The Little Thief in the Pantry
"MOTHER
dear,” said a little mouse one day, “I think the people in our house must be
very kind; don’t you? They leave such nice things for us in the larder.”
There was a
twinkle in the mother’s eye as she replied,—
“Well, my
child, no doubt they are very well in their way, but I don’t think they are
quite as fond of us as you seem to think. Now remember, Greywhiskers, I have
absolutely forbidden you to put your nose above the ground unless I am with
you, for kind as the people are, I shouldn’t be at all surprised if they tried
to catch you.”
Greywhiskers
twitched his tail with scorn; he was quite sure he knew how to take care of
himself, and he didn’t mean to trot meekly after his mother’s tail all his
life. So as soon as she had curled herself up for an afternoon nap he stole
away, and scampered across the pantry shelves.
Ah! here was
something particularly good to-day. A large iced cake stood far back upon the
shelf, and Greywhiskers licked his lips as he sniffed it. Across the top of the
cake there were words written in pink sugar; but as Greywhiskers could not
read, he did not know that he was nibbling at little Miss Ethel’s birthday
cake. But he did feel a little guilty when he heard his mother calling. Off he ran,
and was back in the nest again by the time his mother had finished rubbing her
eyes after her nap.
She took
Greywhiskers up to the pantry then, and when she saw the hole in the cake she
seemed a little annoyed.
“Some mouse
has evidently been here before us,” she said, but of course she never guessed
that it was her own little son.
The next day
the naughty little mouse again popped up to the pantry when his mother was
asleep; but at first he could find nothing at all to eat, though there was a
most delicious smell of toasted cheese.
Presently he
found a dear little wooden house, and there hung the cheese, just inside it.
In ran
Greywhiskers, but, oh! “click” went the little wooden house, and mousie was
caught fast in a trap.
When the
morning came, the cook, who had set the trap, lifted it from the shelf, and
then called a pretty little girl to come and see the thief who had eaten her
cake.
“What are
you going to do with him?” asked Ethel.
“Why, drown
him, my dear, to be sure.”
The tears
came into the little girl’s pretty blue eyes.
“You didn’t
know it was stealing, did you, mousie dear?” she said.
“No,”
squeaked Greywhiskers sadly; “indeed I didn’t.”
Cook’s back
was turned for a moment, and in that moment tender-hearted little Ethel lifted
the lid of the trap, and out popped mousie.
Oh! how
quickly he ran home to his mother, and how she comforted and petted him until
he began to forget his fright; and then she made him promise never to disobey
her again, and you may be sure he never did.
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