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ONE rainy night Peter Mink
stopped at Black Creek; and calling loudly to Timothy Turtle
he asked for a
place to sleep.
"You remember," he
said, when Timothy drew himself upon the bank, "you told me
that you
would do something handsome for me some time. And now that I'm wet and
tired I
hope you can offer me a snug, dry spot in which to spend the night."
"What can you do to pay
me?" asked Timothy Turtle. He never did anything for anybody without
pay.
"Can you saw wood?"
Now, Peter Mink would rather
stay out in the rain forever than saw a single stick of wood. So he
said:
"No, I can't!"
just like that.
"Well, it's about time
you learned," said Timothy Turtle.
Peter Mink was about to
leave in disgust; and he was wondering what name he would call
Timothy Turtle,
when he was a little further away, when he noticed that Timothy had a
thin book
in his hand. "What's that?" Peter asked.
"It's the Farmer's
Almanac," said Timothy Turtle. "I've been looking through it; but my
eyes are bad and I can't read."
Now that was quite true; for
Timothy's eyes were
bad – and he had
never learned to read.
"I'll tell you what
I'll do," Peter Mink announced. "If you'll give me a place to spend
the night I'll read the Farmer's Almanac to you."
"Come right in!"
Timothy Turtle cried, leading the way to a cozy nook beneath a big rock
which
was not far from the water. And Peter Mink was very glad to creep
inside that
comfortable shelter. He took the Almanac from Timothy Turtle and they
both sat
down.
Peter opened the book.
"I see," he said,
"that it says the weather was fair to-day, but look out for a heavy
rain
to-night!"
Now, Timothy Turtle had not
felt quite sure that Peter Mink knew how to read. But when he heard
that he
quickly changed his mind.
"That's exactly what's
happened!" he exclaimed. And he was greatly pleased. But the next
moment
he noticed that Peter Mink was holding the book upside down. Timothy
could tell
that because the picture of the man ploughing, on the cover, was upside
down.
"You can't read!"
he cried angrily. "You don't even know how to hold a book. You've got
it
bottom side up!"
But Peter Mink only smiled
pleasantly at him.
"You don't
understand," he said. "That's the way I was taught to read. Then, if
you want to read when standing on your head, you don't need to turn the
book
over.... It's the latest method," he explained.
"Oh!" said Timothy
Turtle. "That's different!"
"Yes – quite
different!" said Peter Mink.
"What does the Almanac
say about next week?" Timothy inquired.
"Timer to plant
corn!" Peter told him.
"That's so!" said
Timothy Turtle. "Mr. Crow was telling me this very day that Farmer
Green
was ploughing his cornfield; but of course that doesn't
interest me much. . .
. What else does the book say?" Timothy continued.
"Well, here's some
general advice," Peter Mink remarked, as he looked at the Almanac
again.
"It says: 'If anybody comes to you and asks for a place to sleep, give
him
a bed – but first of all, give him a good supper.'"
"I don't believe I want
to hear any more to-night," said Timothy Turtle hastily. "It's
late;
so we'd better go to bed right away."
Peter Mink was somewhat
disappointed. He had hoped to get a fish or two to eat. But there was
nothing
he could say, though he did wish Timothy Turtle could take a hint.
"In the morning you can
read to me again," Timothy told him.
So they went to bed.
But in the morning the
Almanac was nowhere to be found. Timothy Turtle hunted for it in every
place he
could think of – except Peter Mink's pocket.
After Peter had gone,
Timothy continued his search. And at last he found the Almanac beneath
the heap
of dry leaves which Peter Mink had used for a bed.
"That's queer!"
Timothy Turtle said. "I'm almost sure I looked there before Peter Mink
went away.... My eyes must be growing worse."
The
more he thought of the matter, the gladder he
was that he hadn't found the book before. For there was no knowing but
that
Peter Mink might have found some advice about giving a good
breakfast to a
guest who stayed over night. Then Timothy Turtle went into Black Creek
and
caught a fine fish, for he was hungry. And he enjoyed his meal
mightily,
because he had it all to himself.
While he was eating he kept
thinking what a disagreeable fellow Peter Mink was. No doubt he would
have been
surprised had he known that Peter Mink was thinking the same
thing about him,
at exactly the same moment.