“I guess I’ll get up and sit by the window a while,” he said to himself. “Then maybe I’ll feel sleepy.”
So he got up and sat down in a comfortable chair and looked out. It was a beautiful moonlight night, and he could see things almost as well as if it was day.
Well, Buddy hadn’t sat there very long, before he saw something long and black and shadowy creeping along, as softly and as gently as a mouse.
First he thought it was a cat, but when he looked again he saw that it was a fox. And the fox had a bag over his shoulder, and he was sneaking along, looking around to be sure no policeman dogs saw him.
Well, sir, as true as I’m telling you, if that fox didn’t come softly up to Dr. Pigg’s house, right to the front door, as Buddy could see by leaning out of his window, which was open, and looking down, as his window was right over the front door.
Then that fox took a screw-driver out of his bag, and he began to work at the door to force it open, in spite of the lock on it. Oh, how softly and quietly he worked! But Buddy looked down and saw him, and he knew right away that it was a burglar fox, who was coming in the house.
At first Buddy was frightened, and then he knew that he ought to do something. He thought of awakening his papa and mamma, and then he feared that this would scare Brighteyes, and so he decided to drive that burglar fox away all by himself.
Then he tried to think of the best way to do it. He moved softly about his room, looking for something with which to scare the fuzzy old fox, and what do you think he found? Why, his baseball, to be sure!
“That will be as good as a bullet!” thought Buddy.
Then he moved softly to the window, leaned out, where he could see the fox, who was still trying to force open the front door, and raising the ball in his hand, Buddy threw it down with all his might, just as if he was throwing to first base.
Well, sir, the ball hit that bad fox right on the head, and it bounced up almost into Buddy’s hands again, but not quite.
My, how surprised that fox was! In fact he was so surprised that he fell down, and when he got up and saw Buddy looking at him from the window, he was more amazed than ever.
“Get right away from here, you bad burglar fox you!” cried Buddy, “or I’ll throw forty-seven more big bullets at you!”
Of course he really couldn’t, because he didn’t have any other baseballs to throw, but the fox didn’t know that, and really thought the one baseball was a big bullet.
Then, without even stopping to pick up his bag, the fox ran away, and so he didn’t get in at all in Dr. Pigg’s house, and Buddy went to sleep.
Well, when Buddy told his papa and mamma and Brighteyes the next morning what he had done, maybe they weren’t proud of him. Yes, indeed!
I wish I could say that the fox was arrested, but he wasn’t, and made lots more trouble later. But he never broke into Dr. Pigg’s house and I’m glad of it.