Produced by Mary Glenn Krause, David E. Brown, and the
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(This file was produced from images generously made
available by the Library of Congress)









THE RUNAWAY EQUATOR

[Illustration: “They saw the Equator making off, a mile or two away”]




  THE RUNAWAY
  EQUATOR

  And the Strange Adventures of a
  Little Boy in Pursuit of It


  BY

  LILIAN BELL

  AUTHOR OF “THE LOVE AFFAIRS OF AN OLD MAID,”
  “THE EXPATRIATES,” “ABROAD WITH THE JIMMIES,”
  “HOPE LORING,” “AT HOME WITH THE JARDINES,” ETC.


  _Illustrated by_
  PETER NEWELL


  [Illustration]


  NEW YORK
  FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
  PUBLISHERS




  _Copyright, 1910, 1911, by_
  THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY

  _Copyright, 1911, by_
  FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY

_All rights reserved, including that of translation into foreign
languages, including the Scandinavian_


  _September, 1911_




  TO
  JIMMIE BELL, JUNIOR
  SECOND INFANTRY, U.S.A.




CONTENTS


  CHAPTER                                     PAGE

     I. IN WHICH BILLY MEETS NIMBUS              3

    II. THE ENCHANTED TROLLEY CAR               13

   III. THE EQUATOR IS LOOSE                    23

    IV. THE EQUINE OX AND THE EVENING STAR      37

     V. IN PURSUIT                              47

    VI. ON THE PASSIVE VOLCANO                  55

   VII. JACK FROST                              63

  VIII. THE COMPASS                             73

    IX. THE TRAIL OF THE RUNAWAY                83

     X. WHERE NIGHT IS SIX MONTHS LONG          93

    XI. THE END OF THE CHASE                   105

   XII. ACROSS THE RAINBOW                     115




ILLUSTRATIONS


  “THEY SAW THE EQUATOR MAKING OFF A MILE OR TWO AWAY”    _Frontispiece_

                                                                  Facing
                                                                    Page

  “WE’LL TAKE THIS SUNBEAM WITH US”                                    6

  “NIMBUS FOLDED THE TRANSFER INTO A TINY WAND AND SAID:
      ‘THIS CAR FOR THE EQUATOR!’”                                    10

  “BOTH THE PLUMBER’S APPRENTICES JUMPED HASTILY TO THE GROUND”       14

  “STRAIGHT INTO A GREAT PILE OF SNOW WENT THE CAR”                   28

  “PRESENTLY THEY BEGAN TO CRY AS HARD AS EVER THEY COULD”            32

  “NOW, SIR, WHERE IS THAT EQUATOR?”                                  40

  “THERE SUDDENLY APPEARED SEVEN LITTLE CHAPS”                        48

  “WITH A GREAT CRACKLING NOISE THEY SHOT INTO THE VOID”              50

  “BILLY TOOK A SHARP STICK AND POKED THE EQUATOR SMARTLY”            60

  “SEATING HIMSELF ON THE EDGE OF THE CLIFF, HE SANG”                 66

  “CONFRONTING THE EQUINE OX WAS THE CONDUCTOR, WAVING
      HIS HANDS AND SHOUTING”                                         76

  “THEY TIED THE TROLLEY ROPE TO HIS HORN AND SECURED HIM
      TO THE CAR”                                                     78

  “A METEOR DROPPED AMONG THEM”                                       80

  “‘LISTEN,’ SAID THE EQUINE OX, AND THROWING BACK HIS
      HEAD, HE SANG”                                                  84

  “THE EQUINE OX CROWDED INTO THE REAR DOOR”                          90




BILLY MEETS NIMBUS




THE RUNAWAY EQUATOR




CHAPTER I

IN WHICH BILLY MEETS NIMBUS


Mother had been helping Billy with his geography lesson, sitting in
the garden on a lovely day early in spring, and showing Billy how the
earth revolves on its axis. To illustrate this difficult matter and to
make it interesting, she had taken a big yellow orange to represent the
Earth and had used a stick of lemon candy for the Pole. She made the
Equator out of a black rubber band such as you put around fat envelopes.

Then, when Billy said that he understood, Mother dug a hole in the
orange and stuck the lemon stick in it and, handing it to Billy, said
with a droll twinkle in her blue eyes, which always seemed to be
laughing:

“Would you like to eat up the Earth through the North Pole?”

Now Billy had never before tasted the joys of an orange eaten through
a stick of lemon candy; so when Mother, who had a trick of remembering
nice things from her own childhood, showed Billy how it was done, he
settled down to a blissful half hour in which he meant to devour the
whole earth.

It tasted so good that he rolled over on the short grass, under a
lilac-bush in full bloom, and only took his lips from the North Pole
long enough to tell his mother that it tasted “bully.”

“Well,” said his mother, standing up and shaking out her blue dress, “I
must go now. Here is your geography. Don’t forget to bring it in when
you come, and don’t lose the Equator off the Earth, even if you are
eating it. I don’t know what would become of us if the Equator really
should get away!”

Billy laughed aloud. It really was no trouble at all to understand
things when Mother made them appear so funny.

He lay on his back looking up into the sky, which was just the color of
his mother’s blue dress. White clouds, like mountains of white feathers
which must be very soft to sleep on, were over his head.

A bee was buzzing lazily over the lavender blossoms of the lilacs. A
soft wind was blowing. It was indeed very pleasant.

What if the bee should turn into a fairy!

“Why don’t you?” said Billy aloud.

The bee, being puzzled, scratched his head with his left hindfoot and
answered:

“Why don’t I what?”

“Why don’t you be one?”

“I am one bee!” answered the bee, striking a match on Billy’s orange
and lighting a grapevine cigarette.

“Could you be a fairy?” asked Billy.

“I am always beeing things--flowers and honey--so of course I could bee
a fairy. How do you know that I am not one? Look at me!”

Billy sat up and looked.

“Well, I never!” exclaimed Billy. “A minute ago I thought you were a
bee!”

“I can bee anything I choose,” said the Fairy. “That’s why you thought
I was a bee. Because I can bee!”

“Who are you now?” asked Billy.

“I am the Geography Fairy,” answered the stranger.

He held out his hand and then looked at it.

“It’s not raining yet,” he observed; “still----”

Without finishing his sentence he unfolded a pink parasol and tossed it
into the air. It sailed away, slowly at first, then more rapidly as the
light wind caught it and carried it out of sight beyond the lilac-bush.

“I won’t need it till it begins to rain,” he explained, “so they might
as well have it.”

“Who?” gasped Billy.

“The sunbeams. If a sunbeam gets wet he’s done for. Haven’t you ever
noticed that?”

Billy thought he had noticed something of the kind. Anyway the
sunbeams all disappeared directly it began to rain. But being just an
ordinary little boy, he was much more interested in the conversation
of the wonderful stranger than he was in sunbeams, and that is why he
asked:

“What is your name, if you please?”

“My name is Nimbus and I live in the clouds with the other fairies. I
was named after one of the clouds.”

“But,” objected Billy, “I don’t believe in fairies.”

“Very well,” said Nimbus briskly, “keep right on don’t believing. It
doesn’t disturb me in the least.”

“And besides,” said Billy, “there couldn’t be such a thing as a
Geography Fairy.”

“How do you know?” demanded Nimbus.

“Because,” said Billy, “I have never seen one.”

“Nonsense!” returned Nimbus. “Did you ever see a noise?”

“No,” Billy admitted, “I don’t think I ever did. At least I don’t
remember ever having seen one.”

“Well, do you believe that there _aren’t_ any noises?”

Billy had no reply that seemed suitable, and so he said nothing.

Apparently not caring whether he got an answer or not, Nimbus leaped
lightly from the lilac blossom and, picking up an irregular sunbeam
that filtered through the bush, he set it carefully on edge against the
brim of Billy’s hat.

[Illustration: “We’ll take this sunbeam with us”]

“They get tired lying flat on their backs so much,” he said. “We’ll
take this one with us when we go. When we’re hungry we’ll eat it.”

“But we’re not going anywhere,” said Billy. “At least _I_ am not. I’ve
got to go into the house and put the toys away in a few minutes.”

“Tut! tut!” said Nimbus. “Doesn’t the proverb say ‘Never do anything
to-day you can just as well put off until to-morrow’? Let’s enchant
a trolley car and go look after the Equator. I ought to be there
now. That’s my job, looking after the Equator. I’ve left the Equine
Ox there, but he has such a habit of getting indigestion in one of
his four stomachs, and sometimes in all of them, that he is very
inattentive to business.”

“Indigestion in four stomachs must be terribly distressing,” said
Billy. “But what is an Equine Ox?”

“You surely see one twice a year,” said Nimbus. “But they are always
around. They have to be somewhere.”

“I suppose they do,” said Billy, “but what are they?”

“Their names are Vernal and Autumnal. Here’s a poem I wrote about them
once. My friends say I am conceited about my poetry, but I’m not. I
don’t think it is as good as it really is.”

  “I never had an Equine Ox
      To glad me with its soft brown eye,
  But when I stroked its brindled locks
      It always rudely asked me why.

  “I never whispered fondly in
      The creature’s smooth and velvet ear,
  That it did not absurdly grin
      And shed a cadent, mirthful tear.

  “I never clasped its crumpled horn,
      Nor gazed on it with loving look,
  That it did not give moos of scorn
      And sometimes even try to hook.

  “So, though I love the Equine Ox,
      I must admit that, on the whole,
  His conduct very often shocks
      My trusting and confiding soul.”

“That,” said Nimbus, “will give you an excellent idea of the Equine Ox.
Now let us enchant that trolley car and be off about our business.”

“Pooh!” said Billy, “you can’t enchant a trolley car.”

“There you go again,” said Nimbus, “never believing in things. Bring me
a trolley car and I’ll show you whether or not I can enchant it.”

“_I_ can’t bring you a trolley car,” said Billy. “You’ll have to hail
one on the street if you want one. Anyway they don’t go to the Equator;
they only go to town.”

“We’ll see where they go,” returned Nimbus. “If I were going alone I’d
go on a cloud, but I don’t suppose you could sit on a cloud, could you?”

He regarded Billy doubtfully.

“I’m sure I couldn’t,” said Billy. “Besides, what’s the need of going
at all?”

“Oh, I really must go! A foolish Spring Tide broke one of the tropics
the other day, and if the other gets broken there will be nothing to
hold the Equator down but the meridians, and you know they’re very
fragile.”

Billy didn’t know that, but he nodded intelligently. It is always best
to pretend to know more about geography than you really do.

“We’ll be back in time for dinner,” continued Nimbus; “that is, if I
don’t have to fasten up the tides again.”

“Why,” said Billy, “you don’t mean to say you have to fasten the tides?”

“Certainly!” replied Nimbus. “You know the tides are always trying to
put out the Moon, and they go chasing around the Earth after her night
and day. Of course the shore stops them after a while and drives them
back, and that’s what makes them high and low. They’re high when they
run up and try to wash over the shore, and low when the shore drives
them back again. But to keep them from going too far we tie them down
with meridians. That’s why they call them tides. Each one is tied,
don’t you see?”

“Gracious!” exclaimed Billy. “I hope they can’t get untied and put the
Moon out.”

“Oh, they won’t,” Nimbus assured him, “while I’m watching them!
Sometimes they sneak up on her out of the ocean in little drops that
we call mist, but the Sun always catches them at it, and sends them
scurrying down in rain again.”

“I almost believe I’ll go,” said Billy, “if you’re sure we can be back
in time.”

“Not a doubt of it,” said Nimbus; “I’ll send you back on a meteor if I
have to stay.”

Billy excused himself for a minute and ran into the house to tell his
mother, but she was nowhere to be found. So he wrote a note in which he
explained that he had gone away for a little while with the Geography
Fairy. Returning to the garden, he found that Nimbus had now grown to
be as large as a middle-sized baby. He was strolling across the lawn on
his way to the front gate.

Billy trudged along by his side, and soon they were at the street
corner awaiting the coming of a big red trolley car, which Billy hailed
at Nimbus’s suggestion.

When the two got in the conductor looked at the queer little stranger
in amazement.

But Nimbus only nodded at him coldly, leaped up on the seat and began
digging into his pocket, from which he presently pulled a huge blue
transfer.

This he held out when the conductor came for the fare.

“That ain’t no good,” said the conductor.

