While the Frogman and his party were
advancing from the west, Dorothy and her party were
advancing from the east, and so it happened that on
the following night they all camped at a little hill
that was only a few miles from the wicker castle of
Ugu the Shoemaker. But the two parties did not
see one another that night, for one camped on one side
of the hill while the other camped on the opposite
side. But the next morning, the Frogman thought
he would climb the hill and see what was on top of
it, and at the same time Scraps, the Patchwork Girl,
also decided to climb the hill to find if the wicker
castle was visible from its top. So she stuck
her head over an edge just as the Frogman’s head
appeared over another edge, and both, being surprised,
kept still while they took a good look at one another.
Scraps recovered from her astonishment
first, and bounding upward, she turned a somersault
and landed sitting down and facing the big Frogman,
who slowly advanced and sat opposite her. “Well
met, Stranger!” cried the Patchwork Girl with
a whoop of laughter. “You are quite the
funniest individual I have seen in all my travels.”
“Do you suppose I can be any
funnier than you?” asked the Frogman, gazing
at her in wonder.
“I’m not funny to myself,
you know,” returned Scraps. “I wish
I were. And perhaps you are so used to your own
absurd shape that you do not laugh whenever you see
your reflection in a pool or in a mirror.”
“No,” said the Frogman
gravely, “I do not. I used to be proud
of my great size and vain of my culture and education,
but since I bathed in the Truth Pond, I sometimes
think it is not right that I should be different from
all other frogs.”
“Right or wrong,” said
the Patchwork Girl, “to be different is to be
distinguished. Now in my case, I’m just
like all other Patchwork Girls because I’m the
only one there is. But tell me, where did you
come from?”
“The Yip Country,” said he.
“Is that in the Land of Oz?”
“Of course,” replied the Frogman.
“And do you know that your Ruler, Ozma of Oz,
has been stolen?”
“I was not aware that I had
a Ruler, so of course I couldn’t know that she
was stolen.”
“Well, you have. All the
people of Oz,” explained Scraps, “are ruled
by Ozma, whether they know it or not. And she
has been stolen. Aren’t you angry?
Aren’t you indignant? Your Ruler, whom
you didn’t know you had, has positively been
stolen!”
“That is queer,” remarked
the Frogman thoughtfully. “Stealing is a
thing practically unknown in Oz, yet this Ozma has
been taken, and a friend of mine has also had her
dishpan stolen. With her I have traveled all
the way from the Yip Country in order to recover it.”
“I don’t see any connection
between a Royal Ruler of Oz and a dishpan!”
declared Scraps.
“They’ve both been stolen, haven’t
they?”
“True. But why can’t
your friend wash her dishes in another dishpan?”
asked Scraps.
“Why can’t you use another
Royal Ruler? I suppose you prefer the one who
is lost, and my friend wants her own dishpan, which
is made of gold and studded with diamonds and has
magic powers.”
“Magic, eh?” exclaimed
Scraps. “There is a link that connects
the two steals, anyhow, for it seems that all the
magic in the Land of Oz was stolen at the same time,
whether it was in the Emerald City of in Glinda’s
castle or in the Yip Country. Seems mighty strange
and mysterious, doesn’t it?”
“It used to seem that way to
me,” admitted the Frogman, “but we have
now discovered who took our dishpan. It was Ugu
the Shoemaker.”
“Ugu? Good gracious!
That’s the same magician we think has stolen
Ozma. We are now on our way to the castle of
this Shoemaker.”
“So are we,” said the Frogman.
“Then follow me, quick!
And let me introduce you to Dorothy and the other
girls and to the Wizard of Oz and all the rest of us.”
She sprang up and seized his coatsleeve,
dragging him off the hilltop and down the other side
from that whence he had come. And at the foot
of the hill, the Frogman was astonished to find the
three girls and the Wizard and Button-Bright, who
were surrounded by a wooden Sawhorse, a lean Mule,
a square Woozy, and a Cowardly Lion. A little
black dog ran up and smelled at the Frogman, but couldn’t
growl at him.
“I’ve discovered another
party that has been robbed,” shouted Scraps as
she joined them. “This is their leader,
and they’re all going to Ugu’s castle
to fight the wicked Shoemaker!”
They regarded the Frogman with much
curiosity and interest, and finding all eyes fixed
upon him, the newcomer arranged his necktie and smoothed
his beautiful vest and swung his gold-headed cane like
a regular dandy. The big spectacles over his
eyes quite altered his froglike countenance and gave
him a learned and impressive look. Used as she
was to seeing strange creatures in the Land of Oz,
Dorothy was amazed at discovering the Frogman.
So were all her companions. Toto wanted to growl
at him, but couldn’t, and he didn’t dare
bark. The Sawhorse snorted rather contemptuously,
but the Lion whispered to the wooden steed, “Bear
with this strange creature, my friend, and remember
he is no more extraordinary than you are. Indeed,
it is more natural for a frog to be big than for a
Sawhorse to be alive.”
