<h2><SPAN name="XVI" id="XVI"></SPAN>XVI<br/>MRS. WOODCHUCK RUNS</h2>
<p>Mrs. Woodchuck was on her way home,
waddling across the pasture. She had
been making a call on Aunt Polly Woodchuck,
the herb doctor, who lived under
the hill. They had talked over all the
news in the neighborhood. And Mrs.
Woodchuck had her mind on some gossip
that Aunt Polly had told her. Otherwise
she might have noticed sooner that old dog
Spot had spied her.</p>
<p>If he hadn't spoken he would certainly
have caught her that time. For Mrs.
Woodchuck was fat and couldn't run as
fast as she used to. But when Spot's
keen nose caught a scent that told him
there was one of the Woodchuck family
not far away he just had to give one long-drawn
howl.</p>
<p>When Mrs. Woodchuck heard that
dreadful sound she scurried for home.
She dropped her knitting and the apple
that Aunt Polly had given her. And she
only managed to pop down the hole that
was her front door with Spot scarcely a
length behind her.</p>
<p>"Just missed her!" the old dog yelped.
"How unlucky!"</p>
<p>"Just escaped!" Mrs. Woodchuck
gasped. "How fortunate!"</p>
<p>She knew that she was safe. So she
took her own time in crawling through the
long hall that led to her one-room dwelling.</p>
<p>"Dear me!" she exclaimed as she entered
her underground home and saw that
it was empty. "Mr. Woodchuck and
Billy are away. I must hurry and warn
them that old dog Spot is prowling about
the pasture."</p>
<p>Meanwhile Spot lingered at Mrs. Woodchuck's
front door. He scratched in the
dirt that was thrown up before it. He
sniffed at the tracks that the Woodchuck
family had made all about.</p>
<p>"I know now where that fat Mrs. Woodchuck
lives," he growled. "I'll keep an
eye on this hole. Some day I may be able
to get between her and her home. And
then—"</p>
<p>He did not finish what he was saying,
but licked his lips as if he had just enjoyed
a hearty meal.</p>
<p>For a long time Spot waited there. He
could hardly have expected Mrs. Woodchuck
to come out and invite him to enter
her house. The most that she was likely
to do would be to creep not quite to the
upper end of her front hall and peer out to
see what she could through the small
round opening.</p>
<p>"That dame must have a family," Spot
thought. "I'd like to meet them—whether
there's one youngster or seven.
The more the merrier for me."</p>
<p>If Spot had happened to look around
just then he would have had his wish
granted. Or if the wind had been blowing
the other way he could have told, without
looking around, that Mrs. Woodchuck's
son Billy was gazing at him, with
popeyes, from behind a near-by hummock.
He had meandered homewards, pausing
here and there to nip off a clover head or
tear at a plantain leaf, little dreaming
that old dog Spot was right in his door-yard.</p>
<p>When he caught sight of the unwelcome
caller Billy sat up and took one good, long
look at him.</p>
<p>Then Mrs Woodchuck's son turned and
ran down the hillside as fast as his short
legs would carry him. He didn't stop until
he had reached the fence between the
pasture and the meadow. Dashing in
among the brakes that grew deep along
the fence he cowered under the cover that
they gave him.</p>
<p>All at once he felt quite ashamed of
himself.</p>
<p>"I almost forgot the rule!" he chattered.
"The rule says, 'When there's a
Dog about, warn everybody!'"</p>
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