The Glass Cat was a good guide and
led Trot and Cap’n Bill by straight and easy
paths through all the settled part of the Munchkin
Country, and then into the north section where there
were few houses, and finally through a wild country
where there were no houses or paths at all.
But the walking was not difficult and at last they
came to the edge of a forest and stopped there to
make camp and sleep until morning.
From branches of trees Cap’n
Bill made a tiny house that was just big enough for
the little girl to crawl into and lie down. But
first they ate some of the food Trot had carried in
the basket.
“Don’t you want some, too?” she
asked the Glass Cat.
“No,” answered the creature.
“I suppose you’ll hunt around an’
catch a mouse,” remarked Cap’n Bill.
“Me? Catch a mouse! Why should I
do that?” inquired the Glass Cat.
“Why, then you could eat it,” said the
sailor-man.
“I beg to inform you,”
returned the crystal tabby, “that I do not eat
mice. Being transparent, so anyone can see through
me, I’d look nice, wouldn’t I, with a
common mouse inside me? But the fact is that
I haven’t any stomach or other machinery that
would permit me to eat things. The careless
magician who made me didn’t think I’d need
to eat, I suppose.”
“Don’t you ever get hungry or thirsty?”
asked Trot.
“Never. I don’t
complain, you know, at the way I’m made, for
I’ve never yet seen any living thing as beautiful
as I am. I have the handsomest brains in the
world. They’re pink, and you can see ’em
work.”
“I wonder,” said Trot
thoughtfully, as she ate her bread and jam, “if
my brains whirl around in the same way yours do.”
“No; not the same way, surely,”
returned the Glass Cat; “for, in that case,
they’d be as good as my brains, except that
they’re hidden under a thick, boney skull.”
“Brains,” remarked Cap’n
Bill, “is of all kinds and work different ways.
But I’ve noticed that them as thinks that their
brains is best is often mistook.”
Trot was a little disturbed by sounds
from the forest, that night, for many beasts seemed
prowling among the trees, but she was confident Cap’n
Bill would protect her from harm. And in fact,
no beast ventured from the forest to attack them.
At daybreak they were up again, and
after a simple breakfast Cap’n Bill said to
the Glass Cat:
“Up anchor, Mate, and let’s
forge ahead. I don’t suppose we’re
far from that Magic Flower, are we?”
“Not far,” answered the
transparent one, as it led the way into the forest,
“but it may take you some time to get to it.”
Before long they reached the bank
of a river. It was not very wide, at this place,
but as they followed the banks in a northerly direction
it gradually broadened.
Suddenly the blue-green leaves of
the trees changed to a purple hue, and Trot noticed
this and said:
“I wonder what made the colors change like that?”
“It’s because we have
left the Munchkin Country and entered the Gillikin
Country,” explained the Glass Cat. “Also
it’s a sign our journey is nearly ended.”
The river made a sudden turn, and
after the travelers had passed around the bend, they
saw that the stream had now become as broad as a small
lake, and in the center of the Lake they beheld a little
island, not more than fifty feet in extent, either
way. Something glittered in the middle of this
tiny island, and the Glass Cat paused on the bank and
said:
“There is the gold flower-pot
containing the Magic Flower, which is very curious
and beautiful. If you can get to the island,
your task is ended except to carry the
thing home with you.”
Cap’n Bill looked at the broad
expanse of water and began to whistle a low, quavering
tune. Trot knew that the whistle meant that Cap’n
Bill was thinking, and the old sailor didn’t
look at the island as much as he looked at the trees
upon the bank where they stood. Presently he
took from the big pocket of his coat an axe-blade,
wound in an old cloth to keep the sharp edge from
cutting his clothing. Then, with a large pocket
knife, he cut a small limb from a tree and whittled
it into a handle for his axe.
“Sit down, Trot,” he advised
the girl, as he worked. “I’ve got
quite a job ahead of me now, for I’ve got to
build us a raft.”
“What do we need a raft for, Cap’n?”
“Why, to take us to the island.
We can’t walk under water, in the river bed,
as the Glass Cat did, so we must float atop the water.”
“Can you make a raft, Cap’n Bill?”
“O’ course, Trot, if you give me time.”
The little girl sat down on a log
and gazed at the Island of the Magic Flower.
Nothing else seemed to grow on the tiny isle.
There was no tree, no shrub, no grass, even, as far
as she could make out from that distance. But
the gold pot glittered in the rays of the sun, and
Trot could catch glimpses of glowing colors above
it, as the Magic Flower changed from one sort to another.
“When I was here before,”
remarked the Glass Cat, lazily reclining at the girl’s
feet, “I saw two Kalidahs on this very bank,
where they had come to drink.”
“What are Kalidahs?” asked the girl.
“The most powerful and ferocious
beasts in all Oz. This forest is their especial
home, and so there are few other beasts to be found
except monkeys. The monkeys are spry enough to
keep out of the way of the fierce Kalidahs, which
attack all other animals and often fight among themselves.”
