No sooner were the Wizard of Oz and
his followers well within the castle entrance when
the big gates swung to with a clang and heavy bars
dropped across them. They looked at one another
uneasily, but no one cared to speak of the incident.
If they were indeed prisoners in the wicker castle,
it was evident they must find a way to escape, but
their first duty was to attend to the errand on which
they had come and seek the Royal Ozma, whom they believed
to be a prisoner of the magician, and rescue her.
They found they had entered a square
courtyard, from which an entrance led into the main
building of the castle. No person had appeared
to greet them so far, although a gaudy peacock perched
upon the wall cackled with laughter and said in its
sharp, shrill voice, “Poor fools! Poor
fools!”
“I hope the peacock is mistaken,”
remarked the Frogman, but no one else paid any attention
to the bird. They were a little awed by the
stillness and loneliness of the place. As they
entered the doors of the castle, which stood invitingly
open, these also closed behind them and huge bolts
shot into place. The animals had all accompanied
the party into the castle because they felt it would
be dangerous for them to separate. They were
forced to follow a zigzag passage, turning this way
and that, until finally they entered a great central
hall, circular in form and with a high dome from which
was suspended an enormous chandelier.
The Wizard went first, and Dorothy,
Betsy and Trot followed him, Toto keeping at the heels
of his little mistress. Then came the Lion, the
Woozy and the Sawhorse, then Cayke the Cookie Cook
and Button-Bright, then the Lavender Bear carrying
the Pink Bear, and finally the Frogman and the Patchwork
Girl, with Hank the Mule tagging behind. So it
was the Wizard who caught the first glimpse of the
big, domed hall, but the others quickly followed and
gathered in a wondering group just within the entrance.
Upon a raised platform at one side
was a heavy table on which lay Glinda’s Great
Book of Records, but the platform was firmly fastened
to the floor and the table was fastened to the platform
and the Book was chained fast to the table, just as
it had been when it was kept in Glinda’s palace.
On the wall over the table hung Ozma’s Magic
Picture. On a row of shelves at the opposite
side of the hall stood all the chemicals and essences
of magic and all the magical instruments that had
been stolen from Glinda and Ozma and the Wizard, with
glass doors covering the shelves so that no one could
get at them.
And in a far corner sat Ugu the Shoemaker,
his feet lazily extended, his skinny hands clasped
behind his head. He was leaning back at his
ease and calmly smoking a long pipe. Around the
magician was a sort of cage, seemingly made of golden
bars set wide apart, and at his feet, also within
the cage, reposed the long-sought diamond-studded dishpan
of Cayke the Cookie Cook. Princess Ozma of Oz
was nowhere to be seen.
“Well, well,” said Ugu
when the invaders had stood in silence for a moment,
staring about them. “This visit is an unexpected
pleasure, I assure you. I knew you were coming,
and I know why you are here. You are not welcome,
for I cannot use any of you to my advantage, but as
you have insisted on coming, I hope you will make the
afternoon call as brief as possible. It won’t
take long to transact your business with me.
You will ask me for Ozma, and my reply will be that
you may find her if you can.”
“Sir,” answered the Wizard
in a tone of rebuke, “you are a very wicked
and cruel person. I suppose you imagine, because
you have stolen this poor woman’s dishpan and
all the best magic in Oz, that you are more powerful
than we are and will be able to triumph over us.”
“Yes,” said Ugu the Shoemaker,
slowly filling his pipe with fresh tobacco from a
silver bowl that stood beside him, “that is exactly
what I imagine. It will do you no good to demand
from me the girl who was formerly the Ruler of Oz,
because I will not tell you where I have hidden her,
and you can’t guess in a thousand years.
Neither will I restore to you any of the magic I
have captured. I am not so foolish. But
bear this in mind: I mean to be the Ruler of Oz
myself, hereafter, so I advise you to be careful how
you address your future Monarch.”
