<SPAN name="chap24"></SPAN>
<h3> THE AMAZING CONQUEST OF THE BLUES </h3>
<h3> CHAPTER 24 </h3>
<p>The shouting and excitement in the City following upon the recapture of
Cap'n Bill aroused the sleeping Boolooroo. He found the cord still tied
to his big toe and at first imagined his prisoner safe in the dressing
room. While he put on his clothes, the king occasionally gave the cord
a sudden pull, hoping to hurt Cap'n Bill's big toe and make him yell;
but as no response came to this mean action, the Boolooroo finally
looked into the room only to find he had been pulling on a leg of the
couch and that his prisoner had escaped.</p>
<p>Then he flew into a mighty rage, and running out into the hall he aimed
a blow at the unfaithful guard, knocking the fellow off his feet. Then
he rushed downstairs into the courtyard, shouting loudly for his
soldiers and threatening to patch everybody in his dominions if the
sailorman was not recaptured.</p>
<p>While the Boolooroo stormed and raged, a band of soldiers and citizens
came marching in, surrounding Cap'n Bill, who was again firmly bound.</p>
<p>"So-ho!" roared the monarch. "You thought you could defy me, Earth
Clod, did you? But you were mistaken. No one can resist the Mighty
Boolooroo of the Blues, so it is folly for you to rebel against my
commands. Hold him fast, my men, and as soon as I've had my coffee and
oatmeal I'll take him to the Room of the Great Knife and patch him."</p>
<p>"I wouldn't mind a cup o' coffee myself," said Cap'n Bill. "I've had
consid'ble exercise this mornin', and I'm all ready for breakfas'."</p>
<p>"Very well," replied the Boolooroo, "you shall eat with me, for then I
can keep an eye on you. My guards are not to be trusted, and I don't
mean to let you out of my sight again until you are patched."</p>
<p>So Cap'n Bill and the Boolooroo had breakfast together, six Blueskins
standing in a row back of the sailorman to grab him if he attempted to
escape. But Cap'n Bill made no such attempt, knowing it would be
useless.</p>
<p>Trot was in the room, too, standing in a corner and listening to all
that was said while she racked her little brain for an idea that would
enable her to save Cap'n Bill from being patched. No one could see her,
so no one—not even Cap'n Bill—knew she was there.</p>
<p>After breakfast was over, a procession was formed, headed by the
Boolooroo, and they marched the prisoner through the palace until they
came to the Room of the Great Knife. Invisible Trot followed soberly
after them, still wondering what she could do to save her friend.</p>
<p>As soon as they entered the Room of the great Knife, the Boolooroo gave
a yell of disappointment.</p>
<p>"What's become of Tiggle?" he shouted. "Where's Tiggle? Who has
released Tiggle? Go at once, you dummies, and find him, or it will go
hard with you!"</p>
<p>The frightened soldiers hurried away to find Tiggle, and Trot was well
pleased because she knew Tiggle was by this time safely hidden.</p>
<p>The Boolooroo stamped up and down the room, muttering threats and
declaring Cap'n Bill should be punished whether Tiggle was found or
not, and while they waited, Trot took time to make an inspection of the
place, which she now saw for the first time in broad daylight.</p>
<p>The Room of the Great Knife was high and big, and around it ran rows of
benches for the spectators to sit upon. In one place at the head of the
room was a raised platform for the royal family, with elegant
throne-chairs for the King and Queen and six smaller but richly
upholstered chairs for the Snubnosed Princesses. The poor Queen, by the
way, was seldom seen, as she passed all her time playing solitaire with
a deck that was one card short, hoping that before she had lived her
entire six hundred years she would win the game. Therefore, her Majesty
paid no attention to anyone and no one paid any attention to her.</p>
<p>In the center of the room stood the terrible knife that gave the place
its name, a name dreaded by every inhabitant of the Blue City. The
knife was built into a huge framework like a derrick, that reached to
the ceiling, and it was so arranged that when the Boolooroo pulled a
cord the great blade would drop down in its frame and neatly cut in two
the person who stood under it. And in order that the slicing would be
accurate, there was another frame to which the prisoner was tied so
that he couldn't wiggle either way. This frame was on rollers so that
it could be placed directly underneath the knife.</p>
<p>While Trot was observing this dreadful machine, the door opened and in
walked the Six Snubnosed Princesses, all in a row and with their chins
up as if they disdained everyone but themselves. They were
magnificently dressed, and their blue hair was carefully arranged in
huge towers upon their heads, with blue plumes stuck into the tops.
