Kiki turned around and saw a queer
old man standing near. He didn’t stand
straight, for he was crooked. He had a fat body
and thin legs and arms. He had a big, round
face with bushy, white whiskers that came to a point
below his waist, and white hair that came to a point
on top of his head. He wore dull-gray clothes
that were tight fitting, and his pockets were all
bunched out as if stuffed full of something.
“I didn’t know you were here,” said
Kiki.
“I didn’t come until after you did,”
said the queer old man.
“Who are you?” asked Kiki.
“My name’s Ruggedo.
I used to be the Nome King; but I got kicked out
of my country, and now I’m a wanderer.”
“What made them kick you out?” inquired
the Hyup boy.
“Well, it’s the fashion
to kick kings nowadays. I was a pretty good
King to myself but those dreadful
Oz people wouldn’t let me alone. So I had
to abdicate.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means to be kicked out.
But let’s talk about something pleasant.
Who are you and where did you come from?”
“I’m called Kiki Aru.
I used to live on Mount Munch in the Land of Oz,
but now I’m a wanderer like yourself.”
The Nome King gave him a shrewd look.
“I heard that bird say that
you transformed yourself into a magpie and back again.
Is that true?”
Kiki hesitated, but saw no reason
to deny it. He felt that it would make him appear
more important.
“Well yes,” he said.
“Then you’re a wizard?”
“No; I only understand transformations,”
he admitted.
“Well, that’s pretty good
magic, anyhow,” declared old Ruggedo. “I
used to have some very fine magic, myself, but my enemies
took it all away from me. Where are you going
now?”
“I’m going into the inn, to get some supper
and a bed,” said Kiki.
“Have you the money to pay for it?” asked
the Nome.
“I have one gold piece.”
“Which you stole. Very
good. And you’re glad that you’re
wicked. Better yet. I like you, young man,
and I’ll go to the inn with you if you’ll
promise not to eat eggs for supper.”
“Don’t you like eggs?” asked Kiki.
“I’m afraid of ’em; they’re
dangerous!” said Ruggedo, with a shudder.
“All right,” agreed Kiki; “I won’t
ask for eggs.”
“Then come along,” said the Nome.
When they entered the inn, the landlord scowled at
Kiki and said:
“I told you I would not feed you unless you
had money.”
Kiki showed him the gold piece.
“And how about you?” asked
the landlord, turning to Ruggedo. “Have
you money?”
“I’ve something better,”
answered the old Nome, and taking a bag from one of
his pockets he poured from it upon the table a mass
of glittering gems diamonds, rubies and
emeralds.
The landlord was very polite to the
strangers after that. He served them an excellent
supper, and while they ate it, the Hyup boy asked his
companion:
“Where did you get so many jewels?”
“Well, I’ll tell you,”
answered the Nome. “When those Oz people
took my kingdom away from me just because
it was my kingdom and I wanted to run it to suit myself they
said I could take as many precious stones as I could
carry. So I had a lot of pockets made in my clothes
and loaded them all up. Jewels are fine things
to have with you when you travel; you can trade them
for anything.”
“Are they better than gold pieces?” asked
Kiki.
“The smallest of these jewels
is worth a hundred gold pieces such as you stole from
the old man.”
“Don’t talk so loud,”
begged Kiki, uneasily. “Some one else might
hear what you are saying.”
After supper they took a walk together,
and the former Nome King said:
“Do you know the Shaggy Man,
and the Scarecrow, and the Tin Woodman, and Dorothy,
and Ozma and all the other Oz people?”
“No,” replied the boy,
“I have never been away from Mount Munch until
I flew over the Deadly Desert the other day in the
shape of a hawk.”
“Then you’ve never seen the Emerald City
of Oz?”
“Never.”
“Well,” said the Nome,
“I knew all the Oz people, and you can guess
I do not love them. All during my wanderings
I have brooded on how I can be revenged on them.
Now that I’ve met you I can see a way to conquer
the Land of Oz and be King there myself, which is better
than being King of the Nomes.”
