy Rabbit promptly
locked the door again. But this time he
locked himself <i>in</i> instead of <i>out</i>. You
see, he never felt safe in Peter Mink's
company.</p>
<p>Naturally, Jimmy locked Daddy Longlegs
out of the shop, too, though he didn't
know it.</p>
<p>And there Peter Mink stood in the
moon-lit meadow, with his new shoes on
his feet, and with Daddy Longlegs hidden
in the toe of his right shoe.</p>
<p>But no matter if it <i>was</i> the right shoe,
Daddy Longlegs thought it was all wrong.</p>
<hr class="chapter" />
<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_47" id="p_47"></SPAN></span></p>
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