These plumes waved gracefully in the air with every mincing step the
Princesses took. Rich jewels of blue stones glittered upon their
persons, and the royal ladies were fully as gorgeous as they were
haughty and overbearing. They marched to their chairs and seated
themselves to enjoy the cruel scene their father was about to enact,
and Cap'n Bill bowed to them politely and said:</p>
<p>"Mornin', girls. Hope ye feel as well as ye look."</p>
<p>"Papa," exclaimed Turquoise angrily, "can you not prevent this vile
Earth Being from addressing us? It is an insult to be spoken to by one
about to be patched."</p>
<p>"Control yourselves, my dears," replied the Boolooroo. "The worst
punishment I know how to inflict on anyone this prisoner is about to
suffer. You'll see a very pretty patching, my royal daughters."</p>
<p>"When?" inquired Cobalt.</p>
<p>"When? As soon as the soldiers return with Tiggle," said he.</p>
<p>But just then in came the soldiers to say that Tiggle could not be
found anywhere in the City; he had disappeared as mysteriously as had
Ghip-Ghisizzle. Immediately, the Boolooroo flew into another towering
rage.</p>
<p>"Villains!" he shouted. "Go out and arrest the first living thing you
meet, and whoever it proves to be will be instantly patched to Cap'n
Bill."</p>
<p>The Captain of the Guards hesitated to obey this order. "Suppose it's a
friend?" he suggested.</p>
<p>"Friend!" roared the Boolooroo. "I haven't a friend in the country.
Tell me, sir, do you know of anyone who is my friend?"</p>
<p>The Captain shook his head. "I can't think of anyone just now, your
Spry and Flighty High and Mighty Majesty," he answered.</p>
<p>"Of course not," said the Boolooroo. "Everyone hates me, and I don't
object to that because I hate everybody. But I'm the Ruler here, and
I'll do as I please. Go and capture the first living creature you see
and bring him here to be patched to Cap'n Bill."</p>
<p>So the Captain took a file of soldiers and went away very sorrowful,
for he did not know who would be the victim, and if the Boolooroo had
no friends, the Captain had plenty and did not wish to see them patched.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Trot, being invisible to all, was roaming around the room,
and behind a bench she found a small end of rope, which she picked up.
Then she seated herself in an out-of-the-way place and quietly waited.</p>
<p>Suddenly there was a noise in the corridor and evidence of scuffling
and struggling. Then the door flew open and in came the soldiers
dragging a great blue billygoat, which was desperately striving to get
free.</p>
<p>"Villains!" howled the Boolooroo. "What does this mean?"</p>
<p>"Why, you said to fetch the first living creature we met, and that was
this billygoat," replied the Captain, panting hard as he held fast to
one of the goat's horns.</p>
<p>The Boolooroo stared a moment, and then he fell back to his throne,
laughing boisterously. The idea of patching Cap'n Bill to a goat was
vastly amusing to him, and the more he thought of it the more he roared
with laughter. Some of the soldiers laughed, too, being tickled with
the absurd notion, and the Six Snubnosed Princesses all sat up straight
and permitted themselves to smile contemptuously. This would indeed be
a severe punishment, therefore the Princesses were pleased at the
thought of Cap'n Bill's becoming half a billygoat, and the billygoat's
being half Cap'n Bill.</p>
<p>"They look something alike, you know," suggested the Captain of the
Guards, looking from one to the other doubtfully, "and they're nearly
the same size if you stand the goat on his hind legs. They've both got
the same style of whiskers, and they're both of 'em obstinate and
dangerous, so they ought to make a good patch."</p>
<p>"Splendid! Fine! Glorious!" cried the Boolooroo, wiping the tears of
merriment from his eyes. "We will proceed with the Ceremony of Patching
at once."</p>
<p>Cap'n Bill regarded the billygoat with distinct disfavor, and the
billygoat glared evilly upon Cap'n Bill. Trot was horrified, and wrung
her little hands in sore perplexity, for this was a most horrible fate
that awaited her dear friend.</p>
<p>"First, bind the Earth Man in the frame," commanded the Boolooroo.
"We'll slice him in two before we do the same to the billygoat."</p>
<p>So they seized Cap'n Bill and tied him into the frame so that he
couldn't move a jot in any direction. Then they rolled the frame
underneath the Great Knife and handed the Boolooroo the cord that
released the blade. But while this was going on, Trot had crept up and
fastened one end of her rope to the frame in which Cap'n Bill was
confined. Then she stood back and watched the Boolooroo, and just as he
pulled the cord, she pulled on her rope and dragged the frame on its
rollers away, so that the Great Knife fell with a crash and sliced
nothing but the air.</p>
<p>"Huh!" exclaimed the Boolooroo. "That's queer. Roll him up again,
soldiers."</p>
<p>The soldiers again rolled the frame in position, having first pulled
the Great Knife once more to the top of the derrick. The immense blade
was so heavy that it took the strength of seven Blueskins to raise it.