“How can you do that?” inquired Kiki Aru,
wonderingly.
“Never mind how. In the
first place, I’ll make a bargain with you.
Tell me the secret of how to perform transformations
and I will give you a pocketful of jewels, the biggest
and finest that I possess.”
“No,” said Kiki, who realized
that to share his power with another would be dangerous
to himself.
“I’ll give you two pocketsful of
jewels,” said the Nome.
“No,” answered Kiki.
“I’ll give you every jewel I possess.”
“No, no, no!” said Kiki, who was beginning
to be frightened.
“Then,” said the Nome,
with a wicked look at the boy, “I’ll tell
the inn-keeper that you stole that gold piece and
he will have you put in prison.”
Kiki laughed at the threat.
“Before he can do that,”
said he, “I will transform myself into a lion
and tear him to pieces, or into a bear and eat him
up, or into a fly and fly away where he could not
find me.”
“Can you really do such wonderful
transformations?” asked the old Nome, looking
at him curiously.
“Of course,” declared
Kiki. “I can transform you into a stick
of wood, in a flash, or into a stone, and leave you
here by the roadside.”
“The wicked Nome shivered a
little when he heard that, but it made him long more
than ever to possess the great secret. After
a while he said:
“I’ll tell you what I’ll
do. If you will help me to conquer Oz and to
transform the Oz people, who are my enemies, into sticks
or stones, by telling me your secret, I’ll agree
to make you the Ruler of all Oz, and I will be
your Prime Minister and see that your orders are obeyed.”
“I’ll help do that,”
said Kiki, “but I won’t tell you my secret.”
The Nome was so furious at this refusal
that he jumped up and down with rage and spluttered
and choked for a long time before he could control
his passion. But the boy was not at all frightened.
He laughed at the wicked old Nome, which made him
more furious than ever.
“Let’s give up the idea,”
he proposed, when Ruggedo had quieted somewhat.
“I don’t know the Oz people you mention
and so they are not my enemies. If they’ve
kicked you out of your kingdom, that’s your
affair not mine.”
“Wouldn’t you like to
be king of that splendid fairyland?” asked Ruggedo.
“Yes, I would,” replied
Kiki Aru; “but you want to be king yourself,
and we would quarrel over it.”
“No,” said the Nome, trying
to deceive him. “I don’t care to
be King of Oz, come to think it over. I don’t
even care to live in that country. What I want
first is revenge. If we can conquer Oz, I’ll
get enough magic then to conquer my own Kingdom of
the Nomes, and I’ll go back and live in
my underground caverns, which are more home-like than
the top of the earth. So here’s my proposition:
Help me conquer Oz and get revenge, and help me get
the magic away from Glinda and the Wizard, and I’ll
let you be King of Oz forever afterward.”
“I’ll think it over,”
answered Kiki, and that is all he would say that evening.
In the night when all in the Inn were
asleep but himself, old Ruggedo the Nome rose softly
from his couch and went into the room of Kiki Aru
the Hyup, and searched everywhere for the magic tool
that performed his transformations. Of course,
there was no such tool, and although Ruggedo searched
in all the boy’s pockets, he found nothing magical
whatever. So he went back to his bed and began
to doubt that Kiki could perform transformations.
Next morning he said:
“Which way do you travel to-day?”
“I think I shall visit the Rose Kingdom,”
answered the boy.
“That is a long journey,” declared the
Nome.
“I shall transform myself into
a bird,” said Kiki, “and so fly to the
Rose Kingdom in an hour.”
“Then transform me, also, into
a bird, and I will go with you,” suggested Ruggedo.
“But, in that case, let us fly together to the
Land of Oz, and see what it looks like.”
Kiki thought this over. Pleasant
as were the countries he had visited, he heard everywhere
that the Land of Oz was more beautiful and delightful.
The Land of Oz was his own country, too, and if there
was any possibility of his becoming its King, he must
know something about it.