“Ozma is still Ruler of Oz,
wherever you may have hidden her,” declared
the Wizard. “And bear this in mind, miserable
Shoemaker: we intend to find her and to rescue
her in time, but our first duty and pleasure will
be to conquer you and then punish you for your misdeeds.”
“Very well, go ahead and conquer,”
said Ugu. “I’d really like to see
how you can do it.”
Now although the little Wizard had
spoken so boldly, he had at the moment no idea how
they might conquer the magician. He had that
morning given the Frogman, at his request, a dose of
zosozo from his bottle, and the Frogman had promised
to fight a good fight if it was necessary, but the
Wizard knew that strength alone could not avail against
magical arts. The toy Bear King seemed to have
some pretty good magic, however, and the Wizard depended
to an extent on that. But something ought to
be done right away, and the Wizard didn’t know
what it was.
While he considered this perplexing
question and the others stood looking at him as their
leader, a queer thing happened. The floor of
the great circular hall on which they were standing
suddenly began to tip. Instead of being flat
and level, it became a slant, and the slant grew steeper
and steeper until none of the party could manage to
stand upon it. Presently they all slid down
to the wall, which was now under them, and then it
became evident that the whole vast room was slowly
turning upside down! Only Ugu the Shoemaker,
kept in place by the bars of his golden cage, remained
in his former position, and the wicked magician seemed
to enjoy the surprise of his victims immensely.
First they all slid down to the wall
back of them, but as the room continued to turn over,
they next slid down the wall and found themselves
at the bottom of the great dome, bumping against the
big chandelier which, like everything else, was now
upside down. The turning movement now stopped,
and the room became stationary. Looking far
up, they saw Ugu suspended in his cage at the very
top, which had once been the floor.
“Ah,” said he, grinning
down at them, “the way to conquer is to act,
and he who acts promptly is sure to win. This
makes a very good prison, from which I am sure you
cannot escape. Please amuse yourselves in any
way you like, but I must beg you to excuse me, as I
have business in another part of my castle.”
Saying this, he opened a trap door
in the floor of his cage (which was now over his head)
and climbed through it and disappeared from their
view. The diamond dishpan still remained in the
cage, but the bars kept it from falling down on their
heads.
“Well, I declare,” said
the Patchwork Girl, seizing one of the bars of the
chandelier and swinging from it, “we must peg
one for the Shoemaker, for he has trapped us very
cleverly.”
“Get off my foot, please,” said the Lion
to the Sawhorse.
“And oblige me, Mr. Mule,”
remarked the Woozy, “by taking your tail out
of my left eye.”
“It’s rather crowded down
here,” explained Dorothy, “because the
dome is rounding and we have all slid into the middle
of it. But let us keep as quiet as possible
until we can think what’s best to be done.”
“Dear, dear!” wailed Cayke,
“I wish I had my darling dishpan,” and
she held her arms longingly toward it.
“I wish I had the magic on those
shelves up there,” sighed the Wizard.
“Don’t you s’pose
we could get to it?” asked Trot anxiously.
“We’d have to fly,” laughed the
Patchwork Girl.
But the Wizard took the suggestion
seriously, and so did the Frogman. They talked
it over and soon planned an attempt to reach the shelves
where the magical instruments were. First the
Frogman lay against the rounding dome and braced his
foot on the stem of the chandelier; then the Wizard
climbed over him and lay on the dome with his feet
on the Frogman’s shoulders; the Cookie Cook
came next; then Button-Bright climbed to the woman’s
shoulders; then Dorothy climbed up and Betsy and Trot,
and finally the Patchwork Girl, and all their lengths
made a long line that reached far up the dome, but
not far enough for Scraps to touch the shelves.
“Wait a minute. Perhaps
I can reach the magic,” called the Bear King,
and began scrambling up the bodies of the others.
