L. Frank Baum - Oz 20
Page 7
Hungry Tiger. They were all anxious to leave Down Town, and when Betsy told them a little about subways (she had often been in subways in the United States) the Hungry Tiger gave the signal to start.
“We’ve fogotten the barber and the singer,” exclaimed Betsy, pausing suddenly on the top step. But just then the two Rashers came hurrying over, and when the Hungry Tiger announced that they were going Up Town and from there back to the Marvelous Land of Oz, both drew back.
“I’ve had enough ups and downs in my life,” sighed the barber, “and will remain here and make my fortune. By that time Prince Evered may, perchance, be restored to his throne. Then and then only will I return to Rash.” The singer, after one look into the gloomy opening, declared that he too, preferred to stay Down Town.
“With this harp and my beautiful voice, I will soon be a rich man,” he assured them earnestly, and with many goodbyes and good wishes the four travellers left them to make their fortunes. Long after they had descended the steps and entered the subway itself, they could hear the plaintive wails of the sad singer and the thrum of the harp he had picked from the Indus Tree.
It was dim and mysterious in the underground passageway, and after looking in vain for a car or train to carry them Up Town, Betsy began following the arrows painted on the white washed walls.
“There ought to be a car somewhere,” panted the little girl, after they had made at least fifty
turns.
“Try mine,” invited Carter, and with a tired smile Betsy dropped into the wheelbarrow. Reddy was riding the Hungry Tiger, and after they had proceeded for more than an hour, the arrows stopped altogether.
“Well, this isn’t like our subways at all,” exclaimed Betsy in disgust. “When you take a subway at home, you get somewhere.”
“Isn’t this somewhere?” asked Carter, stooping a little so he could enter a rough stone cavern at the end of the tunnel. Whistling cheerfully, he trundled Betsy through the low doorway. The Hungry Tiger followed, sniffing the air suspiciously, and it must be confessed that the little rock chamber did not look very inviting. The walls were ofjagged gray stone, the floor damp and slippery and the whole place dismal and chilly as a vault. A feeble light flickered down from an opening in the ceiling and after a
discouraged look round, Betsy shook her head.
“We’ll have to go back Down Town,” she sighed sadly. “I’ll have to be a cash girl after all!”
“No you won’t!” called Reddy. He had jumped off the tiger and gone to examine the back of the cavern. “Here’s a door!” Hurrying over, the others saw that the little Prince was right.
“‘Cave Inn,’ ” roared the Hungry Tiger, reading the door plate over the little boy’s shoulder. “ ‘Knock three times.’ Why, that’s fine! If it’s an Inn, they’ll surely have something to eat. We can’t get out so we might as well go in,” he finished with a playful wink at Carter. Stepping back a few paces, the Hungry Tiger ran at the door and bumped his head three times against the brass plate. At the third bump, the door of Cave Inn flew open, the floor of the cave itself,. tilted forward and the four adventurers fell through. Stones and dirt rattled down after them and the Hungry Tiger’s growls mingled with the screams of Betsy and Evered, as they went tumbling down into the darkness.
CHAPTER 10
The Magic Spectacles
KALIKO, King of all the gnomes, and metal monarch besides, sat gloomily on the jewelled rock throne in his underground cavern.
“Nothing ever happens here,” complained Kaliko, frowning at his Royal Chamberlain.
“Let’s have a war,” proposed Guph, looking up from the ruby scepter he was polishing. “We haven’t had a war since Ruggedo left.”
“Ruggedo!” shrilled Kaliko, stamping his foot furiously. “How dare you mention that name in my presence. Begone! Begone and never speak to me again.
“Then I’ll write,” mumbled Guph, and picking up his bottle of ruby polish unconcernedly he left
the throne room. Ruggedo was the former King and had ruled over the gnomes for many years. He had been deposed for his wickedness by a powerful Jinn and Kaliko was made monarch in his place. Later Ruggedo had tried to capture Oz, itself, and had been banished by Ozma to a lonely isle in the Nonestic Ocean.