While Kiki the Hyup thought, Ruggedo
the Nome was also thinking. This boy possessed
a marvelous power, and although very simple in some
ways, he was determined not to part with his secret.
However, if Ruggedo could get him to transport the
wily old Nome to Oz, which he could reach in no other
way, he might then induce the boy to follow his advice
and enter into the plot for revenge, which he had already
planned in his wicked heart.
“There are wizards and magicians
in Oz,” remarked Kiki, after a time. “They
might discover us, in spite of our transformations.”
“Not if we are careful,”
Ruggedo assured him. “Ozma has a Magic
Picture, in which she can see whatever she wishes to
see; but Ozma will know nothing of our going to Oz,
and so she will not command her Magic Picture to show
where we are or what we are doing. Glinda the
Good has a Great Book called the Book of Records,
in which is magically written everything that people
do in the Land of Oz, just the instant they do it.”
“Then,” said Kiki, “there
is no use our attempting to conquer the country, for
Glinda would read in her book all that we do, and as
her magic is greater than mine, she would soon put
a stop to our plans.”
“I said ‘people,’
didn’t I?” retorted the Nome. “The
book doesn’t make a record of what birds do,
or beasts. It only tells the doings of people.
So, if we fly into the country as birds, Glinda won’t
know anything about it.”
“Two birds couldn’t conquer
the Land of Oz,” asserted the boy, scornfully.
“No; that’s true,”
admitted Ruggedo, and then he rubbed his forehead
and stroked his long pointed beard and thought some
more.
“Ah, now I have the idea!”
he declared. “I suppose you can transform
us into beasts as well as birds?”
“Of course.”
“And can you make a bird a beast,
and a beast a bird again, without taking a human form
in between?”
“Certainly,” said Kiki.
“I can transform myself or others into anything
that can talk. There’s a magic word that
must be spoken in connection with the transformations,
and as beasts and birds and dragons and fishes can
talk in Oz, we may become any of these we desire to.
However, if I transformed myself into a tree, I would
always remain a tree, because then I could not utter
the magic word to change the transformation.”
“I see; I see,” said Ruggedo,
nodding his bushy, white head until the point of his
hair waved back and forth like a pendulum. “That
fits in with my idea, exactly. Now, listen,
and I’ll explain to you my plan. We’ll
fly to Oz as birds and settle in one of the thick forests
in the Gillikin Country. There you will transform
us into powerful beasts, and as Glinda doesn’t
keep any track of the doings of beasts we can act
without being discovered.”
“But how can two beasts raise
an army to conquer the powerful people of Oz?”
inquired Kiki.
“That’s easy. But
not an army of people, mind you. That would
be quickly discovered. And while we are in Oz
you and I will never resume our human forms until
we’ve conquered the country and destroyed Glinda,
and Ozma, and the Wizard, and Dorothy, and all the
rest, and so have nothing more to fear from them.”
“It is impossible to kill anyone
in the Land of Oz,” declared Kiki.
“It isn’t necessary to
kill the Oz people,” rejoined Ruggedo.
“I’m afraid I don’t
understand you,” objected the boy. “What
will happen to the Oz people, and what sort of an
army could we get together, except of people?”
“I’ll tell you.
The forests of Oz are full of beasts. Some of
them, in the far-away places, are savage and cruel,
and would gladly follow a leader as savage as themselves.
They have never troubled the Oz people much, because
they had no leader to urge them on, but we will tell
them to help us conquer Oz and as a reward we will
transform all the beasts into men and women, and let
them live in the houses and enjoy all the good things;
and we will transform all the people of Oz into beasts
of various sorts, and send them to live in the forests
and the jungles. That is a splendid idea, you
must admit, and it’s so easy that we won’t
have any trouble at all to carry it through to success.”
“Will the beasts consent, do you think?”
asked the boy.
“To be sure they will.
We can get every beast in Oz on our side except
a few who live in Ozma’s palace, and they won’t
count.”