<h2><SPAN name="st2" class="c011">THE STORY OF TWO RACCOON CUBS AND TWO MAN CUBS</SPAN></h2>
<p>Once there was a mother raccoon who had
three cubs; they all lived in the woods eating
fruits and berries and birds’ eggs. Whenever
they were on a tree top and heard a noise,
they would jump head foremost to the ground
and scamper off with their tails in the air.</p>
<p>One day when the cubs had grown to be
quite large sized raccoons, their mother took
them up all together to the top of an orange
tree—you must know that in South America
orange trees, which came originally from
Spain, now grow wild in the forest—and spoke
to them as follows:</p>
<p>“Cublets, you are almost big enough to be
called raccoons; and it is time you began to
hunt for your meals by yourselves. It is very
important for you to know how to do this,
because, when you get to be old, you will go
around all alone in the world, as all raccoons
do. The oldest of you likes snails and cockroaches.
He must hunt around woodpiles
and under trunks of rotting trees, where
there are always plenty of snails and cockroaches.
The next to the oldest of you seems
to like oranges. Up to the month of December
there will be plenty of oranges right here in
this grove. The youngest of you is always
asking for birds’ eggs. Well, there are birds’
nests everywhere. All he will have to do is
hunt. But one thing, however: he must
never go down to the farm looking for eggs.
It is very bad for raccoons to go near farms.</p>
<p>“Cublets, there is one thing more you
must all be afraid of: dogs! dogs! Never go
near a dog! Once I had a fight with a dog.
Do you see this broken tooth? Well, I broke
it in a fight with a dog! And so I know what
I am talking about! And behind dogs come
people, with guns, and the guns make a great
noise, and kill raccoons. Whenever you hear
a dog, or a man, or a gun, jump for your lives
no matter how high the tree is, and run, run,
run! If you don’t they will kill you as sure
as preaching!”</p>
<p>That is what the mother raccoon said to
her cublets. Whereupon, they all got down
from the tree top, and went each his own way,
nosing about in the leaves from right to left
and from left to right, as though they were
looking for something they had lost. For
that is the way raccoons hunt.</p>
<p>The biggest of the cubs, who liked snails and
cockroaches, looked under every piece of dead
wood he came to and overturned the piles of
dead leaves. Soon he had eaten such a fine
meal that he grew sleepy and lay down in a
nice cozy bed of leaves and went to sleep. The
second one, who liked oranges, did not move
from that very grove. He just went from
one tree to another eating the best oranges;
and he did not have to jump from a tree top
once; for neither men, nor dogs, nor guns,
came anywhere near him.</p>
<p>But the youngest, who would have nothing
but birds’ eggs, had a harder time of it. He
hunted and hunted over the hillsides all day
long and found only two birds’ nests—one
belonging to a toucan, with three eggs in it,
and the other belonging to a wood dove, with
two eggs in it. Five tiny little eggs! That
was not very much to eat for a raccoon almost
big enough to go to school. When evening
came the little cub was as hungry as he had
been that morning; and he sat down, all cold
and tired and lonesome, on the very edge of
the forest.</p>
<p>From the place where he was sitting he
could look down on the green fields of the
farm, and he thought of what his mother had
said about such places.</p>
<p>“Now, why did mamma say that? Why
shouldn’t I go looking for eggs down along
those fences on the farm?”</p>
<p>And just as he was saying this all to himself,
what should he hear but the song of a strange
bird: “Cock-a-doodle-doo-oo-oo”; coming
from far, far away and from the direction of
the farmhouse.</p>
<p>“My, did you ever hear a bird sing so
loud?” said the cublet to himself. “What
a big bird it must be! And its eggs must be
the size of a cocoanut!”</p>
<p>“Cock-a-doodle-doo-oo-oo,” came the bird’s
song again. The hungry little raccoon just
couldn’t do without one of those eggs the size
of a cocoanut. The bird was singing somewhere
off to the right. So he made a short
cut through the woods toward the field on the
other side.</p>
<p>The sun was setting, but the raccoon cub
ran with his tail in the air. At last he came
to the edge of the woods, and looked down
again into the fields.</p>
<p>“Cock-a-doodle-doo-oo-oo!”</p>
<p>Not far away now he could see the farmhouse.
