For several minutes they all stood
staring at the black spot on the canvas of the Magic
Picture, wondering what it could mean. “P’r’aps
we’d better ask the little Pink Bear about Ozma,”
suggested Trot.
“Pshaw!” said Button-Bright. “He
don’t know anything.”
“He never makes a mistake,” declared the
King.
“He did once, surely,”
said Betsy. “But perhaps he wouldn’t
make a mistake again.”
“He won’t have the chance,” grumbled
the Bear King.
“We might hear what he has to
say,” said Dorothy. “It won’t
do any harm to ask the Pink Bear where Ozma is.”
“I will not have him questioned,”
declared the King in a surly voice. “I
do not intend to allow my little Pink Bear to be again
insulted by your foolish doubts. He never makes
a mistake.”
“Didn’t he say Ozma was
in that hole in the ground?” asked Betsy.
“He did, and I am certain she
was there,” replied the Lavender Bear.
Scraps laughed jeeringly, and the
others saw there was no use arguing with the stubborn
Bear King, who seemed to have absolute faith in his
Pink Bear. The Wizard, who knew that magical
things can usually be depended upon and that the little
Pink Bear was able to answer questions by some remarkable
power of magic, thought it wise to apologize to the
Lavender Bear for the unbelief of his friends, at the
same time urging the King to consent to question the
Pink Bear once more. Cayke and the Frogman also
pleaded with the big Bear, who finally agreed, although
rather ungraciously, to put the little Bear’s
wisdom to the test once more. So he sat the little
one on his knee and turned the crank, and the Wizard
himself asked the questions in a very respectful tone
of voice. “Where is Ozma?” was his
first query.
“Here in this room,” answered the little
Pink Bear.
They all looked around the room, but
of course did not see her. “In what part
of the room is she?” was the Wizard’s next
question.
“In Button-Bright’s pocket,” said
the little Pink Bear.
This reply amazed them all, you may
be sure, and although the three girls smiled and Scraps
yelled “Hoo-ray!” in derision, the Wizard
turned to consider the matter with grave thoughtfulness.
“In which one of Button-Bright’s pockets
is Ozma?” he presently inquired.
“In the left-hand jacket pocket,”
said the little Pink Bear.
“The pink one has gone crazy!”
exclaimed Button-Bright, staring hard at the little
bear on the big bear’s knee.
“I am not so sure of that,”
declared the Wizard. “If Ozma proves to
be really in your pocket, then the little Pink Bear
spoke truly when he said Ozma was in that hole in
the ground. For at that time you were also in
the hole, and after we had pulled you out of it, the
little Pink Bear said Ozma was not in the hole.”
“He never makes a mistake,”
asserted the Bear King stoutly.
“Empty that pocket, Button-Bright,
and let’s see what’s in it,” requested
Dorothy.
So Button-Bright laid the contents
of his left jacket pocket on the table. These
proved to be a peg top, a bunch of string, a small
rubber ball and a golden peach pit. “What’s
this?” asked the Wizard, picking up the peach
pit and examining it closely.
“Oh,” said the boy, “I
saved that to show to the girls, and then forgot all
about it. It came out of a lonesome peach that
I found in the orchard back yonder, and which I ate
while I was lost. It looks like gold, and I
never saw a peach pit like it before.”
“Nor I,” said the Wizard,
“and that makes it seem suspicious.”
All heads were bent over the golden
peach pit. The Wizard turned it over several
times and then took out his pocket knife and pried
the pit open. As the two halves fell apart,
a pink, cloud-like haze came pouring from the golden
peach pit, almost filling the big room, and from the
haze a form took shape and settled beside them.
Then, as the haze faded away, a sweet voice said,
“Thank you, my friends!” and there before
them stood their lovely girl Ruler, Ozma of Oz.
With a cry of delight, Dorothy rushed
forward and embraced her. Scraps turned gleeful
flipflops all around the room. Button-Bright
gave a low whistle of astonishment. The Frogman
took off his tall hat and bowed low before the beautiful
girl who had been freed from her enchantment in so
startling a manner. For a time, no sound was
heard beyond the low murmur of delight that came from
the amazed group, but presently the growl of the big
Lavender Bear grew louder, and he said in a tone of
triumph, “He never makes a mistake!”