For reply Nimbus folded the transfer up into a tiny wand, touched the
conductor on the cap with it and said:

“This car for the Equator. Passengers desiring transfers for the Arctic
Circle or the North Pole will kindly mention it before we get to Cuba.”

[Illustration: “Nimbus folded the transfer into a tiny wand and said:
‘This car for the Equator!’”]




THE ENCHANTED TROLLEY CAR




CHAPTER II

THE ENCHANTED TROLLEY CAR


Of course such an announcement as that made a great commotion in
the trolley car. The other passengers, a thin deacon, two plumber’s
apprentices and a burglar, wanted to get off immediately.

“I was going back to the shop to get the tools,” said one of the
plumber’s apprentices.

“I was on my way to a horse trade,” explained the deacon.

“And I,” said the burglar, “was just looking about for a nice easy
house to rob. They don’t have any houses at the Equator, so I would
have absolutely nothing to do.”

“Tut! tut!” said the conductor peevishly. “Keep your seats, gents.
There ain’t no such a place as the Equator on this line. You’re on the
wrong car, young chaps,” he added, turning to Billy and Nimbus.

Billy was troubled at this. Could it be that Nimbus really couldn’t
enchant the trolley car after all?

But the Fairy only smiled as the car, which had started away suddenly,
came to a stop, as if it had run into something.

“I thought we wouldn’t get past it,” he said.

“Get past what?” inquired Billy and the plumber’s apprentices in a
breath.

“That imaginary line,” said Nimbus. “I drew it across the track.”

“But,” said Billy, “no imaginary line really goes anywhere except the
Equator.”

“Neither will the trolley car until I let it,” replied Nimbus. “So they
are in the same fix.”

The motorman now came into the car.

“Not enough juice,” he growled. “She turns all right, but she don’t get
nowhere.”

“Try her again,” advised the conductor anxiously. He was looking at
Nimbus and Billy with suspicion. “You kids ain’t been soapin’ the
track, have you?” he inquired suddenly.

“Oh, no, sir!” said Billy. “I’m not allowed to do that.”

The motorman again turned on the power, but although the wheels hummed
and whirred on the track, not an inch forward did the car go.

“There’s something wrong,” he said, “but I don’t know what it is. She
turns all right, and she acts all right, but she don’t go ahead none.”

“She won’t,” said Nimbus, “till these people get off. It would be a
shame to take them to the Equator.”

“Certainly it would,” said the deacon. “I for one am going to get off.”

“Me, too,” said the burglar.

[Illustration: “Both the plumber’s apprentices jumped hastily to the
ground”]

And both of them did.

“It’s all right with us,” said the plumber’s apprentices, settling back
in their seats. “Our time will go on just the same.”

“Well, it ain’t with me,” said the motorman. “I’m going to see what’s
stopping her.”

He went to the rear door and was about to swing off the steps when he
uttered a cry of alarm.

“Great rabbits!” he shouted. “She’s risin’ off’m the track!”

At this both the plumber’s apprentices ran to the platform and jumped
hastily to the ground.

The motorman and conductor hurried to the front platform, but when they
reached it the car had risen thirty feet in the air and was sailing
merrily through space.

The conductor reeled back into the car and sank breathless on a seat.
The motorman followed him.

“What kind of a way to do is this?” demanded the conductor of Nimbus.
“And me with a wife and five children.”

“There is no danger at all,” said Nimbus soothingly. “We’ll have to
come down again, you know. Everything does, that goes up.”

The conductor had got a little over his fright, and was looking out of
the window.

“I don’t know where we’re going, Tommy,” he said to the motorman, “but
it does look as if we was on our way, don’t it?”

“It’s an outrage!” said the motorman, “and I’ve a good mind to chuck
this little feller overboard. It’s all his doings.”

But Nimbus paid no attention to him at all.

“You see,” he said to Billy, “that a trolley car can be enchanted if
you go at it right. I could enchant the conductor and motorman if I
wanted to. I think I’d turn the motorman into a bull.”

The motorman grew pale at this.

“Now, don’t do nothing like that,” he said. “I like this flying
business, honest I do.”

“Very well,” said Nimbus, “but I think you had better go out on the
platform and look for stars. We may be running into one any time.”

The motorman was glad to return to his post, and the conductor arose
and walked unsteadily to the rear platform, where he held fast to the
dashboard rail and gazed with open-mouthed wonder at the scene below.

“We’ll soon be coming to the Dog Star,” Nimbus told Billy. “His name is
Sirius, but he isn’t. He’s almost eight million years old, but he still
behaves like a Puppy Star at the snow-making season. He worries the
Snow Fairies half to death.”

“What are Snow Fairies?” asked Billy.

“They are the people that make the snow. Didn’t you ever hear the
proverb, ‘Make snow while the moon shines’?”

Billy wasn’t quite sure. He had heard one very much like that, though,
about hay, and he wondered if they made snow in fields and left it out
to dry in the moonshine.

“Yes,” said Nimbus, although Billy had not spoken, “it is very much
the same. The snowflakes grow on the little stalks that shoot up from
the clouds, and the Snow Fairies harvest them and dry them in the
moonlight. Then they sift it down on the land and sea, whenever Jack
Frost says the little boys and girls are tired of nutting and making
autumn-leaf bonfires, and want to coast and throw snowballs.”

“Do they make hail that way, too?” asked Billy.

“Oh! gracious, no. They break the hail off the rain clouds with their
hammers, and it freezes on the way down. They soon tire of that,
though, so they never keep it up long. That is why you hear people say
‘Hail and Farewell.’ You have to say good-by to a hailstorm almost
before you’ve had time to say hello to it.”

“I think it is very ill-mannered of the Dog Star to worry them,” said
Billy.

“Oh, Dog Stars have no manners. That is very well shown in the poem I
wrote about the Dog Star. Did you ever happen to hear it?”

“No,” said Billy. “I never did.”

“Well,” said Nimbus, “as nearly as I can remember it runs something
like this:

  “Dog Star, Dog Star, burning bright,
  You can neither read nor write,
  Yet you frolic just the same,
  And have not a thought of shame.

  “When I say: ‘Add one and one,’
  You reply: ‘It can’t be done.
  Sums are flat and grammar stale,
  I prefer to chase my tail.’

  “When I ask: ‘Who built the ark?’
  You turn somersaults and bark:
  Or you growl, with drooping tail,
  ‘Was it Jonah or the Whale?’

  “Dog Star, Dog Star, you don’t know,
  Euclid, Vergil, Scipio,
  Algebra or Calculus,
  My! But you are frivolous.”

“You see,” continued Nimbus, “the Dog Star cares absolutely nothing for
manners. He even barks at O’Taurus.”

“And who,” inquired Billy, “is O’Taurus?”

“He’s the Irish Bull,” said Nimbus. “I’ll tell you more about him
later. I’ve got to go to meet this Meteor now.”

Billy had noticed that for some time it had been getting brighter and
brighter, although the Sun had hidden himself behind a great wall of
blue-black clouds. Now he looked through the front windows and saw a
great star sweeping rapidly down on them, swishing a long tail behind
him.

“Is--is it a comet?” he asked in affright, observing that the motorman
rushed into the car, slamming the door after him.

“Comet nothing!” said Nimbus. “It’s only a fourth- class Meteor with
a message for me. They’re the A.D.T. boys up here, and he’s probably
brought some word from the Equine Ox.”

The Meteor came alongside and Billy read in gold letters across his
glowing cap the words:

  PLANETARY MESSENGER SERVICE

  No. 7,622,451

“My!” he exclaimed, “there are a lot of them, aren’t there?”

“Seven million nine hundred thousand six hundred and three,” said
Nimbus. “What have you got, boy?”

“Message, sir,” said the Meteor briskly, taking off his cap and
extracting a blue envelope.

Nimbus took it and ran his eye over it hastily.

“Here’s a pretty kettle of fish,” he said, handing the paper to Billy.

This is what Billy read as he held the paper in his trembling fingers:

 “Accidentally went to sleep and the Spring Tide broke the other
 tropic. Equator trying to get away, and think I can’t hold him long.
 Please come or send help as soon as possible.

                                            “Regretfully, VERNAL E. OX.”

So! The Equator was trying to do the very thing Mother told Billy not
to let him do! He was trying to slip off the earth by way of the South
Pole!




THE EQUATOR IS LOOSE




CHAPTER III

THE EQUATOR IS LOOSE


“Bother that Equine Ox,” said Nimbus. “I might have known he’d do
something like that, and just before procession week, too.”

“Procession week?” said Billy wonderingly.

“Yes, the week of the procession of the Equine Oxes. The Sun and the
Moon and their oldest daughter, the Evening Star, were coming down to
see it, and Jack Frost and Aurora Borealis ought to be there now. And
that miserable Equine Ox has gone and spoiled it all. He isn’t fit for
anything but a barbecue.”

“What are you going to do?” asked Billy, while the conductor and the
motorman gaped in a dazed silence.

“Do? Why, fix it, of course. I only hope we can get there before he
breaks away altogether. It would be a beautiful state of affairs to
have an Equator charging up and down the world, wouldn’t it?”

“I think it would be fun,” ventured Billy.

“Oh, certainly!” said Nimbus. “When you played under the trees in your
front yard, do you think it would be fun to have cocoanuts drop on you
instead of acorns? Instead of rabbits and chipmunks in the woods, do
you think it would be fun to see lions and tigers and boa-constrictors
and laughing hyenas, to say nothing of hippopotamuses with teeth like
banisters? Yes, it would be real jolly now, wouldn’t it?”

Billy saw that Nimbus was seriously disturbed and he kept silent.

The Meteor, who had entered the car unasked and taken a seat on the
floor, now got up and began to shoot violently from one door to
another, sometimes zigzagging so that he bumped the windows. His
blazing tail trailed after him, and once or twice Billy had to draw
back quickly to keep his face from a severe switching.

The conductor and the motorman were very much annoyed by these antics,
and at last the conductor said:

“What’s the matter with him, anyway? Why don’t he sit still?”

“He can’t sit still,” said Nimbus. “A meteor is a shooting star and
ever so often he has to shoot.”

“Shootin’ is against the rules,” growled the motorman. “No shootin’
allowed in any cars of this company.”

“He isn’t shooting aloud. He’s shooting to himself,” said Nimbus. “I’ll
send him back to the Equator as soon as I compose a message that is
strong enough to tell the Equine Ox what I think of him.”

Billy had been looking out of the window. A long way off he noticed
a row of enormous signs, each with curious characters on it, all
outlined in bright green and blue stars.

“Signs of the Zodiac,” said the Meteor, coming to a sudden stop and
looking over Billy’s shoulder. “‘Keep off the sky,’ and ‘No loose dogs
allowed,’ and such like. The Aerolites have just turned ’em on. They
come right after the twilight.”

“I--I don’t think I understand,” said Billy.

“Neither do I,” said the Meteor, “but I’ll explain it in a minute. I’ve
got a few shots in me now that have got to go off.”

He leaped to his feet and began to dart backward and forward in the car
till Nimbus, who was writing on a pad of paper, became irritated and
slammed the car-door on the Meteor’s tail.

“Isn’t he peevish!” said the Meteor, sinking down at Billy’s side. “But
as I was saying about the Aerolites, every night the Sun goes down, as
you know, and it would be pitch dark until the Moon and the Stars came
up if it wasn’t for them.

“One of them keeps watch until he sees the Sun starting to slide behind
a mountain or into the sea, and then he tells the others, and they all
hurry around and light the twilights. When they have them all lit there
is enough light to see by till the Moon and the Stars get out of bed
for the night. After that they can light the Signs of the Zodiac. They
get paid for that. Lighting the twilights they have to do for their
board and lodging and motive power.”

Nimbus left off writing. “I think that will do,” he said, handing the
pad to Billy.

Billy read:

 “V. E. Ox, Equator.

 “Of all the good-for-nothing, idle, dull-witted, stupid,
 feather-brained idiots I have met in twelve million years you are
 easily the worst. Send that Spring Tide to bed for a week. Get the
 other Equine Ox and a regiment of elephants and sit on the Equator
 till I get there. If he tries to get away duck him in the ocean. My
 only regret is that you have but four stomachs instead of ninety-four
 to get indigestion in.

                                            “Yours disgustedly, NIMBUS.”

The Meteor took the paper from Billy’s hand, Nimbus released the tail
from the door and he shot forth into the night.