There was a man in the yard. The
man was wearing long boots, and leading a
horse by the bridle into a barn. On the
fence in the barnyard, the little raccoon saw
his bird.</p>
<p>“What a silly little ’coon I am,” he said to
himself. “That isn’t a bird! That’s a rooster!
Mamma showed him to me one day, when
we were on top of a big tree up in the woods.
Roosters have a fine song; and they have a
great many hens that lay sweet eggs. I
think I could eat a dozen of those eggs, right
now!”</p>
<p>For some time the little raccoon sat looking
at the rooster and the barn and the farmhouse,
and thinking of what his mother had
said. But at last he thought: “Mamma is
far away! She will never know”; and he
made up his mind that as soon as it was
dark he would run down to that hen coop
and see what he could find.</p>
<p>Before long the sun had gone completely
and it was so dark you could hardly see your
hand before your face. Walking on tiptoe,
the little raccoon came out from the shadow
of the woods, and began making his way toward
the farmhouse.</p>
<p>When he got into the yard, he stopped and
listened carefully. Not a sound! The little
raccoon was as happy as could be: he was
going to eat a hundred, a thousand, two
thousand of those eggs! He looked around
for the hen coop. There it was! He stole up
to the door and peered in.</p>
<p>On the ground, and right in front of the
door, what should he see but an egg? And
such a large egg! If it was not as big as a
cocoanut, it was at least as big as an orange!
And how brightly it shone in the dark!
“Guess I’ll keep that egg for dessert,” thought
the cub for a moment. But his mouth began
to water and water, and he simply couldn’t
wait. He stepped up and put his front teeth
into that egg. But—</p>
<p>Trac-c-c!</p>
<p>He had hardly touched it when there was a
sharp snapping noise. The little raccoon
felt a hard blow strike him in the face,
while a stinging pain caught him in his right
forepaw.</p>
<p>“Mamma! Mamma!” he called, jumping
wildly this way and that. But he could not
get his foot loose. He was caught in a trap!
And just at that moment a dog began to
bark!</p>
<p>All that time when the little raccoon had
been waiting in the woods for night to come,
so that he could go down to get his eggs in the
hen coop, the man who owned the farmhouse
had been playing with his children on
the lawn in the yard. One of them was a
little girl five years old; and the other was a
little boy six years old. Both had golden
hair. They were chasing their father about
and falling down every so often on the grass.
Then they would get up again and run some
more. The man would also pretend to fall
and the three of them were having a splendid
time.</p>
<p>When it grew dark, the man said:</p>
<p>“Now let’s go and set our trap in the hen
coop, so that if the weasel comes to-night to
kill our chickens and eat our eggs, we will
catch him.”</p>
<p>They went and set the trap. Then the
family had dinner, and the little boy and the
little girl were put to bed.</p>
<p>But they were both very much excited about
the trap and the weasel. They could not
sleep. Finally they sat up in their beds and
began to throw pillows at each other. Their
father and mother were reading down in the
dining room. They heard what the children
were doing; but they said nothing.</p>
<p>Suddenly the pillow-throwing stopped; and
after a moment the little boy called:</p>
<p>“Papa! Papa! The weasel is in the trap.