“Did they try to fight you when
you saw ’em?” asked Trot, getting very
much excited.
“Yes. They sprang upon
me in an instant; but I lay flat on the ground, so
I wouldn’t get my legs broken by the great weight
of the beasts, and when they tried to bite me I laughed
at them and jeered them until they were frantic with
rage, for they nearly broke their teeth on my hard
glass. So, after a time, they discovered they
could not hurt me, and went away. It was great
fun.”
“I hope they don’t come
here again to drink, not while we’re
here, anyhow,” returned the girl, “for
I’m not made of glass, nor is Cap’n Bill,
and if those bad beasts bit us, we’d get hurt.”
Cap’n Bill was cutting from
the trees some long stakes, making them sharp at one
end and leaving a crotch at the other end. These
were to bind the logs of his raft together.
He had fashioned several and was just finishing another
when the Glass Cat cried: “Look out!
There’s a Kalidah coming toward us.”
Trot jumped up, greatly frightened,
and looked at the terrible animal as if fascinated
by its fierce eyes, for the Kalidah was looking at
her, too, and its look wasn’t at all friendly.
But Cap’n Bill called to her: “Wade
into the river, Trot, up to your knees an’
stay there!” and she obeyed him at once.
The sailor-man hobbled forward, the stake in one
hand and his axe in the other, and got between the
girl and the beast, which sprang upon him with a growl
of defiance.
Cap’n Bill moved pretty slowly,
sometimes, but now he was quick as could be.
As the Kalidah sprang toward him he stuck out his
wooden leg and the point of it struck the beast between
the eyes and sent it rolling upon the ground.
Before it could get upon its feet again the sailor
pushed the sharp stake right through its body and then
with the flat side of the axe he hammered the stake
as far into the ground as it would go. By this
means he captured the great beast and made it harmless,
for try as it would, it could not get away from the
stake that held it.
Cap’n Bill knew he could not
kill the Kalidah, for no living thing in Oz can be
killed, so he stood back and watched the beast wriggle
and growl and paw the earth with its sharp claws,
and then, satisfied it could not escape, he told Trot
to come out of the water again and dry her wet shoes
and stockings in the sun.
“Are you sure he can’t get away?”
she asked.
“I’d bet a cookie on it,”
said Cap’n Bill, so Trot came ashore and took
off her shoes and stockings and laid them on the log
to dry, while the sailor-man resumed his work on the
raft.
The Kalidah, realizing after many
struggles that it could not escape, now became quiet,
but it said in a harsh, snarling voice:
“I suppose you think you’re
clever, to pin me to the ground in this manner.
But when my friends, the other Kalidahs, come here,
they’ll tear you to pieces for treating me this
way.”
“P’raps,” remarked
Cap’n Bill, coolly, as he chopped at the logs,
“an’ p’raps not. When are
your folks comin’ here?”
“I don’t know,”
admitted the Kalidah. “But when they do
come, you can’t escape them.”
“If they hold off long enough,
I’ll have my raft ready,” said Cap’n
Bill.
“What are you going to do with
a raft?” inquired the beast.
“We’re goin’ over
to that island, to get the Magic Flower.”
The huge beast looked at him in surprise
a moment, and then it began to laugh. The laugh
was a good deal like a roar, and it had a cruel and
derisive sound, but it was a laugh nevertheless.
“Good!” said the Kalidah.
“Good! Very good! I’m glad
you’re going to get the Magic Flower.
But what will you do with it?”
“We’re going to take it
to Ozma, as a present on her birthday.”
The Kalidah laughed again; then it
became sober. “If you get to the land
on your raft before my people can catch you,”
it said, “you will be safe from us. We
can swim like ducks, so the girl couldn’t have
escaped me by getting into the water; but Kalidahs
don’t go to that island over there.”
“Why not?” asked Trot.
The beast was silent.
“Tell us the reason,” urged Cap’n
Bill.
“Well, it’s the Isle of
the Magic Flower,” answered the Kalidah, “and
we don’t care much for magic. If you hadn’t
had a magic leg, instead of a meat one, you couldn’t
have knocked me over so easily and stuck this wooden
pin through me.”
“I’ve been to the Magic
Isle,” said the Glass Cat, “and I’ve
watched the Magic Flower bloom, and I’m sure
it’s too pretty to be left in that lonely place
where only beasts prowl around it and no else sees
it. So we’re going to take it away to
the Emerald City.”
“I don’t care,”
the beast replied in a surly tone. “We
Kalidahs would be just as contented if there wasn’t
a flower in our forest. What good are the things
anyhow?”
“Don’t you like pretty things?”
asked Trot.
“No.”
“You ought to admire my pink
brains, anyhow,” declared the Glass Cat.
“They’re beautiful and you can see ’em
work.”
The beast only growled in reply, and
Cap’n Bill, having now cut all his logs to a
proper size, began to roll them to the water’s
edge and fasten them together.