Billy began to be very much distressed about the darkness, remembering
his promise to his mother to be home for dinner. Nimbus, noticing his
troubled face and feeling better now that he had unburdened himself of
his opinion of the Equine Ox, sat beside him and said cheerfully:

“Never mind, Billy, it’s always half dark up here. We’re out of the
air, you know, and we have to have air to see the light through, just
as your mother has to have opera-glasses to see the play through. We’ll
be home in time for dinner. Never fear.”

At this assurance Billy felt much better, and became very eager to see
the great fight that he knew would take place when they got down to the
Equator and took part in the effort to keep him from escaping.

But the motorman and the conductor were in no such cheerful mood. They
sat apart in a corner and talked in whispers; and Billy, listening
although he did not mean to, soon learned that they were talking about
the Snow Fairies.

“It’s them,” said the conductor, “that spills snow all over the tracks
and ties up the lines in winter.”

“Sure it is!” said the motorman. “Let’s get off and fix ’em.”

Billy glanced out of the window. There, right before his eyes, he saw
a great number of little people, clad in white uniforms, raking huge
masses of what seemed to be white flowers on the upper side of a cloud.
Through the dim half-light he watched them working away, with rakes and
pitchforks, some of them piling the white flakes into great stacks,
while others pulled long rows of them to the edge of the cloud and
pushed them over the side.

Billy remembered that it was summer when he left home and he wondered
how it happened that snow-making was going on; but following with his
eyes the flakes that whirled downward he saw a long chain of mountains
far below. He knew, of course, that snow fell on mountains, even in
summer time, so he understood.

“I tell you what I’ll do,” the motorman was saying; “I’ll go out and
back her sideways and we’ll run through ’em. That’ll knock ’em all off
the cloud, and we won’t have no more snow.”

“Great idea,” said the conductor. “We’ll get ’em all at one lick.”

Billy looked anxiously at Nimbus, who overheard, but only chuckled.
“Let ’em try it,” he said, “and see what happens.”

Nimbus joined Billy at the window, and the motorman and the conductor,
seeing that the Fairy’s back was turned, got up very quietly and went
out on the front platform.

The motorman put his lever on the controller and, looking around
carefully to make sure that he was not observed, reversed the power.

The car trembled, stopped, then began to go backward with a sidelong
motion that took it right into the snow cloud.

Instantly the air grew cold, and the wind howled around the trolley
pole and rattled the windows.

Straight into a great pile of snow went the car, and the Snow Fairies,
looking up, saw it coming and skipped away in every direction.

There was a shock, snow flew in showers, then the car buried itself in
a great white pile up to the window tops and stopped stock still.

Stamping and pawing the snow out of their eyes and mouths, the
motorman and conductor came back into the car.

“Pleasant weather, gentlemen,” said Nimbus. “Looks a little like snow,
however. Suppose you go out now and clear the track. You’re used to it.”

Angry, but too much ashamed of themselves to show their feelings, the
motorman and the conductor got shovels from under the seats and went
out to clear away a path for the car.

“It always pays best to let Nature take care of herself, as the boy
said who sat on the volcano,” Nimbus observed.

“It will be a dreadful delay, though, and we are in such a hurry to get
to the Equator,” said Billy.

“Oh, no, there will be no delay at all! The Cloud is going right in our
direction just as fast as we were. We’ll warm up, however, for it’s a
trifle cold,” said Nimbus. And taking out the sunbeam he had brought
with him from the lilac bush, he hit a piece out of it and handed it to
Billy.

“Eat it,” he said. “Nothing so stimulating in cold weather as a
sunbeam. We’ll just sit here and wait for an answer to my telegram. And
you can act acquainted with the sky people.”

Billy looked out of the window into the sky. Was it true, he wondered,
that the Sun and Moon were really sky people?

“What’s the matter?” asked Nimbus.

“I was just wondering if the Stars are all really people,” said Billy.

“Really people!” said Nimbus. “Well I should say they are. And all
the Clouds are, too. You see that bunch over there? Well, that is
Mrs. Pink-Cloud and Mrs. White-Cloud and Mrs. Pearl-Cloud and Mrs.
Mackerel-Cloud and Mrs. Yellow-Cloud sitting together and sewing on
party dresses for their children to go to the Star children’s birthday
party. It’s warm over there where they are.”

“Oh!” said Billy. “Are they all named?”

“Named! Of course they are! And every Star, too. But nobody can
remember them but their own mother, Mrs. Moon. Even their father, Mr.
Sun, gets confused sometimes and mixes the boys’ names with the girls’.”

“Are the Clouds people, too?” asked Billy wonderingly.

“Just as much people as you are,” answered Nimbus seriously. “Old
General Gray-Cloud and old General Thunder-Cloud are great fighters and
have awful battles. You can hear them down on the Earth sometimes. It
sounds like thunder and looks like lightning from where you live, but
from where we live--Oh, my!”

“Dear me,” said Billy, “how very interesting! And do the mothers teach
their children to behave the way our mothers do on the Earth, or are
they allowed to do as they please in the sky?”

“Well, you do show your ignorance!” said Nimbus, with such severity
that Billy quite blushed for himself. “Why let me tell you what I saw
only yesterday when I was under the lilac bush waiting for you.”

“Did you know about me before I saw you?” asked Billy, much flattered.

“Why, certainly I did. I saw you having such a stupid time with a
geography lesson which I knew I could make so easy for you that I said
to myself: ‘I’ll just wait until I have him all to myself and then I’ll
show him!’”

“That was very kind of you,” said Billy, “and I am sure that I shall
never forget anything I have seen.”

“That’s just the way with me,” said Nimbus; “so what I saw of the Cloud
children I will tell to you, and then it will be just the same as if
you had seen it.”

“So it will,” said Billy, who by this time had got to have great faith
in the Geography Fairy.

“What do you suppose makes it rain?” asked Nimbus suddenly.

Billy thought intently for a moment. He knew he had heard something
about clouds and mist and heat and cold, but for the life of him
he couldn’t remember when anybody asked him. That is what makes
examinations so hard. You know, but you can’t remember.

“Ah, ha!” said Nimbus. “You can’t think, can you? Well, I’ll tell you,
and you’ll never forget this reason. The other day, when their mothers
were all sitting and sewing, the Cloud children----”

“What are their names?” asked Billy.

“Well, there happened to be Pinkie Pink-Cloud and Goldie Gold-Cloud and
Pearlie Pearl-Cloud. They asked their mothers if they could float over
Central Park and watch the Earth children at play. Their mothers said
yes, so away they went. At first it was great fun to watch, for it was
Mayday and all the children were marching about in their pretty white
dresses while nursemaids and fräuleins and mademoiselles by the dozen,
and a few mothers, were looking on.

“Then Pinkie and Goldie and Pearlie began to play tag among themselves,
nor was it very long before Pinkie said that Goldie did not tag her
when she said she did, and Pearlie took sides; so in one moment those
little sunny faces grew black with anger and presently they began to
cry as hard as ever they could.”

“Well?” said Billy, as Nimbus paused.

“Well,” repeated the Fairy, “don’t you see? Their tears were rain!”

“Oh!” said Billy.

“The next thing that happened was that their mothers looked up from
their sewing and saw the dark spot over the park, where, a few minutes
ago, it had all been bright and sunny. They knew what had happened, for
in April and May the Cloud children are easily upset and cry if you
poke your finger at them. So they floated over to the park and, instead
of asking the children what the matter was, as most mothers would have
done, Mrs. Gold-Cloud told the children to look down at the park.”

“And what did they see?” asked Billy, who never before had thought of
looking at the Earth children through the eyes of the clouds.

“Why, the rain spoiling all the pretty white dresses and the children
all stopping their play and rushing about for shelter.”

“I know,” said Billy. “I was there myself.”

“Were you?” said Nimbus. “Then you know what happened.”

“I only know it stopped raining,” said Billy.

“But don’t you know why?” asked Nimbus.

Billy shook his head.

“Because Mrs. Gold-Cloud told the children how tears and black looks
on their faces always spoiled the pleasure of somebody else, and how
smiles and sweet looks and lots of love in the heart brings happiness.
When she said this, the Cloud children dried their tears on their
mothers’ cloud handkerchiefs and began to smile, and when Pinkie and
Goldie kissed each other, the whole sky brightened up. So everything
got sunshiny again, and of course the rain stopped as soon as the tears
were dried, so in five minutes the little Earth children were running
about again as happy as lambs. And the sight of their happiness made
the Cloud children glad they had not been so selfish as to quarrel
long.”

“They must be nice children,” said Billy thoughtfully. “That story
sounds the way my mother tells things.”

“When you go back, you can tell the story to her,” said Nimbus.

“Thank you for telling me,” said Billy politely. “It is a very nice
story and I sha’n’t forget it. I’ll have lots of things to tell when I
get back. What are you going to do about the Equator?”

“Hello!” The last exclamation was directed at the Meteor, who suddenly
appeared through the snow bank and, panting for breath, handed Nimbus a
message which Billy read over his shoulder.

The message read:

 “Glad to know you are coming, and thanks for your kind words. Equator
 is loose.

                                              “Respectfully, EQUINE OX.”




THE EQUINE OX AND EVENING STAR




CHAPTER IV

THE EQUINE OX AND THE EVENING STAR


“I expected it,” said Nimbus with a sigh. “I might have known the
Equine Ox couldn’t hold him.”

“I don’t suppose it is any use to go to the Equator now, is it?” asked
Billy. “I don’t see how we can go there if we don’t know where it is.”

“Well, we know where it was, and there’s where we’ll go,” snapped
Nimbus. “I have a little speech to make to the Equine Ox that he ought
to hear.”

The motorman and the conductor had now got a nice, clean path shoveled
through the snow, so they boarded the car and it soon slid off the snow
cloud and sped on again.

Presently Billy, looking downward, saw that they were coming closer to
the Earth all the time. And what a different Earth it was from any he
had ever seen outside of a geography! A curving coast-line laced with
filmy surf lay below him, and on the hills that rose from it he could
see countless palm trees, each with a little tuft at the top like the
long blades of blue grass about the edge of the garden at home, well
beyond the reach of the lawn mower.

“Gracious! We must be near where the Equator was,” he exclaimed. “It
looks like a conservatory outdoors down there.”

“It’s not,” said Nimbus. “It’s the grandstand. That’s where the
procession of the Equine Oxen was to be held.”

“Of course it won’t be held now?” timidly suggested Billy.

“It will, if I have anything to do with it. Just because we never did
have a procession without an Equator is no reason we shouldn’t have
one. Besides, now that there’s no Equator to watch, unless they parade,
those good-for-nothing creatures won’t earn their cuds.”

The car by this time was grating on a hillside, and soon brought up
between a couple of slender palm trees.

“I’ve been expecting you,” said a voice--a sad voice that seemed to
come from directly above the car.

Looking out of the car window, Billy saw a bright light among the
branches of the tree--a light that surrounded like a halo the figure of
a very pretty girl.

“Why,” said Nimbus briskly, lifting his hat, “it’s the Evening Star.”

“Yes,” said the Evening Star, “it is I. I came to complain about the
Equine Ox. He’s very disconsolate, and he’s singing continually. I wish
you’d stop him.”

Billy was very much surprised to find the Evening Star all alone. He
was about to ask Nimbus why it was when she said:

“You see, Papa--he’s the Sun--never comes out at night; and Mrs. Moon,
who’s my mamma, isn’t up yet, so I had to come alone. Is there anything
else you’d like to know, little boy?”

Billy was very much abashed at thus having a question answered before
he had asked it, and especially by a young lady whom he had never
met. But there was one thing he wanted to know very much, so he said
politely:

“Yes, thank you. I should like to know why the Equine Ox sings when he
is unhappy.”

“Oh, that’s so people can tell he’s the Equine OX,” said the Evening
Star. “He always does things backward. When he’s very angry he rolls on
the ground and roars with laughter. When he’s pleased about anything he
weeps bitterly, and when he’s unhappy he sings.”

“There he is now,” said Nimbus, who had been listening intently. “Don’t
you hear him?”

Billy heard something that first sounded like a long-drawn-out moo, but
which he soon recognized as a very familiar air.

“Come on,” said Nimbus.

“Us, too?” inquired the motorman and conductor. “We don’t want to be
left alone in these here foreign parts.”

“Yes,” said Nimbus, “come ahead!” and he led the way down a winding
pathway that opened through the trees.

