Tip reflected.
"It's a hard thing, to be a marble
statue," he thought, rebelliously, "and I'm not going to stand it. For
years I've been a bother to her, she says; so she's going to get rid of
me. Well, there's an easier way than to become a statue. No boy could
have any fun forever standing in the middle of a flower garden! I'll run
away, that's what I'll do -- and I may as well go before she makes me
drink that nasty stuff in the kettle." He waited until the snores of the
old witch announced she was fast asleep, and then he arose softly and
went to the cupboard to find something to eat.
"No use starting on a journey
without food," he decided, searching upon the narrow shelves.
He found some crusts of bread; but
he had to look into Mombi's basket to find the cheese she had brought
from the village. While turning over the contents of the basket he came
upon the pepper-box which contained the "Powder of Life."
"I may as well take this with me,"
he thought, "or Mombi'll be using it to make more mischief with." So he
put the box in his pocket, together with the bread and cheese.
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Then he cautiously left
the house and latched the door behind him. Outside both moon and
stars shone brightly, and the night seemed peaceful and inviting
after the close and ill-smelling kitchen.
"I'll be glad to get
away," said Tip, softly; "for I never did like that old woman. I
wonder how I ever came to live with her."
He was walking slowly
toward the road when a thought made him pause.
"I don't like to leave
Jack Pumpkinhead to the tender mercies of old Mombi," he
muttered. "And Jack belongs to me, for I made him even if the
old witch did bring him to life."
He retraced his steps to
the cow-stable and opened the door of the stall where the
pumpkin-headed man had been left.
Jack was standing in the
middle of the stall, and by the moonlight Tip could see he was
smiling just as jovially as ever.
"Come on!" said the boy,
beckoning."
"Where to?" asked Jack.
"You'll know as soon as I
do," answered Tip, smiling sympathetically into the pumpkin
face.
"All we've got to do now
is to tramp."
"Very well," returned
Jack, and walked awkwardly out of the stable and into the
moonlight.
Tip turned toward the road
and the man followed him. Jack walked with a sort of limp, and
occasionally one of the joints of his legs would turn backward,
instead of frontwise, almost causing him to tumble. But the
Pumpkinhead was quick to notice this, and began to take more
pains to step carefully; so that he met with few accidents.
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Tip led him along the path without
stopping an instant. They could not go very fast, but they walked steadily;
and by the time the moon sank away and the sun peeped over the hills they
had travelled so great a distance that the boy had no reason to fear pursuit
from the old witch. Moreover, he had turned first into one path, and then
into another, so that should anyone follow them it would prove very
difficult to guess which way they had gone, or where to seek them.
Fairly satisfied that he had escaped
-- for a time, at least -- being turned into a marble statue, the boy
stopped his companion and seated himself upon a rock by the roadside.
"Let's have some breakfast," he said.
Jack Pumpkinhead watched Tip
curiously, but refused to join in the repast. "I don't seem to be made the
same way you are," he said.
"I know you are not," returned Tip;
"for I made you."
"Oh! Did you?" asked Jack.
"Certainly. And put you together. And
carved your eyes and nose and ears and mouth," said Tip proudly. "And
dressed you."
Jack looked at his body and limbs
critically.
"It strikes me you made a very good
job of it," he remarked.
"Just so-so," replied Tip, modestly;
for he began to see certain defects in the construction of his man. "If I'd
known we were going to travel together I might have been a little more
particular."
"Why, then," said the Pumpkinhead, in
a tone that expressed surprise, "you must be my creator my parent my
father!"
"Or your inventor," replied the boy
with a laugh. "Yes, my son; I really believe I am!"
"Then I owe you obedience," continued
the man, "and you owe me -- support."
"That's it, exactly", declared Tip,
jumping up. "So let us be off."
"Where are we going?" asked Jack, when
they had resumed their journey.
"I'm not exactly sure," said the boy;
"but I believe we are headed South, and that will bring us, sooner or later,
to the Emerald City."
"What city is that?" enquired the
Pumpkinhead.
"Why, it's the center of the Land of
Oz, and the biggest town in all the country. I've never been there, myself,
but I've heard all about its history. It was built by a mighty and wonderful
Wizard named Oz, and everything there is of a green color -- just as
everything in this Country of the Gillikins is of a purple color."
"Is everything here purple?" asked
Jack.
"Of course it is. Can't you see?"
returned the boy.
"I believe I must be color-blind,"
said the Pumpkinhead, after staring about him.
"Well, the grass is purple, and the
trees are purple, and the houses and fences are purple," explained Tip.
"Even the mud in the roads is purple. But in the Emerald City everything is
green that is purple here. And in the Country of the Munchkins, over at the
East, everything is blue; and in the South country of the Quadlings
everything is red; and in the West country of the Winkies, where the Tin
Woodman rules, everything is yellow."
"Oh!" said Jack. Then, after a pause,
he asked: "Did you say a Tin Woodman rules the Winkies?"
"Yes; he was one of those who helped
Dorothy to destroy the Wicked Witch of the West, and the Winkies were so
grateful that they invited him to become their ruler, -- just as the people
of the Emerald City invited the Scarecrow to rule them."
"Dear me!" said Jack. "I'm getting
confused with all this history. Who is the Scarecrow?"
"Another friend of Dorothy's," replied
Tip.
"And who is Dorothy?"
"She was a girl that came here from
Kansas, a place in the big, outside World. She got blown to the Land of Oz
by a cyclone, and while she was here the Scarecrow and the Tin Woodman
accompanied her on her travels."
"And where is she now?" inquired the
Pumpkinhead.
"Glinda the Good, who rules the
Quadlings, sent her home again," said the boy.
"Oh. And what became of the
Scarecrow?"
"I told you. He rules the Emerald
City," answered Tip.
"I thought you said it was ruled by a
wonderful Wizard," objected Jack, seeming more and more confused.
"Well, so I did. Now, pay attention,
and I'll explain it," said Tip, speaking slowly and looking the smiling
Pumpkinhead squarely in the eye. "Dorothy went to the Emerald City to ask
the Wizard to send her back to Kansas; and the Scarecrow and the Tin Woodman
went with her. But the Wizard couldn't send her back, because he wasn't so
much of a Wizard as he might have been. And then they got angry at the
Wizard, and threatened to expose him; so the Wizard made a big balloon and
escaped in it, and no one has ever seen him since."
"Now, that is very interesting
history," said Jack, well pleased; "and I understand it perfectly all but
the explanation."
"I'm glad you do," responded Tip.
"After the Wizard was gone, the people of the Emerald City made His Majesty,
the Scarecrow, their King; "and I have heard that he became a very popular
ruler."
"Are we going to see this queer King?"
asked Jack, with interest.
"I think we may as well," replied the
boy; "unless you have something better to do."
"Oh, no, dear father," said the
Pumpkinhead. "I am quite willing to go wherever you please."
Next chapter...
( Tip Makes an Experiment in Magic )
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