The Frog, In Full
The mother's fin-notch
Start with the one thing that has told the twins apart since before either could swim: the notch. Two frogs hatched from the same ribbon of eggs in Cattail Cove wear one face so exactly that the swamp court has spent a whole trial confusing them. Their own mother never did. On the day they came out of the shells she pressed a small, permanent notch into the trailing edge of one tadpole's tail-fin — a mother's mark, older than any tongue-cast, made because she already suspected she would one day need to prove which of her sons was which.
The notched one is PeePoo. It has never grown out, never healed over, never once been forged, because no forger thinks to copy a mother. Ask her across a courtroom which frog is hers and she does not look at the face — she looks at the fin. The face is a coincidence of birth. The notch is the truth of it. It is the first and last honest label the honest twin has ever worn, and the only one his brother has never managed to trace.
Why the tongue cannot sign a lie
Every frog in this swamp signs with its tongue, and PeePoo's has a defect the prosecution has mistaken for an alibi and his friends have long since accepted as a personality. It will not bend toward a lie. Not won't — can't. Asked whether a neighbor's croak sounds good, it tells the kind, detailed truth. Asked to admire a badly painted rock, it manages 'a brave choice' and nothing falser. Witnesses have tested this for nine seasons with leading questions and never once caught it curling.
A forged signature is only a lie you press into paper, and a tongue that cannot lie in conversation certainly cannot lie in ink. That is the physical fact the whole frame job runs aground on. PeePoo's print lands flat and finishes clean — an honest plank, no flourish, nothing tucked into the follow-through. The seventeen checks all carry a hook at the tip that his tongue is simply not built to make. You can trace the plank. You cannot trace your way out of your own honesty, and PeePoo has never had to try.
The compulsive tidiness
Left alone with a quiet afternoon and no audience, PeePoo tidies. Reeds get squared. Cattails get folded flat and corner-matched along a clean line, at the edge of ponds that are not even his, for neighbors who never asked and rarely notice. Mrs. Hopkins, of the pad next door for fourteen seasons, will tell you it is not a courtroom performance but a weekly, unprofitable habit that predates the charges by years.
It is also, quietly, the whole argument for his innocence. Forgery and cattail-folding are the same faculty — patient, careful, unwatched — pointed in opposite directions. One patient, unwatched frog uses that care to counterfeit a brother. The other uses it to leave a stranger's reeds a little neater than he found them. A frog who cannot walk past a crooked cattail without straightening it is not a frog who spends a spring tracing a tongue-print seventeen times in the dark.
The flies worth crossing three ponds for
PeePoo eats a sensible number of flies and has strong, gentle opinions about them. A midge caught in low morning light he considers a fine everyday meal. A mayfly he treats as an occasion. But the fly he would cross three ponds for is a genuinely good gnat catching the moonlight just right — which is precisely what he was doing at 3:47 in the morning on the night of the forgery, admiring one really nice gnat two reeds and three ponds away from any ledger, while a different tongue signed his name.
He is not a greedy eater and never has been. He passes up more than he takes, leaves the best of a hatch for the smaller frogs downstream, and has been known to simply watch a particularly good gnat rather than eat it, on the grounds that some flies are better company than dinner. It is the appetite of a frog with nowhere criminal to be — the kind of harmless, moonlit, entirely decent thing that turns out, in a swamp court, to make the best alibi of all.
Life on the pad
Before Cell Block C, PeePoo kept the cleanest pad in the cove — not showy, just tended: a swept landing, a tidy waterline, a stone he had painted himself and would honestly tell you was 'a brave choice.' He signs everything. Notes, thank-yous, confessions of having found a nice gnat. A frog who signs his own small joys is not a frog who hides behind unsigned boasts crackling in from the far side of the pond.
He believes in the swamp more than the swamp has lately believed in him, dives into currents after strangers' dropped groceries, and has earned a fanbase one honest act at a time — the day-one believers who now dive into courtrooms for him the way he once dove into the water for them. Kindness, in his accounting, compounds. That is the frog: notched by his mother, honest to a physical fault, tidy past all reason, generous past all sense, and sitting patiently in a cell for a signature his tongue was never built to make.