The wood wasn’t nearly so pleasant
now as it had been before, and Dorothy was quite pleased
when, after walking a little way, she came in sight
again of the bank covered with rocking-chairs, and
running up, she hurried through the little door into
the toy-shop.
Everything was just as she had left
it, and the stream was running merrily under the castle
bridge; but just as she was going by, the bridge itself
began hitching up in the middle and pawing, as it were,
at the banks of the stream in such an extraordinary
manner that she stopped to see what was going to happen.
“It’s sure to be something
wonderous,” she said to herself, as she stood
watching it, and she was quite right about this, for
the bridge presently turned into a remarkably spirited
rocking-horse (dappled, with black spots scattered
about), and after rocking back and forth once or twice,
as if to be sure it really was a horse, settled
down perfectly still as if it never expected to be
anything else. In fact, with the exception of
a large fly, about as big as one of Dorothy’s
feet, that was buzzing about, everything in the window
was now perfectly quiet, and drawing a long breath
of relief, she walked away through the shop.
As she walked along on the shelf,
she presently came to the grocer’s shop and
found the Caravan sitting in a row on a little bench
at the door. The Admiral had the Camel in his
lap, and they were all gazing at it with an air of
extreme solicitude. It was a frowsy little thing
with lumpy legs that hung down in a dangling way from
the Admiral’s knees, and Sir Walter was busily
employed trying to make it drink something out of
a bottle.
“What are you giving him?” inquired Dorothy,
curiously.
“Glue,” said the Admiral, promptly.
“He needs stiffening up, you see.”
“Goodness gracious, what an awful dose!”
said Dorothy, with a shudder.
“That doesn’t make
any difference so long as he won’t take it,”
said Sir Walter; and here he flew into a tremendous
passion, and began beating the Camel about the head
so furiously with the bottle that Dorothy cried out,
“Here stop that instantly!”
“He doesn’t mind
it no more than if he was a bolster,” put in
the Highlander. “Set him up again and let’s
see him fall down,” he added, rubbing his hands
together with a relish.
“Indeed, you’ll do nothing
of the sort,” exclaimed Dorothy, with great
indignation; and, snatching the Camel from the Admiral’s
lap, she carried him into the grocer’s shop
and set him down upon the floor. The Camel looked
about for a moment with a very mournful expression
on his face, and then climbed into one of the drawers
that was standing open, and pulled it to after him
as a person might close a door, and Dorothy, after
watching this remarkable performance with great wonderment,
went out again.
The Caravan had lost no time, and
were standing on the bench, putting up a little sign
on the front of the shop with “CAMEL FOR SALE”
on it, and Dorothy, trying not to laugh, said, “Is
this your shop?”
“Yes,” replied the Admiral,
with an important air. “The grocer’s
been sold for a cook because he had an apron on, and
we’ve taken the business.”
“What are you going to keep?”
asked Dorothy, who was vastly amused at this idea.
“Why, we’re going to keep
the shop,” said the Admiral, climbing down from
the bench and staring at her in great surprise.
“But you must certainly keep
things to sell,” said Dorothy.
“How can we keep things if we
sell ’em?” inquired Sir Walter.
“Well, you can’t sell
anything unless you keep it in the shop, you know,”
persisted Dorothy, feeling that she was somehow or
other getting the worst of the argument.
“Bosh!” said the Admiral,
obstinately; “you can’t keep things
you sell that is,” he added, “not
unless your customers are crazy”; and with this
remark the Caravan went into the shop and shut the
door in Dorothy’s face, as if she wasn’t
worth talking to any longer.
Dorothy waited for a moment to see
if they were coming out again, and then, as there
was a noise inside as if they were piling up the drawers
against the door by way of a barricade, she walked
slowly away through the toy-shop.
She had had such a variety of adventures
in the shop by this time that she was getting quite
tired of the place, and she was walking along rather
disconsolately, and wishing there was some way of growing
to her natural size, and then getting back again to
poor old Uncle Porticle and the Blue Admiral Inn,
when, as she went around the corner of the little
apothecary’s shop, she came suddenly upon Bob
Scarlet. To her great surprise, he was now just
about the size of an ordinary robin; but he had on
his red waistcoat, and had quite as important an air
as ever, and he was strolling about examining the
various toys, and putting down the price of everything
in a little red book, as if he were thinking of going
into the business himself.
“Now, I wonder how he ever got
to be that size,” thought Dorothy, as
she hid behind a little pile of lead-pencils and watched
him over the top of them. “I suppose he’s
eaten something, or drunk something, to make him grow,
the way they do in fairy stories; because the Admiral
certainly said he wasn’t any bigger than an ant.
And, oh! I wish I knew what it was,” she
added, mournfully, as the tears came into her eyes
at the thought of how small she was, “I wish
I knew what it was!”
“If I wasn’t a little
afraid of him,” she went on, after she had had
a little cry, “I’d ask him. But likely
as not he’d peck at me old peckjabber!”
and here she laughed through her tears as she thought
of the Caravan in their little sunbonnets. “Or
p’r’aps he’d snap me up! I’ve
often heard of snapping people up when they asked too
many questions, but seems to me it never meant anything
so awful as that before”; and she was rambling
on in this way, laughing and crying by turns, when
at this moment Bob Scarlet came suddenly upon a fine
brass bird-cage, and, after staring at it in a stupefied
way for an instant, he dropped his little book, with
an appearance of great agitation, and hurried away
without so much as looking behind him.
Dorothy ran after him, carefully keeping
out of sight in case he should turn around, and as
she went by the bird-cage she saw that it was marked
“PERFECTLY SECURE” in large letters.
“And that’s what took the conceit
out of you, mister,” she said, laughing to herself,
and hurried along after the Robin.
As she caught sight of him again he
was just scurrying by the grocer’s shop, and
she could see the faces of the Caravan watching him,
over the top of a little half-blind in the window,
with an expression of the greatest concern, and the
next moment a door at the back of the shop opened
and they all rushed out. They had on their sunbonnets
and shawls, and Dorothy saw that the Admiral was carrying
the Camel under his arm; but before she could say
a word to them they had scampered away and were out
of sight.
By this time the toy-shop itself was
all in a commotion. Dolls were climbing down
from the shelves and falling over each other; the big
marbles had in some way got out of the basket and were
rolling about in all directions; and Dorothy could
see the old dame at the further end of the shop, running
about and frantically striking at one thing after
another with her spoon. To make matters worse,
quite a little army of tin soldiers suddenly appeared,
running confusedly about, with the drawers from the
little grocer’s shop upside down on their heads,
and all calling “Fire!” at the top of
their voices. As they couldn’t see where
anybody was going, or where they were going themselves,
it made the situation very desperate indeed.
Dorothy was frightened almost out
of her wits, but she ran on in a bewildered sort of
a way, dodging the rolling marbles and upsetting the
dolls and the soldiers in great numbers, until she
fortunately caught sight of the little rat-hole of
a door, and, rushing through it, she hurried down
the bank, knocking the green rocking-chairs about in
every direction, and ran off into the wood as fast
as she could go.