<h2><SPAN name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024"></SPAN> CHAPTER XXIV<br/> A Midnight Visit</h2>
<p class="poem">
By those who win ’tis well agreed<br/>
He’ll try and try who would succeed.<br/>
—<i>Old Granny Fox</i>.</p>
<p>It seemed to Reddy Fox as if time never had dragged so slowly as it did this
particular night while he and Granny Fox waited until Granny thought it safe to
visit Farmer Brown’s henhouse and see if by any chance there was a way of
getting into it. Reddy tried not to hope too much. Granny had found a way to
get the gate to the henyard left open, but this would do them no good unless
there was some way of getting into the house, and this he very much doubted.
But if there was a way he wanted to know it, and he was impatient to start.</p>
<p>But Granny was in no hurry. Not that she wasn’t just as hungry for a fat
hen as was Reddy, but she was too wise and clever and altogether too sly to run
any risks.</p>
<p>“There is nothing gained by being in too much of a hurry, Reddy,”
said she, “and often a great deal is lost in that way. A fat hen will
taste just as good a little later as it would now, and it will be foolish to go
up to Farmer Brown’s until we are sure that everybody up there is asleep.
But to ease your mind, I’ll tell you what we will do; we’ll go
where we can see Farmer Brown’s house and watch until the last light
winks out.”</p>
<p>So they trotted to a point where they could see Farmer Brown’s house, and
there they sat down to watch. It seemed to Reddy that those lights never would
wink out. But at last they did.</p>
<p>“Come on, Granny!” he cried, jumping to his feet.</p>
<p>“Not yet, Reddy. Not yet,” replied Granny. “We’ve got
to give folks time to get sound asleep. If we should get into that henhouse,
those hens might make a racket, and if anything like that is going to happen,
we want to be sure that Farmer Brown and Farmer Brown’s boy are
asleep.”</p>
<p>This was sound advice, and Reddy knew it. So with a groan he once more threw
himself down on the snow to wait. At last Granny arose, stretched, and looked
up at the twinkling stars. “Come on,” said she and led the way.</p>
<p>Up back of the barn and around it they stole like two shadows and quite as
noiselessly as shadows. They heard Bowser the Hound sighing in his sleep in his
snug little house, and grinned at each other. Silently they stole over to the
henyard. The gate was open, just as Granny had told Reddy it would be. Across
the henyard they trotted swiftly, straight to where more than once in the
daytime they had seen the hens come out of the house through a little hole. It
was closed. Reddy had expected it would be. Still, he was dreadfully
disappointed. He gave it merely a glance.</p>
<p>“I knew it wouldn’t be any use,” said he with a half whine.</p>
<p>But Granny paid no attention to him. She went close to the hole and pushed
gently against the little door that closed it. It didn’t move. Then she
noticed that at one edge there was a tiny crack. She tried to push her nose
through, but the crack was too narrow. Then she tried a paw. A claw caught on
the edge of the door, and it moved ever so little. Then Granny knew that the
little door wasn’t fastened. Granny stretched herself flat on the ground
and went to work, first with one paw, then with the other. By and by she caught
her claws in it just right again, and it moved a wee bit more. No, most
certainly that door wasn’t fastened, and that crack was a little wider.</p>
<p>“What are you wasting your time there for?” demanded Reddy crossly.
“We’d better be off hunting if we would have anything to eat this
night.”</p>
<p>Granny said nothing but kept on working. She had discovered that this was a
sliding door. Presently the crack was wide enough for her to get her nose in.
Then she pushed and twisted her head this way and that. The little door slowly
slid back, and when Reddy turned to speak to her again, for he had had his back
to her, she was nowhere to be seen. Reddy just gaped and gaped foolishly. There
was no Granny Fox, but there was a black hole where she had been working, and
from it came the most delicious smell,—the smell of fat hens! It seemed
to Reddy that his stomach fairly flopped over with longing. He rubbed his eyes
to be sure that he was awake. Then in a twinkling he was inside that hole
himself.</p>
<p>“Sh-h-h, be still!” whispered Old Granny Fox.</p>
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