On being questioned, the Frogman told
them the whole story of the loss of Cayke’s
highly prized dishpan and their adventures in search
of it. When he came to tell of the Lavender Bear
King and of the Little Pink Bear who could tell anything
you wanted to know, his hearers became eager to see
such interesting animals.
“It will be best,” said
the Wizard, “to unite our two parties and share
our fortunes together, for we are all bound on the
same errand, and as one band we may more easily defy
this shoemaker magician than if separate. Let
us be allies.”
“I will ask my friends about
that,” replied the Frogman, and he climbed over
the hill to find Cayke and the toy bears. The
Patchwork Girl accompanied him, and when they came
upon the Cookie Cook and the Lavender Bear and the
Pink Bear, it was hard to tell which of the lot was
the most surprised.
“Mercy me!” cried Cayke,
addressing the Patchwork Girl. “However
did you come alive?”
Scraps stared at the bears.
“Mercy me!” she echoed,
“You are stuffed, as I am, with cotton, and you
appear to be living. That makes me feel ashamed,
for I have prided myself on being the only live cotton-stuffed
person in Oz.”
“Perhaps you are,” returned
the Lavender Bear, “for I am stuffed with extra-quality
curled hair, and so is the Little Pink Bear.”
“You have relieved my mind of
a great anxiety,” declared the Patchwork Girl,
now speaking more cheerfully. “The Scarecrow
is stuffed with straw and you with hair, so I am still
the Original and Only Cotton-Stuffed!”
“I hope I am too polite to criticize
cotton as compared with curled hair,” said the
King, “especially as you seem satisfied with
it.”
Then the Frogman told of his interview
with the party from the Emerald City and added that
the Wizard of Oz had invited the bears and Cayke and
himself to travel in company with them to the castle
of Ugu the Shoemaker. Cayke was much pleased,
but the Bear King looked solemn. He set the Little
Pink Bear on his lap and turned the crank in its side
and asked, “Is it safe for us to associate with
those people from the Emerald City?”
And the Pink Bear at once replied,
“Safe for you and safe for me;
Perhaps no others safe will be.”
“That ‘perhaps’
need not worry us,” said the King, “so
let us join the others and offer them our protection.”
Even the Lavender Bear was astonished,
however, when on climbing over the hill he found on
the other side the group of queer animals and the
people from the Emerald City. The bears and Cayke
were received very cordially, although Button-Bright
was cross when they wouldn’t let him play with
the Little Pink Bear. The three girls greatly
admired the toy bears, and especially the pink one,
which they longed to hold.
“You see,” explained the
Lavender King in denying them this privilege, “he’s
a very valuable bear, because his magic is a correct
guide on all occasions, and especially if one is in
difficulties. It was the Pink Bear who told
us that Ugu the Shoemaker had stolen the Cookie Cook’s
dishpan.”
“And the King’s magic
is just as wonderful,” added Cayke, “because
it showed us the Magician himself.”
“What did he look like?” inquired Dorothy.
“He was dreadful!”
“He was sitting at a table and
examining an immense Book which had three golden clasps,”
remarked the King.
“Why, that must have been Glinda’s
Great Book of Records!” exclaimed Dorothy.
“If it is, it proves that Ugu the Shoemaker
stole Ozma, and with her all the magic in the Emerald
City.”
“And my dishpan,” said Cayke.
And the Wizard added, “It also
proves that he is following our adventures in the
Book of Records, and therefore knows that we are seeking
him and that we are determined to find him and reach
Ozma at all hazards.”
“If we can,” added the
Woozy, but everybody frowned at him.
The Wizard’s statement was so
true that the faces around him were very serious until
the Patchwork Girl broke into a peal of laughter.
“Wouldn’t it be a rich
joke if he made prisoners of us, too?” she said.
“No one but a crazy Patchwork
Girl would consider that a joke,” grumbled Button-Bright.
And then the Lavender Bear King asked,
“Would you like to see this magical shoemaker?”
“Wouldn’t he know it?” Dorothy inquired.
“No, I think not.”
Then the King waved his metal wand
and before them appeared a room in the wicker castle
of Ugu. On the wall of the room hung Ozma’s
Magic Picture, and seated before it was the Magician.
They could see the Picture as well as he could, because
it faced them, and in the Picture was the hillside
where they were not sitting, all their forms being
reproduced in miniature. And curiously enough,
within the scene of the Picture was the scene they
were now beholding, so they knew that the Magician
was at this moment watching them in the Picture, and
also that he saw himself and the room he was in become
visible to the people on the hillside. Therefore
he knew very well that they were watching him while
he was watching them.
In proof of this, Ugu sprang from
his seat and turned a scowling face in their direction;
but now he could not see the travelers who were seeking
him, although they could still see him. His actions
were so distinct, indeed, that it seemed he was actually
before them. “It is only a ghost,”
said the Bear King. “It isn’t real
at all except that it shows us Ugu just as he looks
and tells us truly just what he is doing.”
“I don’t see anything
of my lost growl, though,” said Toto as if to
himself.
Then the vision faded away, and they
could see nothing but the grass and trees and bushes
around them.