The singing grew louder and louder as they proceeded, and shortly
they came out into a little open space overgrown with flowers and
surrounded by a very dense tropical growth. In the center of it stood
a creature that looked a little like an ox, a little like a horse, and
very much like a map of the solar system. Billy and the street-car men
stopped at a signal from Nimbus. The Equine OX was singing.

  How dear to my heart was my home in the tropics,
    The pythons that wreathed in fantastic festoons;
  The parrots discoursing on trivial topics,
    The smug armadillos and sweet-faced baboons;
  The ostrich, the emu, the suave alligator,
    Flamingoes with necks that were cleverly curled;
  But dearest of all was the charming Equator,
    The dear old Equator that ran round the world!

  CHORUS

  The queer old Equator,
  The dear old Equator,
  The quaint old Equator
  That ran round the world.

  From sunset to moonset I look for it vainly,
    I seek it at noontide, I hunt it at dawn;
  And when I don’t find it I see very plainly,
    Too plainly, alas, that it’s probably gone!
  I bade it good-night with the fondest affection,
    And lay down beside it to take a brief nap,
  But leaving no clew that could lead to detection
    The queer old Equator slid right off the map.

  CHORUS

  The queer old Equator,
  The dear old Equator,
  The quaint old Equator,
  Slid right off the map.

[Illustration: “Now, Sir, where is that Equator?”]

Directly the song was finished Nimbus strode up to the Equine Ox and,
shaking his fist angrily at him, demanded:

“Now, sir, where is that Equator?”

“That’s the question,” said the Equine Ox; “where is he? Who knows the
answer?” Then seeing Billy, he added: “Maybe you do!”

“Why, no, sir,” replied Billy in confusion. “I don’t. Not at all.”

“Pay no attention to him,” said Nimbus. “He’s merely trying to avert
suspicion from himself.” Then turning to the Equine Ox, he proceeded:
“Tell us how he got away. Be quick, there is no time to lose.”

“Oh, yes, there is,” said the Equine Ox; “any quantity of it! I lose a
great deal every day and hope to lose a great deal more. As for finding
time, now that is another----”

“How did the Equator get away?” said Nimbus sternly.

“Well, you see, it was this way. Night fell on the tropics and the
tropics broke.”

“Ho, ho!” exclaimed the conductor. “That’s a joke. Ho, ho!”

“What is the gentleman angry about?” uneasily asked the Equine Ox, who
always laughed when he was angry.

“Nothing,” said Nimbus; “go ahead with your explanation.”

“Then a few waves broke,” continued the Equine Ox, “and then day broke
and, well--what could the Equator do but break, too?”

“Did you sit on it?” asked Billy eagerly.

The Equine Ox regarded him gravely.

“Did you ever sit on an Equator?” he asked.

“Why, no,” said Billy, embarrassed. “I didn’t.”

“Neither did I,” said the Equine Ox. “Far be it from me to sit on an
Equator when it is going anywhere.”

“So it’s completely gone, has it?” asked Nimbus. “Which way did it go?”

“Shall I answer both of those questions first?” said the Equine Ox.

“I’ll answer the last,” volunteered the Evening Star. “It went south
and slipped off the South Pole. I saw it.”

Nimbus fell back with a groan and Billy ran forward to catch him.

The motorman and conductor gathered around. “Jab him in the ribs with
the crank handle,” suggested the conductor. “It’s the way we do when
they faints on the car.”

But Nimbus revived before this became necessary.

“It gave me such a start,” he said.

“The Equator’s got a better one,” said the Equine Ox.

“Everything’s easy once you get a start,” commented the motorman.

Nimbus was now himself, and a very energetic little self he was. First
he placed the conductor and the motorman in charge of the Equine Ox,
with orders not to let him out of their sight.

“He must be here to-morrow,” he said, “or the procession cannot go on,
and if the procession does not go on it will always be summer and the
sea will dry up.”

The motorman and the conductor were scarcely eager to undertake the
charge, but something in Nimbus’s manner convinced them that it was
necessary, so they consented.

“You,” said Nimbus to the Evening Star, “will please go and tell your
father that the Equator is off the Earth and that I will try to catch
him.”

“And you,” he said to Billy, “come with me. As soon as the Equator is
off the Earth, he will shrink up to the size of a barrel hoop, and the
meanness in his disposition condensed into that small space will make a
perfect fiend of him. He is liable to drop right down on us this very
minute and burn us into a cinder before you can say ‘Jack Robinson.’ He
gets so hot when he’s angry that he has been known to set an iceberg on
fire. By the way,” he added, “how quickly can you say ‘Jack Robinson’?”

“Jackrobinson!” said Billy.

“I thought so!” said Nimbus. “You’d have been dry ashes before you got
to a-c-k.”

Hardly had he left off speaking when a Meteor dashed in with a message
from the Dog Star.

“Equator coming back to Earth vowing vengeance against Nimbus and
Evening Star,” it said.




IN PURSUIT




CHAPTER V

IN PURSUIT


“First of all,” said Nimbus, “we must find the Rays. Then we’ll go down
to the Meteor farm and put all the Meteors who are off watch or on part
time, to work doing scout duty.”

“Who are the Rays?” asked Billy.

“They are the Sun’s private messengers. They do all his regular work
for him, such as making things grow, and arranging the weather, and
building the bridges----”

“Bridges?” Billy inquired.

“Yes, rainbow bridges. How could we fairies get over the ocean if it
wasn’t for them?”

“You might go on enchanted trolley cars,” suggested Billy.

“Yes, we might, if trolley cars grew on trees in jungles like monkeys,
but they don’t.”

Billy thought it best to make no more suggestions.

“The Rays,” continued Nimbus, “are named Violet, Indigo, Blue,
Green, Yellow, Orange and Red. Get them all together and they make a
beautiful, clear, white light, and we’ll need such a light to find the
Equator.”

There was a rustling of the trees behind them and a sad voice called
out: “I wish you’d take me with you. I’m afraid to stay alone.”

Billy looked quickly around and saw the Evening Star standing at a
little distance, looking very pretty indeed in the soft light that
seemed to sift out of her white frock.

“Oh, nonsense!” said Nimbus. “We’ve men’s work here. You don’t want to
go anyway!”

Two bright tears stood in the Evening Star’s eyes and glistened in the
glow that surrounded her. Nimbus clapped his hands in delight.

“There you are, you fellows!” he shouted; “come out of that.”

“Who?” cried Billy.

“The Rays--all of them. Don’t you see them hiding in those teardrops?
Come, come. No more delay! I’ve important work for you.”

As he spoke, there suddenly appeared before him seven lively little
chaps, each clad from head to foot in his own prismatic color, and all
dancing excitedly about the ground.

“Go tell the old man that the Equator has got away,” commanded Nimbus.
“And then come back here and make us a searchlight. If he isn’t back
here where he belongs by to-morrow there’s no telling what will happen.”

Without a word the Rays suddenly united in a brilliant shaft of white
light and whisked away over the treetops.

As they vanished Billy thought he heard a sob, and glancing about, saw
the Evening Star sitting in the branches of a low palm and crying as if
her heart would break.

“Oh, I’m afraid! I’m afraid!” she wailed. “If the Equator should come
back and find me here when you’re gone he’ll turn me into a Comet; I
just know he will!”

Nimbus’s face grew serious at this.

“There is danger of that,” he said. “Yes, he would be just about
contemptible enough to do that very thing.”

“But how could he?” inquired Billy, his bewilderment steadily
increasing.

“Easiest thing in the world. He has only to set fire to her hair,
and it would stream out behind her in a fan of flame. Then she’d be
so frightened that she’d go wandering off through space and become a
Comet.”

“Then,” said Billy, “I think we had better take Miss Evening Star with
us, don’t you? Unless her father, Mr. Sun, can look after her.”

Nimbus frowned at Billy impatiently.

“My dear boy,” he said, “don’t you know that the Sun never does any
night work of any kind? Besides, just now he’s busy on the other side
of the world. Yes, we’ll take her with us.”

So Nimbus and the Evening Star and Billy went off to the yard where the
Meteors off duty and on part time were assembled.

The inclosure, which was walled in by four fogs, was full of them,
jumping hurdles, playing marbles, or racing around after each other.

So busy were they at their sport that it was not until Nimbus had
shouted himself hoarse that they paid the slightest attention to him.

At last, however, one of them heard him and shot over to see what he
wanted.

“I don’t believe,” said Nimbus, “that you Meteors could hear the rings
of Saturn if they rang all at once. Did you know that the Equator had
escaped?”

“Goodness, no!” said the Meteor, and instantly shot about among his
fellows spreading the dreadful news.

They left off playing immediately, and all lined up before Nimbus for
orders.

“You must go find the Equator,” said the Fairy authoritatively. “The
Rays have gone to notify the Sun. Ten of you will come with us. The
other six million will scatter about the universe and look for him. Let
me know the instant you see him, and stop him if he starts to come back
to the Earth.”

“Yes, sir,” said the Meteors in a breath. With a great crackling noise
they shot away into the void, each taking a different direction so that
their going looked like a splendid shower of rockets on the night of
the Fourth of July.

[Illustration: “With a great crackling noise they shot into the void”]

“I suppose,” said Nimbus, “that the next thing to do is to build a
tower so we can see what is going on in the sky.”

“We have nothing to build it of,” said Billy.

“We could make it of Moonbeams if there were any Moon,” replied Nimbus.

“But there isn’t,” said the Evening Star, “so we’d better find a hill
to climb.”

“I saw a beautiful hill as we were coming here,” said Billy. “It had a
white top, and stood out ever so high over the others.”

“That was a volcano,” said Nimbus. “It’ll be just the place for us.”

“Let’s be starting, then,” said Billy.

So the whole party set out through the trees for the volcano, and in an
hour or two were standing on a great lava field looking up at the dark
sky, which seemed fairly alive with fiery-tailed meteors hurrying here,
there and everywhere on their search for the Equator.

Billy had just settled himself with his back against a comfortable
boulder when he noticed right over his head an object which resembled
a great, luminous doughnut. “I wonder what that is,” he said, pointing
upward.

The Evening Star, quite exhausted with the tramp up the mountain, had
been sitting with her bright face in her hands. At Billy’s words she
glanced up, and a terrified scream brought Nimbus to his feet.

“There he is!” shouted Nimbus excitedly. “He’s coming this way, and we
can never capture him.”

“There who is?” asked Billy.

“The Equator!” said Nimbus.




ON THE PASSIVE VOLCANO




CHAPTER VI

ON THE PASSIVE VOLCANO


Of course there was but one thing to do, and that was to escape as
quickly as possible. Even Nimbus, powerful as he was, couldn’t control
a runaway Equator single-handed, and if the Evening Star were ever
turned into a comet it would take years of patient effort on the part
of her parents to turn her back into a Star again.

Nimbus looked swiftly about him for a second, and then he said:
“Fortunately, this is not an active volcano, so we’ll slip into the
crater.”

He led the way toward a cavelike opening right in the summit of the
mountain--an opening which led downward diagonally, so that it afforded
ample shelter.

Billy hesitated. He had heard about volcanoes, and the thought of
bearding it in its crater was very terrifying.

“Don’t be afraid,” said Nimbus; “this is a passive volcano.”

That reassured Billy, and when he was safe inside the crater he asked
what a passive volcano was.

“It’s one that isn’t active. There are two kinds of verbs and two kinds
of volcanoes--active and passive. The fire in this one has been banked,
so it’s perfectly safe.”

Billy was still a little uneasy, and he was by no means cheered by a
sound of dull rumbling that came up out of the depths of the crater.

He had little time to worry about this new danger, however, for just
then the crater became filled with terrific heat, and its dark recesses
were illumined by a brilliant glare.

Billy’s eyes were dazzled at first, then right above him he made out
the circular form of the Equator staring blankly down at him.

“Oh, I am lost!” cried the Evening Star, and with a series of leaps she
disappeared down the crater.

“The goose, she’ll be burned to death!” said Nimbus, and started after
her.

There was a sound of falling gravel, a sharp patter of footsteps, and
then silence.

Billy knew that it would be foolish to follow, so he quietly waited for
something to happen.

The Equator, meanwhile, was getting a little more accustomed to the
darkness. As he peered about he muttered to himself, and Billy caught
the words: “I hope she hasn’t got away. There’s no one left but the
Equine Ox, and you couldn’t turn him into a Comet any more than you
could turn him out of a pasture.”

