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MR. THOMAS CAT'S NARROW ESCAPE
from Mouser Cat's Story by Amy Prentice

Thomas Tabby Lounging
Buy this cat figurine from GoCollect.com
" Mrs. Toad certainly succeeded in raising quite a disturbance," your Aunt Amy said, feeling it
necessary to make some comment, and Mrs. Mouser replied thoughtfully:
"Yes, almost as much as Mr. Man did when he tried to drown Mr. Thomas
Cat the other day.
It seems that Mr. Thomas had been out in the stable
stealing the food which was left for Mr. Towser, and one of the maids, seeing
it, told Mr. Man, so then and there it was decided that Mr. Thomas must be
drowned. Mr. Man called him up, as if he was the best friend he ever had, and
when Mr. Thomas got near enough, he caught him by the tail, starting off at
once for the stream.
"'What are you going to do with me?' Mr. Thomas cried, and Mr. Man said:
"'You wait and see. I'll teach you to steal Mr. Towser's food! You are
no good, that's what's the trouble with you--you are no good!'
"So he took a rope out of his pocket and tied it around Mr. Thomas'
neck, after they got near the water. Then bent down over the bank to get a
big rock, when his foot slipped, and in he went splashing and howling until
you might have heard him on the next farm, for he couldn't swim a stroke, and
the water was deep where he went in.
"Of course Mr. Thomas wasn't able to do anything to help him, so off he
started for the house the best he knew how, with the rope dragging on behind,
and when he got there, Mrs. Man couldn't help seeing him. Knowing what her
husband had counted on doing she mistrusted that something was wrong, so down
she ran to the stream, getting there just in time to pull Mr. Man out of the
water before he drew his last breath.
"'How did you know where I was?' Mr. Man asked after the water had run
out of his mouth.
"'Why the cat just the same as told me, when he came back with a rope
around his neck.'
"'Well, he was some good after all,' Mr. Man said.' I had begun to think
all cats were useless, but it seems Mr. Crow was right in that poetry of his,
after all.'
"Then Mr. Man went up to the house, and since then Mr. Thomas has been
allowed to stay round the farm, just as he pleases."
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