<h2><SPAN name="chap13"></SPAN>XIII<br/> The Lucky Guest</h2>
<p>In the middle of the day Solomon Owl happened to awake. He was sorry that he
hadn’t slept until sunset, because he was very hungry. Knowing that it
was light outside his hollow tree, he didn’t want to leave home to find
something to eat.</p>
<p>Then, suddenly, he remembered that he had brought Benjamin Bat to his house
early that morning, so Benjamin might escape the storm.... Why not eat Benjamin
Bat?</p>
<p>As soon as the thought occurred to him, Solomon Owl liked it. And he moved
stealthily over to the bed of leaves he had made for his guest just before
daybreak.</p>
<p>But Benjamin Bat was not there. Though Solomon looked in every nook and cranny
of his one-room house, he did not find him.</p>
<p>“He must have left as soon as it stopped raining,” said Solomon Owl
to himself. “He might at least have waited to thank me for giving him a
day’s lodging. It’s the last time I’ll ever bring any
worthless vagabond into my house. And I ought to have known better than to have
anything to do with a crazy person like Benjamin Bat.”</p>
<p>Anybody can see that Solomon Owl was displeased. But it was not at all
astonishing, if one stops to remember how hungry he was, and that he had
expected to enjoy a good meal without the trouble of going away from home to
get it.</p>
<p>Solomon Owl went to the door of his house and looked out. The sun was shining
so brightly that after blinking in his doorway for a few minutes he decided
that he would go to bed again and try to sleep until dusk. He never liked
bright days. “They’re so dismal!” he used to say. “Give
me a good, dark night and I’m happy, for there’s nothing more
cheering than gloom.”</p>
<p>In spite of the pangs of hunger that gnawed inside him, Solomon at last
succeeded in falling asleep once more. And he dreamed that he chased Benjamin
Bat three times around Blue Mountain, and then three times back again, in the
opposite direction. But he never could catch him, because Benjamin Bat simply
wouldn’t fly straight. His zigzag course was so confusing that even in
his dream Solomon Owl grew dizzy.</p>
<p>Now, Benjamin Bat was in Solomon’s house all the time. And the reason why
Solomon Owl hadn’t found him was a very simple one. It was merely that
Solomon hadn’t looked in the right place.</p>
<p>Benjamin Bat was hidden—as you might say—where his hungry host
never once thought of looking for him. And being asleep all the while, Benjamin
didn’t once move or make the slightest noise.</p>
<p>If he had snored, or sneezed, or rustled his wings, no doubt Solomon Owl would
have found him.</p>
<p>When Benjamin awakened, late in the afternoon, Solomon was still sleeping. And
Benjamin crept through the door and went out into the gathering twilight,
without arousing Solomon.</p>
<p>“I’ll thank him the next time I meet him,” Benjamin Bat
decided. And he staggered away through the air as if he did not quite know,
himself, where he was going. But, of course, that was only his queer way of
flying.</p>
<p>When he told his friends where he had spent the day they were astonished.</p>
<p>“How did you ever dare do anything so dangerous as sleeping in Solomon
Owl’s house?” they all asked him.</p>
<p>But Benjamin Bat only said, “Oh! There was nothing to be afraid
of.” And he began to feel quite important.</p>
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