“You ought not to turn anybody into a Comet,” said Billy. “It isn’t
polite.”

The Equator started violently.

“Who are you?” he demanded, scowling at Billy.

“My name is Billy,” said the little boy, “and I am a friend of the
Evening Star.”

“Do you think you could be turned into a Comet, Billy?” asked the
Equator solicitously.

“I-I hope not,” faltered Billy. “I never tried, though.”

“I’m afraid you couldn’t,” grumbled the Equator. “Perhaps you can tell
me where I can find the Evening Star.”

“No,” said Billy decidedly. “I will not.”

“Oh, come now, don’t be rude. I won’t turn her into a very big Comet,
you know.”

“I don’t care,” said Billy. “I shall not tell you where she is, and I
think you ought to be ashamed of yourself.”

“I was driven to it,” said the Equator; “when the Geographers made me,
they wanted to be sure to have enough of me to go around, and I’ve been
going around ever since. It got so monotonous after a while that I
simply had to get into mischief or explode.”

“Was that why you escaped?” asked Billy.

“Yes; the Equine Ox went to sleep and I broke a meridian and got away.
It was quite oxidental, my escaping; I mean accidental.”

“It cannot be very nice, being an Equator,” said Billy thoughtfully;
“but it would be far worse to be a Comet.”

“Oh, I don’t know!” said the Equator. “Comets only have to get to a
certain place once in two or three hundred years, while an Equator has
to be in one place always. I’m very tired,” he said suddenly. “What do
you usually do when you’re tired?”

“I sleep,” said Billy.

“Indeed!” said the Equator; “how interesting. How is it done?”

“Why,” exclaimed Billy eagerly, “you lie down somewhere, then you close
your eyes, then you think of sheep jumping through a fence and try to
count them until you fall asleep.”

“But I can’t think of any sheep jumping through a fence. I never saw a
sheep, nor a fence. Do you suppose it would do just as well to count
hippopotamuses jumping through a swamp?”

“Perhaps,” said Billy doubtfully, “although I never tried it.”

To his great joy the Equator settled down on the summit of the volcano
and closed his eyes. He breathed hard and regularly for a little, and
then, as one eye opened, he said: “What do you do when the third and
seventh and eleventh hippopotamus is a rhinoceros? Count him, too?”

“Certainly,” said Billy, and again the Equator closed his eyes.

Presently he opened them again. “Look here,” he exclaimed, “I’ve
counted all the hippopotamuses and rhinoceroses there are. Now what do
I do?”

“Begin on the camels and lions and tigers,” said Billy.

“And when they’re counted?”

“Count the ants,” said Billy with a sudden inspiration, and the Equator
troubled him no more.

Billy was delighted. The Equator’s lips moved rapidly for some minutes,
and Billy slipped quietly down into the crater to find Nimbus and the
Evening Star to tell them to hurry and make their escape.

He wandered about blindly for some little time, then stopped bewildered.

The crater forked in many directions. It seemed hopeless to explore any
one of them because his friends might have taken another.

At last he determined to make sure that when they did come back they
would have no trouble in escaping.

Returning to the mouth of the crater he saw the Equator still fast
asleep.

Billy’s hands went to his pockets, and when they came out they brought
a quantity of fish-line, which he always carried for emergencies.

He deftly tied the line to a huge stone, making sure that the knot Was
fast, and then very cautiously slipped it through the center of the
Equator, making a loose knot, but one that would be reasonably sure to
hold him. He doubled and redoubled the string, and when the job was
done stood back and surveyed it with considerable pride.

Then, assured that the Equator was at his mercy, he began to hope for
him to wake up so that he could enjoy his triumph. He even coughed once
or twice in the hope of awakening his captive, but the Equator was very
tired and it seemed impossible to arouse him.

At last, unable longer to restrain his impulse, Billy took a sharp
stick and poked the Equator smartly once, twice, three times.

The sleeper’s eyes opened, and he tried to yawn and stretch, but the
fish-line restrained him. He looked about wrathfully and espied Billy.

Instantly his dull glowing skin became white hot with rage, and the
line melted away like straw.

The Equator sprang to his feet, his whole circular body shining like
the iron which the blacksmith has just taken from the forge.

“You shall pay for this, young man!” he cried. “I may not be able to
turn you into a Comet, but I can maroon you on the Polar Star, which
will be quite as satisfactory.”

As Billy stood petrified with fear the Equator swept down upon him.

[Illustration: “Billy took a sharp stick and poked the Equator
smartly”]




JACK FROST




CHAPTER VII

JACK FROST


If you’ve never had an Equator sweep down on you, of course you cannot
understand in the least how frightened Billy was. Even the Equine Ox
grew gray with fear when the Equator was angry, and the Equine Ox was
seldom disturbed by anything but indigestion in his four stomachs.

As for Billy, he had never been really frightened before, excepting
the time he fell into a tar barrel, and looking back upon it, that
experience now seemed a very tame affair.

He shrank back and waited for the worst. To his surprise it did not
happen. For just as the Equator was rushing toward him, just as he was
trying to say Jack Robinson, and say it so quickly that his life would
be spared an instant or two before he was turned to ashes, he heard a
voice say:

“Hello, ’Quate! Loose, I see!”

Instantly the Equator, who had been white-hot, turned a sort of sickly
yellow, then faded to dull red, and finally to a bluish green. In the
meantime he had stopped sweeping down on Billy and was motionless,
save for a tremor that ran through his circular frame.

Between Billy and the Equator stood a wiry little fellow dressed all
in fluffy white, with a white cap to match. In his hand he held what
seemed to be a very straight icicle, which glittered with all the hues
of the rainbow.

The Equator glowered upon the newcomer for some seconds before he
growled huskily: “Jack Frost!”

“Perfectly correct,” said the stranger cheerfully. “I always did admire
a good memory for names.”

“What are you doing here?” demanded the Equator sulkily, and Billy saw
to his joy that he was now in no further danger of attack.

“Nothing that I am ashamed of,” returned Jack Frost, “which is more, it
seems to me, than you can say.”

The Equator stared at Billy. “I--I--” he faltered.

“What was he doing?” asked Jack Frost, turning suddenly to Billy.
Before the little boy could answer the Equator with a flop or two rose
in the air, circled once or twice over the trees and sailed rapidly
away.

“Bad lot!” commented Jack Frost. “Never take him seriously.”

“But he was going to burn me up,” said Billy.

“Umph!” said Jack Frost. “That’s different. Let’s go and see about it.”

Billy thought he had seen all of the Equator he cared to, but Jack
Frost insisted on watching that ill-tempered creature, and so Billy
followed him to the very top of the volcano where they could get a
clear view of the horizon.

They saw the Equator making off a mile or two away, and Jack Frost,
taking Billy by the arm, started down the mountain at a brisk trot. As
they hurried along Jack Frost said:

“I suppose you have heard of me.”

“Oh, yes,” said Billy. “I have, many times.”

“I’m not so cold as I’m painted,” said Jack Frost.

“I’m sure you are not,” replied Billy respectfully.

“No,” said Jack Frost, “I really am not a bad fellow. Your father
probably holds it against me because I freeze the water pipes
sometimes, but think how the plumber’s poor little children love me for
it.”

“That’s true,” said Billy.

“Sometimes,” continued Jack Frost, “I pinch little boys’ fingers, but
that is only to remind them that they forget to ask their mothers if
they can go skating.”

“I only did that once,” said Billy, reddening.

“Again,” said Jack Frost, “I nip flowers. I do that to warn them to go
back into the ground, because winter is coming.”

“You ought to do it,” said Billy. “I hope they don’t object.”

“They do, though. People often object to things that are good for them,
like going to bed early, and washing their hands and geography.”

“Oh, I love geography now,” protested Billy.

“Oh, I’m delighted to hear it. Do you like songs?”

“Yes, indeed. The Equine Ox knows a beautiful one about the Equator.”

“I cannot imagine a beautiful song about the Equator,” said Jack Frost.
“See what you think of mine.” And seating himself on the edge of the
cliff they had been skirting, with his heels hanging over space, he
sang:

THE SONG OF JACK FROST

  “In the brown October,
    When the bonfires burn,
  When reluctant robins
    Sadly homeward turn,
  When the trees are moulting
    Leaves of gold and red,
  Like stray flakes of sunset
    From the sky o’erhead,
  Then I steal at twilight
    Through the shadows gray,
  Heralding the winter
    That is on its way.
  Soon with films of silver
    I shall overspread
  Every quiet water
    In its pebbly bed.
  Soon I’ll warn the flowers
    That it’s time to keep
  Tryst with dreams of springtime,
    Wrapped in golden sleep.

[Illustration: “And seating himself on the edge of the cliff, he
sang”]

  Then when first the snowflakes
    Tremble in the air
  I must forth and hurry,
    Hurry everywhere:
  Silvering the treetops
    Till their branches bright
  Shimmer as the rainbow
    In the morning light.
  Etching lacy landscapes
    On the windowpane,
  Spreading fluffy carpets
    Over hill and plain,
  Roofing over rivers,
    Blanketing the bears,
  Warm and snug and cozy
    In their forest lairs.
  Here and there and yonder,
    Always on the wing,
  Till I’m called to slumber
    By the voice of Spring.”

“I think that is a very pretty song,” said Billy.

“Thank you,” said Jack Frost; “but what has become of the Equator in
the meantime?”

Billy looked in every direction, but no sign of the Equator was to be
seen.

“I was listening to your song,” he said. “I forgot to keep looking.”

“You are a very nice little boy,” said Jack Frost, patting Billy on
the head, “but we have just got to find that Equator. There is no
telling what he may be doing.”

“I know what he will try to do,” said Billy.

“That’s something. What is it?”

“Catch Miss Evening Star and make a Comet out of her.”

“Great goodness! Why didn’t you say that before?”

“There wasn’t time,” explained Billy.

“There is always time,” said Jack Frost coldly. “Time is everywhere.
The supply is inexhaustible.”

“I’m sorry,” said Billy.

“Never mind,” said Jack Frost kindly. “I dare say it will turn out all
right, like the farmer’s wagon that met the automobile. Anyway, here
comes the Geography Fairy. He ought to have some tidings.”

Looking over the edge of the cliff, Billy saw Nimbus approaching. He
explained afterward that the crater which he and the Evening Star had
followed, led right through the volcano and out of the cliff at the
bottom.

Jack Frost hailed him, and Nimbus climbed up, bidding his train of
Meteors wait until he returned.

He and Jack Frost shook hands cordially, and Nimbus inquired:

“Have either of you seen anything of the Evening Star? I lost track of
her when we got out of the crater.”

“Gracious!” said Billy, “I thought she was with you.”

“So she was,” said Nimbus, “but she said she thought she’d like to fly
once more, and sailed off to pay the Moon a visit.”

Jack Frost looked up quickly.

“That’s where the Equator’s gone, then,” he said.

“Has the Equator left the top of the volcano?” asked Nimbus excitedly.

“He has,” said Jack Frost. “He was just about to destroy this little
boy when I stopped him. He’s afraid of me.”

“More than of any one else in the whole world,” said Nimbus. “But where
do you suppose he is now?”

“I don’t suppose,” said Jack Frost; “I can only suspect.”

“And what do you suspect?”

“That he’s trailing the Evening Star, and if he finds her----”

“But he must not find her,” cried Nimbus.

“No,” said Jack Frost, “he must not.”

Out of the darkness above them shone a bright speck that grew larger
and larger. As it drew nearer Billy saw that it was a Meteor, a new
Meteor which he had never seen before.

“Hey, there!” shouted Nimbus, who had seen him the same moment Billy
did; “any message for me?”

“Yes,” puffed the Meteor, who was not within easy talking distance.
“Miss Evening Star is being chased by the Equator, and has only got
about a thousand miles’ start.”

“Which way are they going?” asked Nimbus and Jack Frost in a breath.

“Gee whiz!” said the Meteor, “I forgot to ask.”




THE COMPASS




CHAPTER VIII

THE COMPASS


“Strange that you fellows never forget to ask for your meals,” said
Jack Frost tartly. “Your memory never fails you there.”

“Let us not waste time scolding them,” said Nimbus. “The important
thing is to find where the Equator and the Evening Star have gone.”

“Very true,” said Jack Frost. “We’ll establish headquarters
immediately, and send out scouts.”

Then he led the way to a little clump of palms which was at the foot of
a hill just below them.