Don’t you hear Tuké barking? Let us go
too, papa!”</p>
<p>Tuké, you see, was the name of the dog!</p>
<p>Their father said they might, provided
they put their shoes on. He would never let
them go out at night, barefooted, for fear of
coral or rattlesnakes.</p>
<p>So they went in their pajamas, just as they
were.</p>
<p>And what, if you please, did they find in the
trap? Their father stooped down in the
doorway of the hen coop, holding Tuké back by the
collar. When he stood up, he was holding a
little raccoon by the tail; and the little raccoon
was snapping and whistling and screaming
“Mamma! Mamma!” in a sharp, shrill
voice like a cricket’s.</p>
<p>“Oh, don’t kill him, papa! He is such a
pretty little ’coon!” said the boy and the
girl. “Give him to us, and we will tame him!”</p>
<p>“Very well,” said the father. “You may
have him. But don’t forget that raccoons
drink water when they are thirsty, the same
as little boys and girls.”</p>
<p>He said this because once he had caught a
wildcat and given it to them for a pet. They
fed it plenty of meat from the pantry. But
they didn’t dream that it needed water. And
the poor wildcat died.</p>
<p>The cage where the wildcat had been kept
was still standing near the hen coop. They
put the raccoon into the cage, and went back
into the house. This time, when they went
to bed, they fell fast asleep at once.</p>
<p>About midnight, when everything was still,
the little raccoon, who had a very sore foot
from the cuts made in it by the teeth of the
trap, saw three shadows come creeping up
toward his cage; for the moon was now
shining faintly. They came closer and closer,
moving softly and noiselessly over the ground.
His heart gave a great leap when he discovered
that it was his mother and his two
brothers, who had been looking for him everywhere.</p>
<p>“Mamma! Mamma!” he began to cry
from his cage, but soft-like, so as not to wake
up the dog. “Here I am, here I am. Oh,
get me out of here! I’m afraid! I’m afraid!
Mamma! Mamma! Mamma!” The little
raccoon was choking with tears!</p>
<p>The mother and the two brother raccoons
were as happy as could be to find him! They
rubbed their noses against him through the
wires in the cage, and tried to stroke him
with their paws. Then they set to work to
get him out, if they could. First they
examined the wiring of the cage, and one after
another they worked at it with their teeth.
But the wire was thick and tough, and they
could do nothing with it. Then an idea came
to the mother raccoon.</p>
<p>“People cut wires with files! Where can
we get a file? A file is a long piece of iron with
three sides, like the rattle of a rattlesnake.
You push it away from you across the wire,
and then you draw it toward you. Finally
the wire breaks. Let’s hunt around in the
blacksmith shop, and we may find one.”</p>
<p>They hurried off to the shop where the
farmer kept his tools. Soon they found the
file and came back with it to the cage. Thinking
it must be very hard to file off a wire, they
all took hold of the file and started pushing
it back and forth between two of the wires.
They pushed so hard that the cage began to
shake all over and made a terrible noise. In
fact, it made such a loud noise that Tuké woke
up and set to barking at the top of his voice.
The raccoons were frightened out of their wits;
and for fear the dog might ask them where
they got that file, they scampered off, with
their tails in the air, toward the forest.</p>
<p>The little boy and the little girl woke up
very early in the morning to go to see their
new pet, who had been brooding sadly in his
cage all night long.</p>
<p>“What shall we call him?” asked the little
boy.</p>
<p>“Seventeen,” answered the little girl. “I
can count to seventeen!”</p>
<p>And what did “Seventeen” have for breakfast?
One of those hen’s eggs he had tried so
hard to get the night before. And after the
hen’s egg, a grasshopper, and then a piece of
meat, and then a bunch of grapes and finally
a lump of chocolate! By the end of the day, he
was letting the two children reach their finger
through the cage to scratch his head; and so
pleased was he at all that was now happening
to him that he liked being a prisoner in a cage
almost as much as being a free raccoon cub on
the mountain side. He was all taken up with
the nice things that were placed in his coop
for him to eat; and he liked those two yellow-headed
children who kept coming to look at
him!</p>
<p>That night and the following one, Tuké,
the dog, slept so close to “Seventeen’s” cage
that when his mother and his two brothers
came back to make another try at rescuing
him, they did not dare approach. But on the
third night everything was as it should be.
