o do nothing at all?" Mr. Crow inquired.
"Exactly!" Major Monkey cried. "And I've no doubt that you'd be a
great success."
Old Mr. Crow always liked praise. And of course the Major's remark
pleased him. It made him all the more eager, too, to see the army
attack Johnnie Green and his friends.
"Let's go back," said Mr. Crow, "and drive those boys out of the
picnic grove!"
But Major Monkey shook his head.
"I don't want to lose my army," he said. "And besides we haven't any
guns."
"You can throw stones, can't you?" Mr. Crow asked him.
"Oh, yes!" said the Major.
"Well, then--if I were you I'd get some stones down by the brook and go
straight back to the grove and hurl them at the enemy."
He said so much more that at last Major Monkey yielded. And a little
later he crept back through the tree-tops with all the stones he could
carry.
Hidden high above the heads of the picnic party, Major Monkey gave
several short whistles. "The attack!" he whispered to old Mr. Crow,
who had returned with him to see the fun.
"Hullo!" Johnnie Green shouted, stopping short in the midst of a game
of leapfrog. "Who's up there?" And he peered into the greenery above.
Nobody seemed to know the answer to his question. Certainly there was
nobody missing from the picnic party.
"I wonder if it's Red Head!" said Johnnie. "You remember he said he
couldn't come because he had work to-day. But he must have sneaked
over here ahead of us and climbed a tree."
The words were scarcely out of Johnnie Green's mouth when a small
stone plunged down from the trees and struck one of his great toes.
Being barefooted, Johnnie Green let out a yell.
"Ouch!" he cried. "It's Red Head! There's no doubt about it."
If anybody else had any doubts, they faded quickly when a small shower
of stones descended.
"Stop that!" the boys began to shout. "Come down!" And they threatened
Red Head with terrible punishments.
Of course, Major Monkey was delighted. He knew that his army of
generals could see--and hear--everything. And after he had thrown his
last stone he felt so bold that he slipped down upon a lower limb,
which gave him a better view of the picnic ground.
One of the boys caught a glimpse of a queer figure above him. And with
a shriek he turned and fled.
His companions looked at him in wonder. And Johnnie Green couldn't
imagine what had happened, when his staring eyes beheld the Major
hanging from a bough over his head.
"It's
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