
Of the splendid courtiers and servitors surrounding Fumbo's father only three remained, for I
regret to say that neither the servants nor the old nobility had been able to stand the hardships attendant
upon poverty, and they had left in a body the first morning Mrs. Sew-and-Sew had served oatmeal
without cream for breakfast. The army, too, had deserted and marched off to Jinxland because the King
could not buy them new uniforms, so that only three retainers were left in the old red castle on the hill.
Pudge, the oldest and fattest of the wise men, had stayed because he was fond of his room in the tower
and of Mrs. Sew-and-Sew's coffee. Scroggles, the second footman, had stayed because he had
old-fashioned notions of his duty, and Grampa, though long since discharged from active service, had
stuck to his post like the gallant old soldier he was, and as there were no battles to fight, he tended the
furnace, weeded the gardens and helped King Fumbo and Mrs. Sew-and-Sew bring up their son to as
fine a young Prince as any in Oz.
It was of Prince Tatters during all this bluster-that Grampa was thinking as he lay shivering
under the carpet, and as soon as the thunder stopped hammering in his ears he stuck out his head. The
wind, after snatching off ten roofs, the wings from the red mill and shaking all the little cottages till their
very chimneys chattered, had rushed away overRedMountain. It was still raining, but Grampa, seeing that
the worst was over, crawled out of the carpet and began to look for trouble. And what do you s'pose he
found? Why, the King, or at least, the best part of the King!
"Ragamercy!" shrieked the old soldier, jumping behind a tapis tree, a thing he had never done
in all of those nine hundred and eighty battles. But his conduct does not surprise me at all, for Fumbo had
lost his head in the storm, and was running wildly around without it-stumbling over bushes and vines and
stamping his stockinged feet in a perfect frenzy of fright and fury. Now, of course, you will say at once
that Fumbo is not the first King to lose his head and I can only answer that he is the first I ever heard of
who went on living without it, and if Ragbad were not in the wonderful land of Oz I should say at once
that the thing was impossible. In Oz, however, one may come apart, but no one ever dies; so here was
poor Fumbo, with his head clean off, as live and lively as ever.
Breathing hard Grampa peered around the tapis tree again to see whether his eyes had
deceived him. But no, it was the King, without a doubt, and without his head. "Whatever will Mrs.
Sew-and-Sew do now," groaned Grampa, and pulling his campaign hat well down over his ears he
dashed out and seizing Fumbo's arm began splashing through the garden, dragging the King along after
him. Mrs. Sew-and-Sew had already reached the castle and was sitting on the broken-springed sofa that
served for a throne, sneezing violently. She had not only rescued her quilt, but she had caught a frightful
cold. All the colors in the quilt had run together, and this last calamity so upset the poor lady that she
began sobbing and sneezing by turns. But right in the middle of the fifteenth sneeze, she looked up and
saw the old soldier with the game leg standing in the doorway.
"Now don't be frightened," begged Grampa, advancing stiffly and dripping water all over the
rug. "Don't be alarmed, but at the same time prepare yourself for a blow."