Old dog Spot felt greatly pleased with himself. He had told everybody that would listen to him how he could make Miss Kitty Cat angry just by still and pointing at her.
"You'd better leave that cat alone," the old horse Ebenezer advised him. "Don't you remember how she clawed you when you cornered her in this barn one day?"
"I remember—yes!" Spot admitted, as he looked cross-eyed at his nose, which still bore the marks of Miss Kitty's claws. "I'm careful not to stand too near her," he explained. "I don't try to grab her. I just stare at her. And she gets wild."
"A wild cat," old Ebenezer warned him, "is a dangerous creature."
"Nonsense!" said Spot. "She always away after I've at her for a few minutes. It's the funniest sight! If you could see it once you'd know she was terribly afraid of me."
"Nonsense!" said the old horse Ebenezer. But he couldn't make Spot believe there was the slightest danger in teasing Miss Kitty Cat.
"She always runs up a tree after I've been pointing at her," Spot went on.
"You'd better look out!" Ebenezer cautioned him. "She'll have you climbing a tree the first thing you know."
Well, that made Spot laugh. And he went out of the barn feeling even more pleased with himself than ever. He was sorry that Miss Kitty Cat wasn't in the yard. He felt just like bothering her.
"I'll go up to the pasture and find me a woodchuck to chase," Spot said to himself, for he was in such high spirits that he simply had to have fun of some sort.
First, however, he to stop and dig up a bone that he had buried in the flower garden. So he across the yard. And as he drew near the he changed his plans all at once. He forgot his bone and he forgot his woodchuck, too. For he caught sight of something that had escaped his eye before. Stretched on the outside one of the kitchen windows Miss Kitty Cat was enjoying a nap in the sunshine.
"Aha!" said Spot very softly. "Aha! Here's a bit of luck." And he turned sharply aside and hurried towards the house, to come to a dead stop beneath the window and stand there motionless with his nose pointing at the sleeping form of Miss Kitty.
Though Spot didn't make the slightest noise the suddenly opened her eyes.
"Tchah!" she exclaimed, springing to her feet and glaring at her annoyer.
If the window hadn't been closed no doubt Miss Kitty would have slipped through it into the kitchen. But there was no escape that way.
"It's a pity," she muttered, "that a person can't take a cat nap without being stared at by this old dog. I think it's about time I took my neighbor's advice and taught him to keep his eyes and his nose where they belong."
Then Miss Kitty Cat jumped. She jumped off the window ledge straight at old dog Spot, who was still gazing up at her from below.
When he saw her coming he gave a startled and tried to her. But he was too slow. Miss Kitty Cat landed squarely on his back and clawed him .
Old Spot dashed half way across the farmyard, then dropped suddenly and rolled over and over on the ground.
The next instant he was on his feet again and tearing toward the barn. Though Miss Kitty had dropped off his back and was already on her way to the house he did not look around to see what had become of her.
Spot bolted through the barn door and into an empty stall, where he jumped into the manger and down in the hay that half filled it, and moaned.
It was the stall next to the old horse Ebenezer's. And that mild fellow peered over at him in wonder. "What has happened?" he inquired.
"The cat scratched me," Spot told him. "I was teasing her and she wasn't at all nice about it."
"What were you doing—pointing at her?" Ebenezer asked him.
"Yes!"
"I suppose it made her wild," the old horse remarked. "And a wild cat is a dangerous creature."
Spot fretfully. He wished he could lick his wounds. But how can one lick scratches when they are behind one's ears?
"I was a wild dog for a few moments," he . "I never dreamed she would plump down on me like that."
"Haven't you ever heard of it's raining cats and dogs?" Ebenezer said. "Well, to-day it rained cats."