They went directly to the shop, got the file,
and hurried to the cage.</p>
<p>“But mamma,” said the little raccoon,
“I guess I’d rather stay where I am. They
feed me all the eggs I want, and they are very
kind to me. Today they told me that if I
was good, they would soon let me go about
the yard loose. There are two of them, with
yellow hair. And they are man cubs, just as
we are ’coon cubs. We shall have a fine time
playing together.”</p>
<p>The three wild raccoons were very sad to
hear all this; but they made the best of it,
and went away, just promising to come back
and see “Seventeen” every night.</p>
<p>And so they did. Each evening, as soon
as it was dark and whether it was fair or
rainy, the mother raccoon came with her two
cublets to see their little brother. He gave
them bread and chocolate, which he handed
out between the wires of his cage; and they ate
it on the ground nearby.</p>
<p>In two weeks, he was let loose to run about
the yard; and every night he went back to his
cage of his own accord to sleep. He had his
ears tweeked a number of times, when the
farmer caught him too close to the hen coop;
otherwise he had no trouble at all. The two
children became much attached to him; and
when the wild raccoons heard how kind those
man cubs were to their little brother, they
began to be as fond of them as he was.</p>
<p>But one night, when it was very dark and
very hot and a thunderstorm was gathering
on the mountains, the wild raccoons called
to “Seventeen” in vain. “Seventeen!
Seventeen! Seventeen!” But he did not answer.
In great alarm they crept up to the cage and
looked in.</p>
<p>Pstt!</p>
<p>They drew back just in time. There in the
door of the cage a big rattlesnake lay coiled.
They had almost touched him with their
noses. And now they knew why “Seventeen”
failed to answer! The rattlesnake had bitten
him and probably he was already dead.</p>
<p>The three raccoons decided they must first
punish the rattlesnake. They rushed upon
him from three directions and snipped his
head off before he knew what they were about.
Then they hurried inside the cage. “Seventeen”
was lying there on the floor in a pool of
blood, his feet up in the air, and his sides
shaking as he panted for breath. They
caressed him with their tongues and licked
his body all over for more than a quarter of an
hour. But it did no good. “Seventeen”
finally opened his mouth and stopped breathing
altogether. He was dead. Raccoons
ordinarily are not much harmed by rattlesnake
poison. Some other animals are not
hurt at all. But this snake had bitten
“Seventeen” right through an artery; and
he had died, not of the poison, but from
loss of blood.</p>
<p>The mother raccoon and her two cublets
wept over his body for a long time; then, since
they could do nothing further for him, they
left the cage where he had been so happy and
went back to the woods. But they kept
thinking all the time: “What will the two
man cubs say when they find that their little
playmate is dead? They will probably be
very, very sad and cry a long time!” They
had grown to love the man cubs just from
what “Seventeen” had said of them; and one
thought was in their three heads—to relieve
the sorrow of the two man cubs as best they
could.</p>
<p>They talked the matter over earnestly; and
at last they agreed to the following plan.
The second youngest cublet looked almost
like the raccoon who was dead. He had the
same markings, was about the same size, and
carried himself in much the same way. Why
shouldn’t he go and crawl into the cage,
taking the place of his brother? The man
cubs would probably be surprised; but
nothing more. The four of them had talked
about everything that went on at the farm
so much, that the new raccoon could easily
pretend he had been there all along. He
might do it so well even, that the man cubs
would not notice anything at all.</p>
<p>So they ran back to the cage, and the little
raccoon took the place of his dead brother.
The mother raccoon and her remaining cub
took hold of “Seventeen” with their teeth and
dragged him away off to the woods, where
they buried him under the leaves.</p>
<p>The next day, the man cubs were surprised
at a number of strange habits “Seventeen”
seemed to have learned during the night.
But the new cub was just as affectionate to
them as the real “Seventeen” had been; and
they never guessed what had happened. The
two man cubs played about with the raccoon
cub all day long as usual; and at night the
two wild raccoons came to pay their usual
visit. The tame raccoon saved bits of his
boiled eggs for them each time; and they
would sit down and eat them on the ground in
front of the cage. He told them all that
happened at the farm; and they told him all
the news about doings in the woods.</p>
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