But wicked as Ruggedo had been, the gnomes often sighed for his return. Things had been more interesting during Ruggedo’s reign and though Kaliko was a good King, he was not half so interesting. Kaliko knew this and any mention of the old gnome king always irritated him intensely. For several moments after Guph’s departure, he continued to mutter and mumble with displeasure. Then, suddenly bethinking himself of a new invention of the chief wizard, he reached into his pocket and brought out a green case. In the case was a pair of pink spectacles, not merely spectacles, mind you, but exspectacles, and the gnome wizard had assured the King that with them he could see events before they occurred.
Kaliko had not yet tried this new contrivance, and still grumbling a little he set the exspectacles upon his nose and stared drearily at the rock wall in front of him. He really did not expect anything to happen. Therefore, when. four figures appeared suddenly upon the wall, he gave a start of astonishment. Reflected upon the rock surface as clearly as if it were a moving picture, he could see four people making their way through the Lost Labyrinth at the Southern end of his dominions.
“Guph! Guph!” shrieked the Gnome King, pounding vigorously on the gong at his side. “Come back here at once. And when Guph, rather sulkily, appeared, he pointed excitedly at the wall.
“Look! Look!” commanded Kaliko. “It’s Betsy Bobbin, the Hungry Tiger of Oz and two others. What in mud is that fellow made of anyway?”
Rubbing his eyes, Guph stared at the wall and then at his master. Then, taking a scrap of paper from a rock desk beside the throne, he scribbled two words on the paper and handed it to the King.
“You’re crazy, stated the paper, quite saucily.
“How dare you write to me like that!” fumed Kaliko, tearing the paper in two. “Are you dumb, can’t you speak? Are you blind, can’t you see?” He waved again at the great rock. Then, suddenly realizing that Guph had not the exspectacles to help him, tore them off and clapped them upon the Chief Chamberlain’s nose. Immediately Guph was as excited as Kaliko.
“Hurrah!” exulted the little gnome, forgetting his determination not to speak to the King again. “Hurrah! Now we can have a war. Shall I call out the Guard and have the red hot dungeons heated?
Hah, Hah, Hah!”
“What are you laughing at?” exclaimed Kaliko, as Guph doubled up with mirth.
“That animated truck garden,” panted Guph. “He’s fallen on his corn ear and the Hungry Tiger just slipped into a mud hole!”
“Let me see,” cried the King, snatching the exspectacles back again. And for the next five minutes Kaliko and his Chief Chamberlain fought bitterly for possession of the magic glasses. As soon as Kaliko had them, Guph wanted to see how the travelers were progressing, and as soon as Guph had them Kaliko insisted on having them back.
“Well, shall we have a war?” grumbled Guph, as Kaliko seized the specs for the seventeenth
time.
“Certainly not,” answered the King. “Betsy’s a good friend of mine. Don’t you remember, she was here when Ruggedo was deposed? And I see no harm in these others.”
“I thought it would be like this,” muttered Guph in disgust. “You’re such a goody-goody, you never let us have any fun at all. I suppose you’ll end by inviting them all to lunch,” he finished bitterly.
“Just what I was thinking of,” admitted Kaliko cheerfully. “Pray go and conduct them the rest of the way and don’t slam the door when you go out, either.” Settling back on his throne with a little chuckle of anticipation, Kaliko continued to watch the progress of Betsy and her friends through the winding corridors of the Lost Labyrinth.
Betsy, herself, did not even know she was in the gnome King’s dominions. After a terrible tumble throug
h the dark, the four adventurers had plunged into the underground pool of a grim green grotto. While the water had broken their fall and saved them from serious injury, it had not added to their cheerfulness.
“This is not the ruby that protects me from water,” sputtered Prince Evered, as Carter dragged him out of the pool. “Ugh! I’m nearly drowned!”
“Have you still got it?” asked Betsy. The Hungry Tiger had already pulled her out and was helping Carter fish his wheelbarrow from the pool. Feeling in his pocket, the Prince nodded. Then, picking up his sword, he looked around in huge disgust.
“Is this a Cave Inn?” he demanded indignantly.