But when he came to the Cookie Cook, his soft paws
tickled her side so that she squirmed and upset the
whole line. Down they came, tumbling in a heap
against the animals, and although no one was much
hurt, it was a bad mix-up, and the Frogman, who was
at the bottom, almost lost his temper before he could
get on his feet again.
Cayke positively refused to try what
she called “the pyramid act” again, and
as the Wizard was now convinced they could not reach
the magic tools in that manner, the attempt was abandoned.
“But something must be done,” said
the Wizard, and then he turned to the Lavender Bear
and asked, “Cannot Your Majesty’s magic
help us to escape from here?”
“My magic powers are limited,”
was the reply. “When I was stuffed, the
fairies stood by and slyly dropped some magic into
my stuffing. Therefore I can do any of the magic
that’s inside me, but nothing else. You,
however, are a wizard, and a wizard should be able
to do anything.”
“Your Majesty forgets that my
tools of magic have been stolen,” said the Wizard
sadly, “and a wizard without tools is as helpless
as a carpenter without a hammer or saw.”
“Don’t give up,”
pleaded Button-Bright, “’cause if we can’t
get out of this queer prison, we’ll all starve
to death.”
“Not I!” laughed the Patchwork
Girl, now standing on top of the chandelier at the
place that was meant to be the bottom of it.
“Don’t talk of such dreadful
things,” said Trot, shuddering. “We
came here to capture the Shoemaker, didn’t we?”
“Yes, and to save Ozma,” said Betsy.
“And here we are, captured ourselves,
and my darling dishpan up there in plain sight!”
wailed the Cookie Cook, wiping her eyes on the tail
of the Frogman’s coat.
“Hush!” called the Lion
with a low, deep growl. “Give the Wizard
time to think.”
“He has plenty of time,”
said Scraps. “What he needs is the Scarecrow’s
brains.”
After all, it was little Dorothy who
came to their rescue, and her ability to save them
was almost as much a surprise to the girl as it was
to her friends. Dorothy had been secretly testing
the powers of her Magic Belt, which she had once captured
from the Nome King, and experimenting with it in various
ways ever since she had started on this eventful journey.
At different times she had stolen away from the others
of her party and in solitude had tried to find out
what the Magic Belt could do and what it could not
do. There were a lot of things it could not
do, she discovered, but she learned some things about
the Belt which even her girl friends did not suspect
she knew.
For one thing, she had remembered
that when the Nome King owned it, the Magic Belt used
to perform transformations, and by thinking hard she
had finally recalled the way in which such transformations
had been accomplished. Better than this, however,
was the discovery that the Magic Belt would grant
its wearer one wish a day. All she need do was
close her right eye and wiggle her left toe and then
draw a long breath and make her wish. Yesterday
she had wished in secret for a box of caramels,
and instantly found the box beside her. Today
she had saved her daily wish in case she might need
it in an emergency, and the time had now come when
she must use the wish to enable her to escape with
her friends from the prison in which Ugu had caught
them.
So without telling anyone what she
intended to do for she had only used the
wish once and could not be certain how powerful the
Magic Belt might be Dorothy closed her
right eye and wiggled her left big toe and drew a
long breath and wished with all her might. The
next moment the room began to revolve again, as slowly
as before, and by degrees they all slid to the side
wall and down the wall to the floor all
but Scraps, who was so astonished that she still clung
to the chandelier. When the big hall was in its
proper position again and the others stood firmly
upon the floor of it, they looked far up the dome and
saw the Patchwork girl swinging from the chandelier.
“Good gracious!” cried
Dorothy. “How ever will you get down?”
“Won’t the room keep turning?” asked
Scraps.
“I hope not. I believe it has stopped
for good,” said Princess Dorothy.
“Then stand from under, so you
won’t get hurt!” shouted the Patchwork
Girl, and as soon as they had obeyed this request,
she let go the chandelier and came tumbling down heels
over head and twisting and turning in a very exciting
manner. Plump! She fell on the tiled floor,
and they ran to her and rolled her and patted her into
shape again.