When all was in readiness, the King pulled the cord a second time, and
Trot at the same instant pulled upon her rope. The same thing happened
as before. Cap'n Bill rolled away in his frame, and the knife fell
harmlessly.</p>
<p>Now, indeed, the Boolooroo was as angry as he was amazed. He jumped
down from the platform and commanded the soldiers to raise the Great
Knife into position. When this was accomplished, the Boolooroo leaned
over to try to discover why the frame rolled away—seemingly of its own
accord—and he was the more puzzled because it had never done such a
thing before.</p>
<p>As he stood, bent nearly double, his back was toward the billygoat,
which in their interest and excitement the soldiers were holding in a
careless manner. Before any could stop him, he butted his Majesty so
furiously that the King soared far into the air and tumbled in a heap
among the benches, where he lay moaning and groaning.</p>
<p>The goat's warlike spirit was roused by this successful attack. Finding
himself free, he turned and assaulted the soldiers, butting them so
fiercely that they tumbled down in bunches, and as soon as they could
rise again ran frantically from the room and along the corridors as if
a fiend was after them. By this time the goat was so animated by the
spirit of conquest that he rushed at the Six Snubnosed Princesses, who
had all climbed upon their chairs and were screaming in a panic of
fear. Six times the goat butted, and each time he tipped over a chair
and sent a haughty Princess groveling upon the floor, where the ladies
got mixed up in their long, blue trains and flounces and laces and
struggled wildly until they recovered their footing. Then they sped in
great haste for the door, and the goat gave a final butt that sent the
row of royal ladies all diving into the corridor in another tangle,
whereupon they shrieked in a manner that terrified everyone within
sound of their voices.</p>
<p>As the Room of the Great Knife was now cleared of all but Cap'n Bill,
who was tied in his frame, and of Trot and the moaning Boolooroo, who
lay hidden behind the benches, the goat gave a victorious bleat and
stood in the doorway to face any enemy that might appear. Trot had been
as surprised as anyone at this sudden change of conditions, but she was
quick to take advantage of the opportunities it afforded. First she ran
with her rope to the goat, and as the animal could not see her, she
easily succeeded in tying the rope around its horns and fastening the
loose end to a pillar of the doorway. Next she hurried to Cap'n Bill
and began to unbind him, and as she touched the sailor she became
visible. He nodded cheerfully, then, and said, "I had a notion it was
you, mate, as saved me from the knife. But it were a pretty close call,
an' I hope it won't happen again. I couldn't shiver much, bein' bound
so tight, but when I'm loose I mean to have jus' one good shiver to
relieve my feelin's."</p>
<p>"Shiver all you want to, Cap'n," she said as she removed the last
bonds. "But first you've got to help me save us both."</p>
<p>"As how?" he asked, stepping from the frame.</p>
<p>"Come and get the Boolooroo," she said, going toward the benches. The
sailor followed and pulled out the Boolooroo, who, when he saw the
terrible goat was captured and tied fast, quickly recovered his
courage. "Hi, there!" he cried. "Where are my soldiers? What do you
mean, prisoner, by daring to lay hands upon me? Let me go this minute
or I'll—I'll have you patched TWICE!"</p>
<p>"Don't mind him, Cap'n," said Trot, "but fetch him along to the frame."
The Boolooroo looked around to see where the voice came from, and Cap'n
Bill grinned joyfully and caught up the king in both his strong arms,
dragging the struggling Monarch of the Blues to the frame.</p>
<p>"Stop it! How dare you?" roared the frightened Boolooroo. "I'll have
revenge! I'll—I'll—"</p>
<p>"You'll take it easy, 'cause you can't help yourself," said Cap'n Bill.
"What next, Queen Trot?"</p>
<p>"Hold him steady in the frame, and I'll tie him up," she replied. So
Cap'n Bill held the Boolooroo, and the girl tied him fast in position
as Cap'n Bill had been tied, so that his Majesty couldn't wiggle at
all. Then they rolled the frame in position underneath the Great Knife
and Trot held in her hand the cord which would release it.</p>
<p>"All right, Cap'n," she said in a satisfied tone. "I guess we can run
this Blue Country ourselves after this." The Boolooroo was terrified to
find himself in danger of being sliced by the same knife he had so
often wickedly employed to slice others. Like Cap'n Bill, he had no
room to shiver, but he groaned very dismally and was so full of fear
that his blue hair nearly stood on end.</p>
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