“I wonder where this passageway leads,” murmured Betsy, who had run to an opening in the grotto. “Maybe there’s an inn after all.” But there was no sign of an inn anywhere-only a maze of rocky corridors branching out in every direction. With Betsy and Reddy on his back, the Hungry Tiger stepped cautiously Out of the grotto and started down the widest of the curious corridors. The floors were slippery with moss covered rocks, the ceiling was of glittering green stones, shaped like long, jagged icicles.
Betsy and the Prince of Rash often had to lie flat on the tiger’s back to escape their sharp points, while poor Carter Green was forced to bend double, as he walked. Sure-footed as he was, the Hungry Tiger slipped again and again on the treacherous stones and Carter’s progress was a succession of spills, slides and tumbles. Through it all the Vegetable Man maintained his cheerfulness, stubbornly refusing to abandon the wheelbarrow, but after an hour of winding in and out of the dreary labyrinth had still brought them nowhere, even the Vegetable Man grew anxious and sad. A thin blue mold was beginning to form on the end of his nose.
“If I don’t get out of here soon, I’ll spoil,” he wheezed nervously. “Do you see any opening
ahead?”
The Hungry Tiger was about to reply when he slipped into the mud-hole that had so amused Guph. This so discouraged the poor beast he said nothing at all. Indeed, the rest of their journey, while interesting to Kaliko, watching comfortably from his throne, was neither interesting or amusing to the travellers themselves. When they came at last to an impassible rock wall and realized they must retrace their steps, Carter sank dejectedly into the wheelbarrow and the Hungry Tiger lay down and panted with exhaustion. Imagine their astonishment, when a door in the wall suddenly opened and Guph, bearing a blazing ruby lantern, appeared before them.
“Follow me,” commanded Guph disagreeably. “His Majesty has foolishly invited you to lunch.”
“It’s a gnome!” cried Betsy in surprise. “Why, we must be in the Gnome King’s dominions.”
“I was here with Dorothy and Billina, when we rescued the Queen of Ev and her ten children,” puffed the Hungry Tiger, rising to his feet. “Ruggedo was King then, but he’s been put out of the Kingdom, I understand.”
“I wonder if Kaliko’s still King?” exclaimed Betsy. The little girl had had a whole book of adventures with Ruggedo and had even been present at Kaliko’s coronation. “Oh, I do hope Kaliko’s the King,” she finished earnestly.
“Well, if you’re going to wonder and hope, stay here,” grumbled Guph. “If you’re coming to lunch, follow me.” Without waiting for an answer, the crooked little elf turned on his heel and started rapidly down the narrow passageway. The Hungry Tiger looked questioningly back at Carter and Carter looked uneasily at Betsy.
“Let’s go,” decided the little girl sensibly. “If Kaliko’s still King I know he’ll help us.”
“If he don’t, I’ll slice off his nose,” declared Reddy, peering over Betsy’s shoulder in an endeavor to catch another glimpse of Guph. He had never seen a gnome before, and as they hurried after the King’s messenger, Betsy explained a bit about these queer rock-colored elves, who live under the earth’s surface and dig for precious metals and stones. They passed hundreds of the busy little men on their way through the rocky tunnels, and when Guph entered the underground castle of the Gnome King, himself, both Carter Green and Prince Evered gasped with astonishment and admiration. Lighted with jeweled lanterns, spread with silken rugs, furnished with taste and even magnificence, the spacious caverns opened in a blaze of splendor before the visitors. The Gnome King’s dwelling was an old story to Betsy and the Hungry Tiger. They were more interested in knowing who was King, and when the tiger, hurrying after Guph, burst suddenly into the throne room, Betsy gave a cry of real pleasure.
“Why,. hello, Kaliko!” cried the little girl, jumping down and running over to him eagerly.
“King Kaliko, if you don’t mind,” whispered the gnome looking nervously at Guph, who was making faces at the Hungry Tiger. “How did you happen into these parts, my dear?”
“We caved in,” growled the Hungry Tiger, sniffing the air anxiously. “Is lunch nearly ready, old fellow? I’m perishing for a square meal.”
“Certainly!Certainly!” Kaliko answered politely. “But first introduce me to your friends. I’ve been watching you through my exspectacles for an hour.”
