Sarah ran a small fertilized egg business and kept hundreds of young hens with ten roosters. She was very strict about efficiency: any rooster that didn’t do his job ended up in the soup pot and was quickly replaced.
Keeping track of them took too much time, so Sarah came up with a clever idea. She tied a tiny bell around each rooster’s neck, and every bell had a different sound. That way, she could sit on the porch, listen carefully, and know exactly which rooster was working.
For a while, the system worked perfectly.
But one morning, Sarah noticed something strange. All the bells were ringing except one: old Butch’s bell.
Butch was her favorite rooster, so she went to investigate.
The other roosters were chasing hens all over the yard, bells ringing loudly. But the hens heard them coming and ran away.
Then Sarah spotted Butch.
He had grabbed his own bell in his beak so it couldn’t make a sound. Quietly, he would sneak up on a hen, do his job, and move on before she noticed.
Sarah was so impressed that she entered Butch in a show. The judges loved him.
They awarded him both the “No Bell Peace Prize” and the “Pullet Surprise.”
Clearly, old Butch had a future in politics.
After all, only a politician could win awards for sneaking up on people and taking advantage of them before they heard the warning bells.