“Really,” said Dorothy,
looking solemn, “this is very s’prising.
We can’t even find a shadow of Ozma anywhere
in the Em’rald City, and wherever she’s
gone, she’s taken her Magic Picture with her.”
She was standing in the courtyard of the palace with
Betsy and Trot, while Scraps, the Patchwork Girl,
danced around the group, her hair flying in the wind.
“P’raps,” said Scraps,
still dancing, “someone has stolen Ozma.”
“Oh, they’d never dare do that!”
exclaimed tiny Trot.
“And stolen the Magic Picture,
too, so the thing can’t tell where she is,”
added the Patchwork Girl.
“That’s nonsense,”
said Dorothy. “Why, ev’ryone loves
Ozma. There isn’t a person in the Land
of Oz who would steal a single thing she owns.”
“Huh!” replied the Patchwork
Girl. “You don’t know ev’ry
person in the Land of Oz.”
“Why don’t I?”
“It’s a big country,”
said Scraps. “There are cracks and corners
in it that even Ozma doesn’t know of.”
“The Patchwork Girl’s just daffy,”
declared Betsy.
“No, she’s right about
that,” replied Dorothy thoughtfully. “There
are lots of queer people in this fairyland who never
come near Ozma or the Em’rald City. I’ve
seen some of ’em myself, girls. But I haven’t
seen all, of course, and there might be some
wicked persons left in Oz yet, though I think the
wicked witches have all been destroyed.”
Just then the Wooden Sawhorse dashed
into the courtyard with the Wizard of Oz on his back.
“Have you found Ozma?” cried the Wizard
when the Sawhorse stopped beside them.
“Not yet,” said Dorothy.
“Doesn’t Glinda the Good know where she
is?”
“No. Glinda’s Book
of Records and all her magic instruments are gone.
Someone must have stolen them.”
“Goodness me!” exclaimed
Dorothy in alarm. “This is the biggest
steal I ever heard of. Who do you think did
it, Wizard?”
“I’ve no idea,”
he answered. “But I have come to get my
own bag of magic tools and carry them to Glinda.
She is so much more powerful than I that she may
be able to discover the truth by means of my magic
quicker and better than I could myself.”
“Hurry, then,” said Dorothy,
“for we’ve all gotten terr’bly worried.”
The Wizard rushed away to his rooms
but presently came back with a long, sad face.
“It’s gone!” he said.
“What’s gone?” asked Scraps.
“My black bag of magic tools. Someone must
have stolen it!”
They looked at one another in amazement.
“This thing is getting desperate,”
continued the Wizard. “All the magic that
belongs to Ozma or to Glinda or to me has been stolen.”
“Do you suppose Ozma could have
taken them, herself, for some purpose?” asked
Betsy.
“No indeed,” declared
the Wizard. “I suspect some enemy has stolen
Ozma and for fear we would follow and recapture her
has taken all our magic away from us.”
“How dreadful!” cried
Dorothy. “The idea of anyone wanting to
injure our dear Ozma! Can’t we do ANYthing
to find her, Wizard?”
“I’ll ask Glinda.
I must go straight back to her and tell her that my
magic tools have also disappeared. The good Sorceress
will be greatly shocked, I know.”
With this, he jumped upon the back
of the Sawhorse again, and the quaint steed, which
never tired, dashed away at full speed. The three
girls were very much disturbed in mind. Even
the Patchwork Girl seemed to realize that a great
calamity had overtaken them all. Ozma was a
fairy of considerable power, and all the creatures
in Oz as well as the three mortal girls from the outside
world looked upon her as their protector and friend.
The idea of their beautiful girl Ruler’s being
overpowered by an enemy and dragged from her splendid
palace a captive was too astonishing for them to comprehend
at first. Yet what other explanation of the
mystery could there be?
“Ozma wouldn’t go away
willingly, without letting us know about it,”
asserted Dorothy, “and she wouldn’t steal
Glinda’s Great Book of Records or the Wizard’s
magic, ’cause she could get them any time just
by asking for ’em. I’m sure some
wicked person has done all this.”
“Someone in the Land of Oz?” asked Trot.
“Of course. No one could
get across the Deadly Desert, you know, and no one
but an Oz person could know about the Magic Picture
and the Book of Records and the Wizard’s magic
or where they were kept, and so be able to steal the
whole outfit before we could stop ’em.
It must be someone who lives in the Land of Oz.”
“But who who who?”
asked Scraps. “That’s the question.
Who?”
“If we knew,” replied
Dorothy severely, “we wouldn’t be standing
here doing nothing.”
Just then two boys entered the courtyard
and approached the group of girls. One boy was
dressed in the fantastic Munchkin costume a
blue jacket and knickerbockers, blue leather shoes
and a blue hat with a high peak and tiny silver bells
dangling from its rim and this was Ojo
the Lucky, who had once come from the Munchkin Country
of Oz and now lived in the Emerald City. The
other boy was an American from Philadelphia and had
lately found his way to Oz in the company of Trot
and Cap’n Bill. His name was Button-Bright;
that is, everyone called him by that name and knew
no other. Button-Bright was not quite as big
as the Munchkin boy, but he wore the same kind of clothes,
only they were of different colors. As the two
came up to the girls, arm in arm, Button-Bright remarked,
“Hello, Dorothy. They say Ozma is lost.”