The Meteors, like a great flock of fireflies, followed along in their
wake, and when they stopped they lined up for orders.

“Now,” said Nimbus, addressing them, “how many points of the compass
are there?”

“It depends entirely on the compass,” said one of the Meteors.

“He’s right,” said Jack Frost. “A large compass would have more points
than a small one. There’s more room on it.”

“I can box the compass,” chirruped another Meteor proudly.

“I can box ears,” snapped Nimbus peevishly.

Here Jack Frost broke in.

“Tell off a thousand Meteors,” he said, “to count all the points on the
largest compass, and then order a scout to go in the direction pointed
by each point. That ought to get them.”

“Good,” declared Nimbus. “Go to work, you fellows, and carry out
orders. The first one who discovers them, notify Aurora Borealis, and
she’ll flash the signal down to us.”

The Meteors, who were always active when there was work to be done,
shot forth on their errands.

“How long do you suppose it will be before the Equator can catch the
Evening Star?” asked Billy.

“It all depends on whether or not they are both going in the same
direction,” replied Jack Frost.

Billy smiled. “Of course,” he said, “if they were going in opposite
directions he never would catch her.”

“Wrong,” said Jack Frost. “Supposing I started for the South Pole and
you started for the North Pole, and we both kept on going in the same
direction after we got there, what would happen?”

Billy thought a minute. “Oh, I see!” he cried; “we’d meet on the
opposite side of the earth.”

“We would,” said Jack Frost, “if we didn’t stop on the way. The
Equator has probably gone in the opposite direction, intending to meet
the Evening Star on the other side of the world. That would surprise
her.”

“In that case,” said Nimbus, “Jack Frost and I had better start off in
opposite directions and see which gets to the other side of the world
first. The one who does can put a stop to this chase.”

“But we don’t know just which part of the other side they’re going to
meet on,” objected Jack Frost.

“We can take a chance,” said Nimbus. “That’s what the Meteors will have
to do, and we can beat them, because we have no tails to drag after us.”

“What shall I do?” said Billy.

“You can stay here and get him if he happens to pass,” said Nimbus.

Billy was a little troubled about this, but he was not the boy to admit
that he was frightened, and, though his mouth trembled a trifle and he
winked a little more rapidly than usual, he kept a brave face as his
two friends each called a cloud out of the sky and sailed away upon it.

He had stood there but a few minutes when he heard the tinkling of
a bell a little distance away. At first it rang slowly and at long
intervals, then faster and faster, till at length it sounded like the
triangle the man played in one corner of the orchestra in the theater
at home.

Thinking there could be no harm in finding out where the sound came
from, as the Equator was as little likely to alight in one place as
another, he listened very carefully, then proceeded slowly toward the
tinkling sound.

Soon he came out into the very clearing where the trolley car had
reached the earth, and there stood the trolley car with the face of the
Equine Ox protruding from the front door and wearing a very unhappy
expression.

Confronting the Equine Ox was the conductor, who was waving his hands
and shouting, while the motorman was stooping over, a little way off,
gathering up a smooth round stone about the size of an egg.

Meanwhile the tinkle of the bell sounded continuously, and the
Equine Ox wriggled and writhed as if very much displeased with his
imprisonment.

The motorman being nearest to him, Billy addressed him:

“What are you going to do with that stone?” he inquired.

“Throw it at the Ox,” replied the motorman.

“Oh, don’t do that,” pleaded Billy. “You might hurt him. And he isn’t
doing anything bad, I’m sure.”

“He isn’t, isn’t he?” shouted the motorman. “Ain’t he lashing his tail?”

“What of that?” asked Billy. “All animals lash their tails except bears
and saddle horses and fox-hunters, which haven’t any tails to lash.”

“But his tail is caught in the bell rope,” said the motorman, hurling
the stone at the Equine Ox. The stone broke a window, and although
it did not reach its target, it annoyed the creature so that he
struggled more frantically than before, and the bell jingled furiously.

[Illustration: “Confronting the Equine Ox was the conductor, waving his
hand and shouting”]

“Stop,” cried the conductor excitedly. “It’s getting too expensive for
me.”

“Expensive!” said Billy in amazement.

“Yes, expensive. Every time he wiggles his tail that way he rings up a
fare, and he’s rung up more than thirty-seven dollars’ worth already.
I’ve counted ’em all.”

Billy understood why the motorman and the conductor were so worried.
The tail of the Ox had become entangled in the rope that led to the
fare register, and every tinkle of the bell meant a fare recorded.

At first he was shocked to think of this wasteful extravagance, but
then he recollected that as the car was not on a regular run the fares
couldn’t really be counted against the motorman and the conductor.

They were not at all certain of this when he explained it to them.

“We’re going back, ain’t we?” asked the conductor.

“Oh, yes,” said Billy, “I’m sure we are.”

“Well, when we run the car into the barn they’ll charge me with these
fares,” said the conductor. “The car will have been away so long that
they’ll be disgusted if it has not earned any money.”

“I tell you,” said Billy; “when Nimbus comes back I’ll get him to
enchant the register so it will only charge up the fares you have
really collected. That will make it all right.”

This appeased the motorman and the conductor, and in answer to Billy’s
questions they explained how the Equine Ox got into the car.

When they were left alone with him he had behaved very badly, rolling
on the ground and laughing very heartily, which proved, as they had
been told by Nimbus, that he was furiously angry.

Then he began to sing, and at last he actually started to run away.

But they prevented this by tying the trolley rope tightly to his horn
and securing him to the car, and then, fearing that the rope might
break, they hit upon a stratagem.

They talked eagerly about the comforts and coolness of the inside of
the car, until the curiosity of the Equine Ox outran his discretion and
he insisted upon going in.

Knowing that he was governed by contraries, they tried to prevent his
doing so. This, as they expected, made him all the more determined, and
he forced his way past them into the car.

But once inside he found it impossible to get out, and then it was that
he began the lashing of his tail, which had resulted in the ringing up
of so many fares.

Billy agreed with the motorman and the conductor that the best place
for the Equine Ox was in the trolley car, for if he tried too hard to
escape they had only to shut the door to keep him there.

So Billy sat down and told the trolley men everything that had happened
since he left them, and they became as excited as he was about the
chances of the Evening Star’s escape from the Equator.

“I wish I had the Equator in reach of my crank handle,” said the
motorman.

“I wish,” said Billy, “that the Evening Star would come past here right
now. We’d get Nimbus to enchant the trolley car again, and away we’d go
back home with her.”

“Sure,” said the conductor. “We could use her for a headlight on the
way home.”

They were all busily discussing what could be done to secure the
Evening Star against the Equator when they had her in Billy’s home when
a light shone above the trees and soon a Meteor dropped among them.

“I just met the Equator going west-nor’west,” he said. “Where’s Nimbus?”

“In that case,” bellowed the Equine Ox, “I’ll go sou’-sou’east,” and he
walked calmly away in that direction, tearing out the forward end of
the trolley car as he went.

[Illustration: “Soon a Meteor dropped among them”]




THE TRAIL OF THE RUNAWAY




CHAPTER IX

THE TRAIL OF THE RUNAWAY


With wild cries the conductor and the motorman ran after the Equine Ox,
but although he appeared to be walking, he went at a tremendous speed,
and soon they were compelled to give up the chase.

“Oh! Oh!” wailed Billy, who was terribly distressed at the escape of
the Equine Ox, “I wish there was something I could do. But I am so
small that I am absolutely useless around here.”

There was a cracking of branches close at hand, and to Billy’s
astonishment and delight the Equine Ox reappeared.

“Do you think it is unlucky to be small, Billy?” he inquired.

The motorman and the conductor started forward, but the Equine Ox
lowered his horns.

“Never mind that now,” he said to them. “I will give you due notice of
my next movements, and on the whole I don’t think I will go at all. I
don’t think the Equator will come this way, at all events.”

The conductor and the motorman still advanced, but Billy said:

“I think the Equine Ox is speaking the truth. His eyes look honest.”

“My eyes are honest,” said the Equine Ox. “They never deceived me in my
life. But as I was saying, why are you so sorry that you’re small?”

“Because,” said Billy, “I can’t be of any help when things happen.”

“Listen,” said the Equine Ox, and throwing back his head he sang:

THE MELANCHOLY STAR

  “A foolish little star I knew, quite petulant and peevish grew,
    And all because he thought he was
      Compelled to shine unheeded.
  ‘I know,’ he sighed, ‘that I am small, and so I shouldn’t shine at
        all;
    It isn’t fair to keep me where
      I plainly am not needed.’

  “So every night, from dark till dawn, dejectedly he carried on,
    And pined and sighed and whined and cried
      In this dyspeptic fashion.
  In bitterness and discontent his poor defenseless rays he rent,
    And tore his hair, till sore despair
      Became his ruling passion.

[Illustration: “Listen, said the Equine Ox, and throwing back his head,
he sang”]

  “Of course when one thus falls a prey to melancholy, night and day,
    And merely moans and mopes and groans,
      He’ll grow weak-minded from it;
  And as this star became more blue, and thinking of his sorrows grew
    Each day more sad, he soon went mad,
      And turned into a comet.

  “Now little girls who fancy they are always in grown people’s way,
    And little chaps who think perhaps
      They’re not appreciated;
  Of course will surely never share the fate this starlet had to bear,
    But still they need perhaps to heed
      This tale that I’ve related.

  “For if they do not mind at all because they happen to be small,
    They soon will see their tasks will be
      Made wonderfully lighter;
  And when a child is gay of heart, and always gladly does his part,
    And never sighs and never cries,
      He makes the whole world brighter.”

“I’ll try not to be sorry any more,” said Billy, when the song was
finished.

“That’s right,” said the Equine Ox; “and now, if the gentlemen don’t
mind, I’d like to go back into the trolley car. It fitted me perfectly,
and it was such fun ringing that bell.”

“The trolley car’s broke,” said the conductor. “And if it wasn’t I
wouldn’t take a chance on having you ring up any more fares.”

“Very well,” said the Equine Ox, “then we might as well sit quietly and
await the reports of the Meteors. They’ll be coming in very soon now.”

But it was not a Meteor who first arrived. It was Jack Frost and
Nimbus, coming in from opposite directions almost at the same time.
Both had been clear around the world, they said, and neither had seen a
sign of the Equator or the Evening Star.

“I suppose,” said Billy, when this dismal report was received, “that we
ought to notify the Sun.”

“I can’t notify him,” said Jack Frost. “He and I are utter strangers.”

“I sent the Rays to notify him,” said Nimbus. “But I don’t think it
will do any good. He can only travel so fast anyway, not more than a
million miles a minute, and that would not do any good.”

“What is there to do, then?” inquired Billy disconsolately.

Hardly were the words out of his mouth when a Meteor came dashing in
among them.

“Any news?” asked Jack Frost.

“Lots of it,” said the Meteor. “News is happening every minute.”

“He means any news of the Evening Star or the Equator,” said Nimbus.

“No,” said the Meteor. “In fact I had forgotten all about them in the
excitement.”

“What excitement?” demanded Nimbus.

“Why,” said the Meteor, “the most astonishing things are happening. In
Chicago grapefruits are growing on Wabash Avenue, monkeys are swarming
up the Tribune Building on Madison Street, and they are raising tobacco
and watermelons on Drexel Boulevard.”

“Gracious,” said Jack Frost, “and this is the middle of January! What
can that mean?”

“Great news,” sang out a voice overhead, and another Meteor settled in
among them.

“Snow has all melted in Duluth,” he said, “and there is an
unprecedented sale of palmleaf fans all through that part of the
country.”

Before any one could express surprise at this astonishing information a
third Meteor and a fourth alighted.

“It is ninety degrees in the shade in Winnipeg,” said the third Meteor,
“and they are picking cocoanuts in Quebec. The baseball season has
opened in Iceland.”

“Hotter still in Norway,” said the fourth Meteor, who had just arrived;
“oldest inhabitant never remembers such sultry weather. Eskimos are now
wearing mosquito nets instead of furs, and they’re catching crocodiles
in the Arctic Ocean. The icebergs have begun to boil.”

“This won’t do!” cried Jack Frost excitedly. “All the work that I’ve
been at for centuries is being undone. I’ll soon have to organize a
syndicate to attend to my business if this keeps up. Whatever can have
happened?”

Another Meteor came in just then with still more tidings.

