vain and petty and spoiled. I certainly try not to be wicked (after my experiences with Wickedness). But we all have our bad points, donât we? I might as well admit that those happen to be mine, and I can only hope to make up for them with the good ones.
There was no funeral anyway, so no harm was done. Just the opposite, in fact! When I showed up again a few days after the cycloneâwithout so much as a scratch on me, sitting by the chicken coop, which had somehow remained undisturbed through everythingâpeople had assumed that my survival was some kind of miracle.
They were wrong. Miracles are not the same as magic.
But whether you want to call it a miracle or something else, every paper from Wichita to Topeka put me on the front page. They threw a parade for me that year, and a few months later I was asked to be the head judge at the annual blueberry pie contest at the Kansas State Fair. Best of all, because I came back from my adventures minus one house, everyone in town pitched in to build us a new one.
That was how we got this new house, to replace the old one that was still back in you-know-where. It was quite a spectacle to behold: it was bigger than any other for miles around, with a second story and a separate bedroom just for me, and even an indoor commode and a jaunty coat of blue paint, though that was just as gray as everything else in Kansas soon enough.
Henry and Em didnât seem particularly happy about any of it. They were humbled, naturally, that our neighbors had done all this for us, especially seeing as how they had all suffered their losses in the cyclone, some of them bigger than ours. Of course we were grateful.
But when the neighbors had done their work and gone home, my aunt and uncle had examined all the unfamiliar extravagances and had concluded that the old house had suited them just fine.
âAn indoor commode!â Aunt Em exclaimed. âIt just doesnât seem decent!â
How silly they were being . Grumbling about the gift that had been so kindly given to us.
On the other hand, I had to admit that even I felt that the new house left a few things to be desired. Nothing could compare to what I had seen while I had been gone. How do you go back to a two-bedroom farmhouse in Kansas when youâve been in a palace made of emeralds?
Once youâve seen castles and Munchkins and roads of yellow brick, once youâve faced down monsters and witches and come face-to-face with true magic , well then, no matter how much you might have missed it while you were gone, the prairie can seem somewhat dull andâtrulyâdownright dreary.
All I wanted to do upon my return was tell my aunt and uncle everything about what Iâd seen. The whole time Iâd been in Oz, Iâd imagined Aunt Emâs amazed face when I told her about the fields of giant poppies that put you right to sleep, and Iâd thought about how Uncle Henry would sputter and spit his coffee back into his cup when he heard about the town where all the people were made of china.
They hadnât given me quite the reaction Iâd been hoping for. In fact, theyâd hardly reacted at all. Instead, theyâd just exchanged a worried glance and told me that it must have been some fanciful dream Iâd had when I hit my head during the cyclone. They warned me not to repeat the story, and to get some rest. They said nobody liked a tale-teller.
Never mind that a bump on the head didnât explain where the house was now, or why no one had ever found it. And it didnât explain how Iâd gotten home. When I told them about the magical Silver Shoes that had carried me back across the Deadly Desert, they seemed even less convinced than ever. After all, the shoes had slipped from my feet somewhere along the way.
I can see why some people might have thought I was crazy, or a liar, or had made the whole thing up. Around here, they donât believe in anything they canât see