“Who says so?” she asked.
“Ev’rybody’s talking about it in
the City,” he replied.
“I wonder how the people found it out,”
Dorothy asked.
“I know,” said Ojo.
“Jellia Jamb told them. She has been asking
everywhere if anyone has seen Ozma.”
“That’s too bad,” observed Dorothy,
frowning.
“Why?” asked Button-Bright.
“There wasn’t any use
making all our people unhappy till we were dead certain
that Ozma can’t be found.”
“Pshaw,” said Button-Bright,
“it’s nothing to get lost. I’ve
been lost lots of times.”
“That’s true,” admitted
Trot, who knew that the boy had a habit of getting
lost and then finding himself again, “but it’s
diff’rent with Ozma. She’s the Ruler
of all this big fairyland, and we’re ’fraid
that the reason she’s lost is because somebody
has stolen her away.”
“Only wicked people steal,”
said Ojo. “Do you know of any wicked people
in Oz, Dorothy?”
“No,” she replied.
“They’re here, though,”
cried Scraps, dancing up to them and then circling
around the group. “Ozma’s stolen;
someone in Oz stole her; only wicked people steal;
so someone in Oz is wicked!”
There was no denying the truth of
this statement. The faces of all of them were
now solemn and sorrowful. “One thing is
sure,” said Button-Bright after a time, “if
Ozma has been stolen, someone ought to find her and
punish the thief.”
“There may be a lot of thieves,”
suggested Trot gravely, “and in this fairy country
they don’t seem to have any soldiers or policemen.”
“There is one soldier,” claimed Dorothy.
“He has green whiskers and a
gun and is a Major-General, but no one is afraid of
either his gun or his whiskers, ’cause he’s
so tender-hearted that he wouldn’t hurt a fly.”
“Well, a soldier is a soldier,”
said Betsy, “and perhaps he’d hurt a wicked
thief if he wouldn’t hurt a fly. Where
is he?”
“He went fishing about two months
ago and hasn’t come back yet,” explained
Button-Bright.
“Then I can’t see that
he will be of much use to us in this trouble,”
sighed little Trot. “But p’raps Ozma,
who is a fairy, can get away from the thieves without
any help from anyone.”
“She might be able to,”
answered Dorothy reflectively, “but if she had
the power to do that, it isn’t likely she’d
have let herself be stolen. So the thieves must
have been even more powerful in magic than our Ozma.”
There was no denying this argument,
and although they talked the matter over all the rest
of that day, they were unable to decide how Ozma had
been stolen against her will or who had committed the
dreadful deed. Toward evening the Wizard came
back, riding slowly upon the Sawhorse because he felt
discouraged and perplexed. Glinda came later
in her aerial chariot drawn by twenty milk-white swans,
and she also seemed worried and unhappy. More
of Ozma’s friends joined them, and that evening
they all had a big talk together. “I think,”
said Dorothy, “we ought to start out right away
in search of our dear Ozma. It seems cruel for
us to live comf’tably in her palace while she
is a pris’ner in the power of some wicked enemy.”
“Yes,” agreed Glinda the
Sorceress, “someone ought to search for her.
I cannot go myself, because I must work hard in order
to create some new instruments of sorcery by means
of which I may rescue our fair Ruler. But if
you can find her in the meantime and let me know who
has stolen her, it will enable me to rescue her much
more quickly.”
“Then we’ll start tomorrow
morning,” decided Dorothy. “Betsy
and Trot and I won’t waste another minute.”
“I’m not sure you girls
will make good detectives,” remarked the Wizard,
“but I’ll go with you to protect you from
harm and to give you my advice. All my wizardry,
alas, is stolen, so I am now really no more a wizard
than any of you, but I will try to protect you from
any enemies you may meet.”
“What harm could happen to us in Oz?”
inquired Trot.
“What harm happened to Ozma?” returned
the Wizard.
“If there is an Evil Power abroad
in our fairyland, which is able to steal not only
Ozma and her Magic Picture, but Glinda’s Book
of Records and all her magic, and my black bag containing
all my tricks of wizardry, then that Evil Power may
yet cause us considerable injury. Ozma is a fairy,
and so is Glinda, so no power can kill or destroy
them, but you girls are all mortals and so are Button-Bright
and I, so we must watch out for ourselves.”
“Nothing can kill me,” said Ojo the Munchkin
boy.
“That is true,” replied
the Sorceress, “and I think it may be well to
divide the searchers into several parties, that they
may cover all the land of Oz more quickly. So
I will send Ojo and Unc Nunkie and Dr. Pipt into the
Munchkin Country, which they are well acquainted with;
and I will send the Scarecrow and the Tin Woodman into
the Quadling Country, for they are fearless and brave
and never tire; and to the Gillikin Country, where
many dangers lurk, I will send the Shaggy Man and
his brother, with Tik-Tok and Jack Pumpkinhead.
Dorothy may make up her own party and travel into
the Winkie Country. All of you must inquire
everywhere for Ozma and try to discover where she is
hidden.”
They thought this a very wise plan
and adopted it without question. In Ozma’s
absence, Glinda the Good was the most important person
in Oz, and all were glad to serve under her direction.