“Great schools of whales are passing Cape Nome,” he said, “all going
north. They’re picking strawberries off the tundras there, and they are
advertising hot springs for rheumatism in a glacier.”

Nimbus, who had been sitting with knitted brows, suddenly leaped to his
feet, and slapped the conductor on the back with such violence that
that gentleman fell forward against the Equine Ox.

“I know what it is,” shouted Nimbus. “The Equator is up there. That’s
what’s making all this trouble!”

“Then far be it from me to stay here,” said Jack Frost, preparing to
start at once. “I’m not going to have all my good icebergs and glaciers
melted like ice cream. It took me countless centuries to make some of
them.”

“Oh, never mind your old icebergs and glaciers,” said Nimbus. “The
point is that we’ve located the Equator and we can stop him before he
catches the Evening Star. He can only thaw a radius of a few miles at
one time, now that he’s shrunk so, so you don’t need to worry at all
about his undoing your work.”

“Well, anyway, we must go up there,” said Jack Frost.

“We certainly must,” said Nimbus, “and as soon as possible. I expect
Aurora Borealis will be reporting him at any time now.”

At that exact moment the sky lighted up with pink splendor that waved
and flickered and danced over the heavens.

“There she is now,” cried Nimbus. “Come, let us be off!”

“Please,” said Billy, who was intensely excited, “may I go, too? I
should dearly love to help catch him.”

“Why, yes, I guess so,” said Nimbus. “I’ll enchant the trolley car
again and we’ll all go in that.”

The trolley car had been very badly damaged by the Equine Ox, but
Nimbus merely tapped it with his wand and it became whole again. The
motorman regarded him open-mouthed.

“Wouldn’t he be a wonder in a repair shop?” he exclaimed.

“I guess she’ll hold together now,” said Nimbus. “Come on, Jack Frost;
come on, Billy,” and he led the way into the car.

The conductor and the motorman took their places, and the Equine Ox at
the last moment crowded into the rear door. There was scarcely room for
him, but Nimbus did not care to lose any time in putting him out.

The car was speedily got under way and soon was merrily sailing along
in the direction of the North Pole.

[Illustration: “The Equine Ox crowded into the rear door”]




WHERE NIGHT IS SIX MONTHS LONG




CHAPTER X

WHERE NIGHT IS SIX MONTHS LONG


“It is a good thing that both the Evening Star and the Equator shine,”
said Billy. “We can find them so easily in the dark.”

“But there isn’t going to be any dark,” said Jack Frost.

“Oh, but there will be at night!” said Billy confidently. “It is always
dark at night. It has to be or you wouldn’t know it was night.”

“But there won’t be any night for six months where we are going,” said
Jack Frost. “There never is at the North Pole.”

“Gracious!” said Billy; “that must be dreadful. And do the days last
for six months, too?”

“To be sure they do. If you ask a boy to come to your house to spend
the afternoon at the North Pole he stays for three months.”

“It must be terrible when the baby has the colic all night,” said Billy
thoughtfully. “That happens often at our house, and Papa has to walk
the floor with him.”

“I don’t know much about babies,” said Jack Frost, “but I suppose they
would stop crying before morning. Maybe they’d be satisfied crying for
a month or two if they weren’t interrupted.”

“There’s an iceberg,” said Nimbus, who had been keeping a lookout. “We
ought to be getting there in a little while now. We are running into a
dawn anyway.”

To the southward Billy noticed a faint grayish streak in the sky, and
soon he could see the white caps that the breakers always wear to keep
their heads warm on windy days.

They were going very fast. Little white specks that seemed to be
flying past beneath them he now saw were icebergs, and by-and-by these
began to appear in great numbers, dotting the sea like schools of tiny
islands in all directions.

Although the light was growing brighter all the time, he was still
aware of a faint flickering glow to the northward, and this his friends
told him was Aurora Borealis flashing the news that the Equator and the
Evening Star were still in the neighborhood.

“I wish this thing would hurry,” said Nimbus impatiently. “We are not
going more than five hundred miles an hour now. Mere dawdling, I call
it.”

“Crawling,” said Jack Frost.

“I wonder how long it will be before we catch up to them,” said Billy.

“Can’t tell,” said Nimbus. “Depends on whether we are going in their
direction or not.”

Suddenly Jack Frost gave a roar of rage.

“Look there!” he shouted. “Just look there. It took me centuries to
make that glacier, and now look at it. Isn’t that a shame?”

Below them, where a range of snowy mountains skirted the sea, they saw
a long dark streak which, when more closely observed, proved to be a
mountain area entirely bared of snow and leading like a great broad
road to the north.

“That’s what that wretched Equator has been doing,” said Jack Frost
sadly. “He’s spoiled a glacier that was a work of art--almost my
masterpiece. I suppose when I get up to the North Pole I’ll find he has
melted that. And if he has, it’ll spoil. You cannot possibly keep a
North Pole unless you keep it on ice.”

“But,” cried Nimbus, who plainly did not share Jack Frost’s annoyance,
“we can trace him now. That is where he must have lighted. Let’s go
down there and see if we can find any trace of the Evening Star.”

He had hardly spoken when the car began rapidly to descend, and
presently it was resting on a mountain top between two tall ice cliffs.

Jack Frost looked at them ruefully.

“That was my glacier,” he said. “My beautiful glacier--one of the best
I ever built. And now look at it. Ruined, utterly ruined.”

Nimbus, who had been searching over the rocks, uttered a cry of
pleasure.

“Look here,” he said. “The Equator got here first. The Evening Star did
not come till later. So she is probably safe, after all.”

“How do you know that?” said Jack Frost.

“See,” said Nimbus. “When he got here and cleaned the snow off”--Jack
Frost grunted disgustedly--“the flowers began to spring up. Here are
daisies and buttercups and forget-me-nots and violets and trilliums,
all growing where he turned the heat on.”

“I don’t see that that proves anything,” said Jack Frost.

“But it does,” said Nimbus, “whether you see it or not. After they grew
and blossomed somebody came and picked lots of them. You can see where
they have been snipped off.”

“Well?” said Jack Frost.

“It must have been the Evening Star,” continued Nimbus. “She’s very
fond of flowers, you know, and nobody else could get here.”

“Humph!” said Jack Frost; “there may be something in that. But whether
there is or not, I must rebuild this glacier, or at least start it.
I’ll begin by cutting down these flowers.”

“Oh, please don’t!” said Billy. “They look so pretty here among the
snowdrifts. Let them just stay for a while anyway.”

“All right,” said Jack Frost, “for a while, if it will please you. But
I want you to understand that they are in the way of the loveliest
glacier that----”

“Never mind your glacier,” shouted Nimbus. “I’ve found the track of the
Evening Star, and she is going east instead of north.”

He had climbed up a crevice in one of the ice cliffs and was studying
the surface of a thin covering of new-fallen snow.

There before him were the dainty footprints of the Evening Star,
and here and there a blossom apparently fallen from her bouquet lay
scattered along the tracks.

“Now,” said Nimbus, “we will separate. Billy, you and I will go after
the Evening Star, and you, Jack Frost, can follow the open trail of the
Equator and see if you can find him. If you do find him, be sure not to
let him get away.”

“How about us?” said the motorman severely.

“Oh, I had forgotten you!” said Nimbus.

“We hadn’t,” said the motorman.

“Then you’d better,” said the Equine Ox, sticking his head out of one
of the windows of the car. “Always remember yourself last.”

“I don’t care to hear anything more from you,” said the motorman.
“It’s against the rules for a beast to talk, anyway.”

“Oh, I don’t know about that!” said a voice from a little peak just
above them.

“A bear,” said Billy, astonished.

“Why not?” said the voice, as a great white Polar Bear threaded his way
down the slope toward the trolley car.

But the motorman and the conductor seemed to think there were many
reasons why not. They hastily sought shelter inside the car and closed
the door after them, while the Equine Ox, with a snort of terror,
pulled his head in so quickly that he brought away a part of the sash
with his horns.

“My!” said Billy; “I’m afraid that bear will get them or us.”

“He’ll have to eat the side of the trolley car before he gets them,”
said Nimbus.

“And by that time,” added Jack Frost, “he’ll be so full he won’t have
any more room for them.”

So, leaving the bear busily gnawing at the sash board of the car,
Nimbus, Jack Frost and Billy proceeded afoot on their quest.

Jack Frost set out on the Equator’s trail at a prodigious pace,
muttering to himself at each fresh discovery of a ruined glacier or
melted icefield.

Billy and Nimbus proceeded more slowly, for the track of the Evening
Star was not always distinct, and it was plain that, here and there,
when the going was hard, she had sailed over the obstructing cliffs.

At the end of an hour the track disappeared altogether, nor could they
find it, search as they might.

“Where do you suppose she has gone?” inquired Billy.

“Up,” said Nimbus briefly. “Probably saw the Equator coming.”

As he was speaking they heard a familiar voice, and Jack Frost hailed
them.

“Hello!” said Nimbus; “what are you doing over here?”

“This is where the track brought me,” replied Jack Frost, and Billy and
Nimbus saw that the trail through the snow which had been melted by the
Equator was within a few yards of them.

“That explains why the Evening Star stopped walking,” said Nimbus. “She
saw the Equator headed over this way, and decided she had better travel
a little faster.”

It had grown quite light, so that the flashes of Aurora could no longer
seem to guide them, for they had quite faded in the brighter dawn.

As Billy was very tired, Jack Frost and Nimbus agreed to sit down for a
few minutes while he rested. In the mean time they sent a Meteor back
for the trolley car so that they might continue their journey more
easily.

“Walking is foolish, anyway,” said Jack Frost. “Why any one who can fly
should ever walk is a mystery to me.”

“Birds do,” said Billy.

“Yes,” said Jack Frost, “and sometimes they overdo it, like the awkward
auk. Did you ever hear about him?”

“No,” said Billy, “I never did, but I should love to.”

“It’s a sad story,” said Jack Frost, “but here it is”:

  “Two excellent wings had the awkward auk,
    But he was never known to fly,
  Preferring a rambling, shambling walk,
    And the walruses wondered why;
  Yet there seems no reason that on this point
    Their minds should have been so hazy,
  For it’s clear to me as a thing can be
    That the awkward auk was lazy.

  “Though he might have skirted the rainbow’s rim
    Or circled above the seas,
  The only gait that appealed to him
    Was one of reposeful ease;
  He strutted about o’er the crags and cliffs
    In a most ungainly fashion,
  And the fowls that flew he was prone to view
    With a kind of cold compassion.

  “But it chanced one night that a hungry fox
    Got a look at the awkward auk,
  Who was strolling about on the spray-washed rocks
    With his usual clumsy walk;
  He made a dash for the startled bird,
    And the auk with a frown of fright
  On his furrowed brow, observed that now
    Was a crisis that called for flight.

  “He flapped and flopped with his feeble wings,
    And he wobbled his trifling tail;
  But, alas! The long-neglected things
    Were not of the least avail;
  Which is why the fox, as he licked his chops
    With a gratified gusto, winked,
  And is why the auk who preferred to walk
    Has come to be quite extinct.”

Jack Frost had just finished the last word when the Meteor came flying
up to them.

“The Equator,” he said, “is at the North Pole, and the Evening Star is
hiding under a glacier there. As soon as he melts the glacier----”

“Everything will be lost,” finished Nimbus. “Come on, there is not a
moment to lose.”

“I’ll be there in a minute,” said Jack Frost, “but I’ve got to start
those melted glaciers first; you know that’s my job, and I dare not
neglect it.”

“All right,” said Nimbus. “Billy and I will go on without you. Come on,
Billy.”

Billy started to follow him, but Nimbus, in his excitement, had
completely forgotten the little boy. He struck up a pace that Billy
could not possibly keep, and soon was out of hearing--a tiny speck on
the vast white snowfield that stretched ahead toward the horizon.

“I guess I’ll have to go with you, Jack Frost,” said Billy, turning
sadly toward the spot where that worthy had been standing.

But Jack Frost had vanished utterly, and there was Billy deserted on a
great Arctic snowfield, just at the most exciting moment of the chase.




THE END OF THE CHASE




CHAPTER XI

THE END OF THE CHASE


It must be admitted that there were tears in the little boy’s eyes,
tears that overflowed and made damp, messy places on his wide
shirt-collar before they could be ordered back where they belonged.

They were tears of disappointment rather than fear, although certain
thoughts of bears and walruses and even great sharp-billed Arctic owls
insisted on following one another very rapidly through his mind.

