“It’s funny,” said
Toto, standing before his friend the Lion and wagging
his tail, “but I’ve found my growl at last!
I am positive now that it was the cruel magician
who stole it.”
“Let’s hear your growl,” requested
the Lion.
“G-r-r-r-r-r!” said Toto.
“That is fine,” declared
the big beast. “It isn’t as loud
or as deep as the growl of the big Lavender Bear,
but it is a very respectable growl for a small dog.
Where did you find it, Toto?”
“I was smelling in the corner
yonder,” said Toto, “when suddenly a mouse
ran out and I growled.”
The others were all busy congratulating
Ozma, who was very happy at being released from the
confinement of the golden peach pit, where the magician
had placed her with the notion that she never could
be found or liberated.
“And only to think,” cried
Dorothy, “that Button-Bright has been carrying
you in his pocket all this time, and we never knew
it!”
“The little Pink Bear told you,”
said the Bear King, “but you wouldn’t
believe him.”
“Never mind, my dears,”
said Ozma graciously, “all is well that ends
well, and you couldn’t be expected to know I
was inside the peach pit. Indeed, I feared I
would remain a captive much longer than I did, for
Ugu is a bold and clever magician, and he had hidden
me very securely.”
“You were in a fine peach,”
said Button-Bright, “the best I ever ate.”
“The magician was foolish to
make the peach so tempting,” remarked the Wizard,
“but Ozma would lend beauty to any transformation.”
“How did you manage to conquer
Ugu the Shoemaker?” inquired the girl Ruler
of Oz.
Dorothy started to tell the story,
and Trot helped her, and Button-Bright wanted to relate
it in his own way, and the Wizard tried to make it
clear to Ozma, and Betsy had to remind them of important
things they left out, and all together there was such
a chatter that it was a wonder that Ozma understood
any of it. But she listened patiently, with
a smile on her lovely face at their eagerness, and
presently had gleaned all the details of their adventures.
Ozma thanked the Frogman very earnestly
for his assistance, and she advised Cayke the Cookie
Cook to dry her weeping eyes, for she promised to
take her to the Emerald City and see that her cherished
dishpan was restored to her. Then the beautiful
Ruler took a chain of emeralds from around her own
neck and placed it around the neck of the little Pink
Bear.
“Your wise answers to the questions
of my friends,” said she, “helped them
to rescue me. Therefore I am deeply grateful
to you and to your noble King.”
The bead eyes of the little Pink Bear
stared unresponsive to this praise until the Big Lavender
Bear turned the crank in its side, when it said in
its squeaky voice, “I thank Your Majesty.”
“For my part,” returned
the Bear King, “I realize that you were well
worth saving, Miss Ozma, and so I am much pleased that
we could be of service to you. By means of my
Magic Wand I have been creating exact images of your
Emerald City and your Royal Palace, and I must confess
that they are more attractive than any places I have
ever seen not excepting Bear Center.”
“I would like to entertain you
in my palace,” returned Ozma sweetly, “and
you are welcome to return with me and to make me a
long visit, if your bear subjects can spare you from
your own kingdom.”
“As for that,” answered
the King, “my kingdom causes me little worry,
and I often find it somewhat tame and uninteresting.
Therefore I am glad to accept your kind invitation.
Corporal Waddle may be trusted to care for my bears
in my absence.”
“And you’ll bring the
little Pink Bear?” asked Dorothy eagerly.
“Of course, my dear. I
would not willingly part with him.”
They remained in the wicker castle
for three days, carefully packing all the magical
things that had been stolen by Ugu and also taking
whatever in the way of magic the shoemaker had inherited
from his ancestors. “For,” said
Ozma, “I have forbidden any of my subjects except
Glinda the Good and the Wizard of Oz to practice magical
arts, because they cannot be trusted to do good and
not harm. Therefore Ugu must never again be
permitted to work magic of any sort.”
“Well,” remarked Dorothy
cheerfully, “a dove can’t do much in the
way of magic, anyhow, and I’m going to keep
Ugu in the form of a dove until he reforms and becomes
a good and honest shoemaker.”
When everything was packed and loaded
on the backs of the animals, they set out for the
river, taking a more direct route than that by which
Cayke and the Frogman had come. In this way they
avoided the Cities of Thi and Herku and Bear Center
and after a pleasant journey reached the Winkie River
and found a jolly ferryman who had a fine, big boat
and was willing to carry the entire party by water
to a place quite near to the Emerald City.
The river had many windings and many
branches, and the journey did not end in a day, but
finally the boat floated into a pretty lake which was
but a short distance from Ozma’s home.
Here the jolly ferryman was rewarded for his labors,
and then the entire party set out in a grand procession
to march to the Emerald City. News that the Royal
Ozma had been found spread quickly throughout the
neighborhood, and both sides of the road soon became
lined with loyal subjects of the beautiful and beloved
Ruler. Therefore Ozma’s ears heard little
but cheers, and her eyes beheld little else than waving
handkerchiefs and banners during all the triumphal
march from the lake to the city’s gates.
And there she met a still greater
concourse, for all the inhabitants of the Emerald
City turned out to welcome her return, and all the
houses were decorated with flags and bunting, and
never before were the people so joyous and happy as
at this moment when they welcomed home their girl
Ruler. For she had been lost and was now found
again, and surely that was cause for rejoicing.
Glinda was at the royal palace to meet the returning
party, and the good Sorceress was indeed glad to have
her Great Book of Records returned to her, as well
as all the precious collection of magic instruments
and élixirs and chemicals that had been stolen
from her castle. Cap’n Bill and the Wizard
at once hung the Magic Picture upon the wall of Ozma’s
boudoir, and the Wizard was so light-hearted that
he did several tricks with the tools in his black
bag to amuse his companions and prove that once again
he was a powerful wizard.
For a whole week there was feasting
and merriment and all sorts of joyous festivities
at the palace in honor of Ozma’s safe return.
The Lavender Bear and the little Pink Bear received
much attention and were honored by all, much to the
Bear King’s satisfaction. The Frogman
speedily became a favorite at the Emerald City, and
the Shaggy Man and Tik-Tok and Jack Pumpkinhead, who
had now returned from their search, were very polite
to the big frog and made him feel quite at home.
Even the Cookie Cook, because she was quite a stranger
and Ozma’s guest, was shown as much deference
as if she had been a queen.
“All the same, Your Majesty,”
said Cayke to Ozma, day after day with tiresome repetition,
“I hope you will soon find my jeweled dishpan,
for never can I be quite happy without it.”