“Exspectacles!” exclaimed Betsy. “Well, I was wondering how you knew we were here.” With a proud smile Kaliko held out the pink glasses and explained how they worked and, while the little Prince and Betsy were still examining his specs, the Gnome King begged them to sit down and tell him the whole story of their adventures.
“For I’m quite sure,” surmised Kaliko looking curiously from one to the other, but longest at Carter Green, “I’m quite sure you’ve been having some amazing adventures.”
Betsy nodded vigorously and Carter grinned from ear to ear, which seemed to surprise Kaliko very much. Then, seating herself in a little rock rocking chair, Betsy told how the Hungry Tiger had been carried to Rash, of her meeting with the Vegetable Man and the strange manner in which they had arrived in the same Kingdom. Then she went on with Prince Evered’s story, told how he had been deprived of his throne and robbed of the three Rash rubies.
As Betsy described the magical powers of the stolen gems, the Gnome King leaned forward with sudden interest and as the little girl explained how the Vegetable Man had come into possession of one of the lost rubies, Carter saw a surprised look flash between Kaliko and his Chief Chamberlain. Then he saw the Gnome King slip a small ring from his finger and hide it in a crevice of his throne. None of the others noticed Kaliko’s action at all. Reddy was too interested in the Gnome’s curious cavern to bother about any possible danger, the Hungry Tiger’s eyes had closed in a momentary doze and Betsy, herself, seemed to have the greatest confidence in the King.
“I’ll have to watch out for all of us,” decided Carter, hurriedly wiping the mold from his nose. And while Betsy continued her story, the Vegetable Man began to examine the King’s cavern with great care. “We may have to leave in a hurry,” thought Carter nervously.
“Lend me those exspectacles,” mumbled the Hungry Tiger sleepily, as the little girl told Kaliko their intention of returning to the Emerald City as soon as they could and having Ozma restore Reddy to his throne. “Lend me those exspectacles.” When the little Prince of Rash held them up before the Hungry Tiger’s eyes, he gave a roar of delight.
“What do you see?” asked Reddy curiously.
“What do I see?” purred the Hungry Tiger licking his chops. “Why, I see that lunch is ready at last. Come on fellows!”
“He’s right,” chuckled Kaliko, taking back his glasses. “For I ordered it an hour ago. This way my dear.” Taking Betsy’s arm, the Gnome King led the way to his crystal dining hall where one table was set cozily for four, and another, apparently for a dozen. “I haven’t forgotten your tremendous appetite, you see, smiled Kaliko, waving toward the low table along which roasts of beef and legs of lamb were ranged in a tempting row. The Hungry Tiger gave a sigh of satisfaction, and without waiting for a knife, fork or napkin, began to munch his way hungrily down the table. For Betsy and the little Prince, Kaliko had prepared an alluring luncheon of fried chicken, sweet potatoes and peach pie. At the Vegetable Man’
s place stood a sparkling glass of root beer.
“I didn’t suppose you’d care to eat,” observed Kaliko tactfully, “but I was sure you would enjoy our National drink.”
Carter was so touched by the Gnome King’s thoughtfulness that he began to reproach himself for his unkind suspicions.
Kaliko, himself, ate sparingly of a hot mud pie and swallowed a cup of scalding black rock coffee and, while ten little nimble gnomes waited on the table, he and Betsy talked over old Oz times and discussed means of crossing the Deadly Desert.
“I don’t know how you feel,” yawned the Hungry Tiger, when he had finally worked his way to the end of his long table, “but I feel like a nap.
Betsy and the little Prince admitted that they were tired, too, and immediately Guph showed them to a splendid suite of guest caverns, just off the throne room. The Vegetable Man slammed his door hard, then opened it quite noiselessly. Just as he had expected, the two gnomes had their heads close together. Now, when it comes to hearing there is nothing so fine as a corn ear and what Carter heard through his made him tremble with indignation.
“If.you weren’t such a miserable mole,” muttered Guph bitterly, “you’d get that other ruby!”
CHAPTER 11
The Second Rash Ruby
I TOLD you there was a strange power in that ruby when you bought it from the fisherman,” hissed Guph. “No ruby has an R carved in the side without some reason. It is undoubtedly one of the magic rubies of Rash-the one protecting the holder from danger by water.”