But when five minutes passed and no bears nor other terrifying
creatures appeared Billy began to take heart.

“They’re sure to miss me,” he said aloud, for it was comforting to hear
a sound, even if it were only that of his own voice. “And when they do
miss me they’ll find me. They are fairies, and they can find anything.”

“Anything but the Evening Star,” said a deep voice beside him. “They
haven’t found her yet, remember.”

Billy jumped almost out of his shoes, he was so startled, but he
looked bravely in the direction of the voice just the same, and to his
amazement he saw the Equine Ox standing knee deep in snow and switching
his tail vigorously as he had learned to switch it in the tropics
where the flies are bad. It made Billy laugh to see him do it in the
Arctic Circle. But the Equine Ox said it was a warming process.

“I repeat,” said the Equine Ox, “that they haven’t found the Evening
Star. That is chiefly because they refused to ask me to help them.”

“But,” said Billy, “you are supposed to be back there with the
conductor and the motorman.”

“They were not interesting,” said the Equine Ox. “No doubt they are
very worthy people, but they are not interesting. They talked about pie
and cheese sandwiches and fried beefsteak and other things I do not
care for, so I came up here. I knew I would have to, anyway, before
they found the Evening Star.”

“How in the world did you get here?” asked Billy.

“I didn’t,” said the Equine Ox.

“But you’re here, so you must have got here,” insisted Billy.

“You asked,” said the Equine Ox placidly, “how in the world I got here.
I didn’t get here in the world. I got here out of the world. I came by
way of the Big Dipper.”

“Oh!” said Billy; “I suppose I see. Anyway, it would not be polite to
keep on asking you questions, even if I don’t understand.”

“An Equine Ox,” said the other, “can go anywhere he pleases, on the
world or off of it. I hadn’t seen the Big Dipper for some time, so
I went up there, took a drink and came down here. I know of nothing
easier to do than that, do you?”

Billy knew of a great many things that would have been easier for him
to do; so many, in fact, that it would be too great a task to enumerate
them, so he kept silent.

“I do hope you can help them find the Evening Star,” he said at length.

“Certainly I can,” said the Equine Ox. “There she is now.”

“Where?” cried Billy.

“Over across the lake on the other side of the mountain”--and the
Equine Ox pointed with his tail to the southward. “Just now she is
frozen in a glacier.”

“Mercy!” said Billy; “and there is no one to help us to get her out.”

“Unless you count us,” said the conductor. “But I suppose, of course,
you don’t.”

He was standing right at Billy’s elbow, and directly behind him was the
motorman.

“The Equine Ox ran away on us again,” explained the conductor, noticing
Billy’s astonishment.

“Ran away on you?” inquired Billy.

“He means off of them,” said the Equine Ox. “He’s dreadfully
ungrammatical.”

“Don’t you call me names,” said the conductor threateningly.

“Please don’t quarrel,” said Billy. “The Evening Star is in that
glacier over yonder, and we must get her out of it or she’ll freeze to
death.”

“Then let’s,” said the motorman.

Billy excitedly hurried to the glacier, and the others followed as fast
as they could.

It was plain that somebody was confined within its green depths, for a
form could be distinctly seen by the whole party, who flattened their
noses against the cliff-like side of the glacier and gazed eagerly into
it.

“I think you had better begin to batter in the ice with your horns,”
said the motorman, “and we’ll follow you up and throw out the loose
ice.”

The Equine Ox, thus addressed, fell energetically to work and soon had
broken a fair-sized hole in the ice wall.

Into it dashed the conductor and the motorman, and they threw out the
fragments of ice broken off by the sharp horns, while Billy, unable to
do anything or to find any place to work at all, stood and wrung his
hands in impatience.

It was a hard task, but the three kept steadily at it, and in a very
little while only a thin wall separated them from the object of their
search.

Suddenly the last film of ice was broken through, and then they all
fell back in blank amazement, for it was not the Evening Star at all
who came forth, but Jack Frost, looking rather chilly and very much
ashamed.

“Jack Frost!” cried the Equine Ox. “Jack Frost, by all that’s
astonishing!”

“Well, I never!” said the conductor.

“Me neither,” said the motorman, “and many of ’em.”

“How in the world did you get in there, Jack Frost?” asked Billy.

“Well, I hate to admit it,” said Jack Frost, “but I froze myself in. It
was all a mistake.”

“Mistakes will happen,” said the motorman. “The best of us are sure to
make ’em at times. I hate to run over dogs, but sometimes I do it.”

“You see,” said Jack Frost, “I was in a hurry to rebuild that glacier,
and I got so interested I didn’t leave myself any place to get out till
it was all done.”

“But why didn’t you build it from the outside?” asked Billy.

“That’s the way men build things,” said Jack Frost. “It’s different
with us Nature people. Did you ever see a tree built from the outside?
Or a tomato?”

Billy couldn’t remember that he ever had.

“And now,” continued Jack Frost, “I wish you would tell me the news.
Has the Equator got the Evening Star yet?”

“I don’t know,” said Billy.

“Why haven’t you been finding out?”

“Look here, Jack Frost,” said the Equine Ox impatiently, “that’s a nice
question for you to be asking. If we had been finding out, what would
have become of you?”

“I suppose, of course, you knew it was I who was in here when you
started digging?” said Jack Frost.

“Ho, ho!” roared the motorman. “He’s got the critter on that one.”

The Equine Ox tossed his horns indifferently and stalked away.

“Where are you going?” asked Billy.

“Back to the place where the Equator ought to be,” said the Equine Ox.
“I’m tired of this business. I wish I’d never come.”

“He means that he wishes he’d never came,” said the conductor to the
motorman. “Somehow that sentiment hits me--hits me hard.”

“It hits me like a pile driver,” said the motorman. “Let’s go back with
him.”

“Hurry, if you are coming,” said the Equine Ox, who had overheard them.
“I’ll give you a lift as far as--where do you live, anyway?”

“Suburbia,” said the conductor.

“All right,” said the Equine Ox; “climb on my back and we’ll be in
Suburbia in time for supper. Jack Frost, you can send Nimbus back with
the car.”

“All right,” cried Jack Frost after them, “as soon as we find the
Equator.”

For a little while Billy, standing beside Jack Frost, watched them as
they galloped off toward where the blue of the sky met the white of the
snowfields. The Equine Ox seemed not to mind the load he carried, and
just as Billy turned away the conductor and the motorman were lighting
their pipes preparatory to settling down for a comfortable ride. Then
Jack Frost spoke to him and Billy saw them no more.

“What is that on the snow mountain over there?” Jack Frost was saying.

“Let’s go and see,” said Billy, even before he turned to look.

The snow mountain was only a little way off, and upon its summit some
dark object seemed to move as if fluttering in the wind.

“You go ahead,” said Jack Frost, “and I’ll be with you in a minute.
I forgot to stop up that hole you fellows dug in the glacier. If the
Equator ever gets in there he’ll destroy the whole thing again in a
second.”

“All right,” said Billy; “but don’t be long, for I may need help.”

Jack Frost turned back, and Billy set out alone for the snow mountain,
and soon got close enough to get a good view.

At first he was overjoyed, for upon the mountain he saw the Evening
Star, and he felt that the long quest for her was as good as ended.

A few steps further, however, brought him to the brink of a circular
abyss, too wide to leap over and far too deep to fall into. It shut him
off completely from the peak that rose in its center.

“Jack Frost will be able to make an ice bridge across it when he
comes,” said Billy, so he patiently sat down to wait.

In another instant he cried out in alarm.

Overhead sounded a crackling and snapping, and swiftly the Equator
dropped down from a great height and began to hover directly over the
head of the Evening Star.

Already the ice under her had begun to melt. Soon it would melt away
altogether and then Billy knew that the Equator, kept at a distance now
by fear of the cold snow, would fall upon her and bear her away, and
perhaps turn her into a Comet right before his horrified eyes.




ACROSS THE RAINBOW




CHAPTER XII

ACROSS THE RAINBOW


“Oh, if I could only get over there!” moaned Billy. He had not stopped
to think what he would do if he were there. His eagerness to help the
Evening Star was so keen that he was almost ready to leap the abyss
before him. He even went to the brink and tried to calculate his
chances of getting across with a running jump, but he saw that the best
jumper in the world could not have got half way over before he would
have tumbled into the icy depths below. So, with a sigh, he sat down to
think.

Billy did not mean to cry--he never meant to cry--but the sight of the
Equator hovering so closely over the Evening Star and melting down the
snow mountain like a wax taper brought an unbidden tear or two to his
eyes, and they rolled slowly down his cheeks.

One of them fell on his stocking, where it quickly froze, and Billy,
looking at it disconsolately, observed that it shone with the hues of
the rainbow in the light thrown off by the Equator.

Suddenly he leaped to his feet, dancing for joy.

“The Rays!” he cried, “they will build me a bridge!”

And he called them by name one after another:

“Violet, Indigo, Blue, Green, Yellow, Orange and Red!”

Instantly the little people stood before him, and Red, who was their
spokesman, asked him what he desired.

“A bridge!” cried Billy. “A bridge as quickly as you can.”

It was the work of a second. The little people all sprang into the air
together and lo! in front of Billy stretched a slender rainbow bridge,
leading from his feet to the snow mountain on which was the imprisoned
Evening Star. And at each end was a great pot of yellow gold as large
as a preserve kettle.

Bravely Billy started to cross the bridge. It trembled violently in the
strong light, as rainbows will, for they are flimsy things at best.
Billy hesitated. He was not frightened, but it was so hard to keep his
balance.

And then he heard a cheery shout behind him, and up came Jack Frost
running as fast as his legs could carry him, and fairly panting with
excitement.

“It’s all right, Billy, go ahead!” he called, laying a steadying hand
on the rainbow, which at once hardened under his cold.

Thus encouraged Billy proceeded. As he went on he noticed that the snow
mountain had ceased to melt. Indeed, it was beginning slowly to rise in
the air again, thanks to the influence of Jack Frost, who was freezing
the water far faster than the Equator could melt it.

Up, up it went, its peak narrowing to a needle point. Above it the
Equator, unused to the cold, shriveled and shrank. Now he was the size
of a hoop, now of a doughnut, presently he was scarcely larger than a
ring.

“Slide!” shouted a familiar voice behind Billy. “Slide, Evening Star,
slide for your life!”

The Evening Star heard the voice, and she, as well as Billy, recognized
it as the voice of Nimbus.

“The snow mountain is the North Pole!” cried Nimbus. “I just asked an
Eskimo where it was and he pointed it out. I came just in time, didn’t
I?”

The last question was addressed to the Evening Star, who had followed
his advice and slid right into his arms.

“I jumped the gully,” said Nimbus, pointing to the abyss. “There wasn’t
time to come over the bridge. And now I think we’ve got the Equator
where we want him.”

“Where do you want me?” snarled the Equator.

“Over this Pole,” said Nimbus, and as he spoke he slid up the North
Pole as a sailor slides down a rope, grasped the Equator and impaled
him upon it.

He rolled him down and down until Jack Frost could reach him and help
hold him, and the Equator, feeling himself stretched like an elastic
over the conical snow peak, saw that he was doomed to be rolled back
around the earth and resume his post of duty in the center.

“I won’t do it,” he protested. “I’ll never do it!”

He struggled and twisted in his efforts to escape, but Nimbus held him
fast, and Jack Frost kept him small by the clutch of his icy fingers.

Billy danced up and down in his excitement, for once the Equator almost
got away.

“Go on down! Go on down!” shouted Billy. “My mother says you are only
an imaginary line, anyway!”

       *       *       *       *       *

“Why, Billy,” said his mother, “look at the way you have eaten up your
poor North Pole!”

And at the sound of his mother’s voice Nimbus put a sunbeam into
Billy’s mouth which tasted just like lemon candy. The clang of the
enchanted trolley car sounded in his ears as the whole lot of his new
friends stepped aboard and vanished from his sight. He looked around.
But, instead of Nimbus and the Evening Star and Jack Frost and the
Equator, he found his mother smiling down at him as he lay under the
lilac bush, and the conductor was just ringing the bell for the trolley
car to stop at the corner.


THE END




TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:


 Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.

 Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.

 The illustrations listed on pages 28, 32, 48, and 78 in the List of
   Illustrations do not exist in the original text.

 Alternate or archaic spelling has been retained from the original.