<h2><SPAN name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025"></SPAN> CHAPTER XXV<br/> A Dinner For Two</h2>
<p class="poem">
Dark deeds are done in the stilly night,<br/>
And who shall say if they’re wrong or right?<br/>
—<i>Old Granny Fox</i>.</p>
<p>It all depends on how you look at things. Of course, Granny and Reddy Fox had
no business to be in Farmer Brown’s henhouse in the middle of the night,
or at any other time, for that matter. That is, they had no business to be
there, as Farmer Brown would look at the matter. He would have called them two
red thieves. Perhaps that is just what they were. But looking at the matter as
they did, I am not so sure about it. To Granny and Reddy Fox those hens were
simply big, rather stupid birds, splendid eating if they could be caught, and
bound to be eaten by somebody. The fact that they were in Farmer Brown’s
henhouse didn’t make them his any more than the fact that Mrs. Grouse was
in a part of the Green Forest owned by Farmer Brown made her his.</p>
<p>You see, among the little meadow and forest people there is no such thing as
property rights, excepting in the matter of storehouses, and because these hens
were alive, it didn’t occur to Granny and Reddy that the henhouse was a
sort of storehouse. It would have made no difference if it had. Among the
little people it is considered quite right to help yourself from
another’s storehouse if you are smart enough to find it and really need
the food.</p>
<p>Besides, Reddy and Granny knew that Fanner Brown and his boy would eat some of
those hens themselves, and they didn’t begin to need them as Reddy and
Granny did. So as they looked at the matter, there was nothing wrong in being
in that henhouse in the middle of the night. They were there simply because
they needed food very, very much, and food was there.</p>
<p>They stared up at the roosts where the biddies were huddled together, fast
asleep. They were too high up to be reached from the floor even when Reddy and
Granny stood on their hind legs and stretched as far as they could.</p>
<p>“We’ve got to wake them up and scare them so that some of the silly
things will fly down where we can catch them,” said Reddy, licking his
lips hungrily.</p>
<p>“That won’t do at all!” snapped Granny. “They would
make a great racket and waken Bowser the Hound, and he would waken his master,
and that is just what we mustn’t do if we hope to ever get in here again.
I thought you had more sense, Reddy.”</p>
<p>Reddy looked a little shamefaced. “Well, if we don’t do that, how
are we going to get them? We can’t fly,” he grumbled.</p>
<p>“You stay right here where you are,” snapped Granny, “and
take care that you don’t make a sound.”</p>
<p>Then Granny jumped lightly to a little shelf that ran along in front of the
nesting boxes. From this she could reach the lower roost on which four fat hens
were asleep. Very gently she pushed her head in between two of these and
crowded them apart. Sleepily they protested and moved along a little. Granny
continued to crowd them. At last one of them stretched out her head to see who
was crowding so. Like a flash Granny seized that head, and biddy never knew
what had wakened her, nor did she have a chance to waken the others.</p>
<p>Dropping this hen at Reddy’s feet, Granny crowded another until she did
the same thing, and just the same thing happened once more. Then Granny jumped
lightly down, picked up one of the hens by the neck, slung the body over her
shoulder, and told Reddy to do the same with the other and start for home.</p>
<p>“Aren’t you going to get any more while we have the chance?”
grumbled Reddy.</p>
<p>“Enough is enough,” retorted Granny. “We’ve got a
dinner for two, and so far no one is any the wiser. Perhaps these two
won’t be missed, and we’ll have a chance to get some more another
night. Now come on.”</p>
<p>This was plain common sense, and Reddy knew it, so without another word he
followed old Granny Fox out by the way they had entered, and then home to the
best dinner he had had for a long long time.</p>
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