<h2>III</h2></div>
<p>Tommy was just thinking how he
would love to carry his mother a polar
bearskin for his father, and his father a
sealskin coat for his mother, when Santa
Claus came up behind him and tweaked
his ear.</p>
<p>“Ah!” he said, “so you want something—something
you can’t get?”</p>
<p>“Not for myself,” said Tommy, shamefacedly.</p>
<p>“So,” said Santa Claus, with a look much
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_62' name='page_62'></SPAN>62</span>
like Tommy’s father when he was pleased.
“I know that. They don’t have them exactly
about here. The teddy-bears drove
them out. You have to go away off to find
them.” He waved his hand to show how
far off it was.</p>
<p>“I should like to hunt them, if I only
had a gun!” said Tommy;—“and one for
Johnny, too,” he added quickly.</p>
<p>Santa Claus winked again. “Well,” he
said slowly, just as Tommy’s father always
did when Tommy asked for something and
he was considering—“well, I’ll think about
it.” He walked up and touched a spring, and
the glass door flew open. “Try these guns,”
he said; and Tommy tipped up and took
one out. It, however, seemed a little light
to shoot polar bears with and he put it
back and took another. That, however,
was rather heavy.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_63' name='page_63'></SPAN>63</span></p>
<p>“Try this,” said Santa Claus, handing
him one, and it was the very thing. “Load
right; aim right; and shoot right,” said he,
“and you’ll get your prize every time. And,
above all, stand your ground.”</p>
<p>“Now, if I only had some dogs!” thought
Tommy, looking around at a case full of
all sorts of animals; ponies and cows; and
dogs and cats; some big, some little, and
some middle-sized. “I wish those were
real dogs.”</p>
<p>“Where’s Sate?” asked Santa Claus.</p>
<p>“Sate can’t pull a sled,” said Tommy.
“He’s too little. Besides, he ain’t an Eskimo
dog—I mean he isn’t,” he corrected
quickly, seeing Santa Claus look at him.
“But he’s awful bad after cats.” Just then,
to his horror, he saw Sate in the show-case
with his eye on a big, white cat. He could
hardly keep from crying out; but he called
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_64' name='page_64'></SPAN>64</span>
to him very quietly, “Come here, come
here, Sate. Don’t you hear me, sir?
Come here.”</p>
<p>He was just about to go up and seize
him when Santa Claus said: “He’s all
right. He’s just getting acquainted.”</p>
<p>“My! how much he talks like Peake,”
thought Tommy. “I wonder if he is his
uncle.”</p>
<p>Just then Sate began to nose among some
little brownish-gray dogs, and so, Tommy
called, “Here—come here—come along,”
and out walked not only Sate, but six other
dogs, and stood in a line just as though they
were hitched to a sled, the six finest Eskimo
dogs Tommy had ever seen.</p>
<p>“Aren’t they beauties!” said Santa Claus.
“I never saw a finer lot; big-boned, broad-backed,
husky fellows. They’ll scale an
ice-mountain like my reindeer. And if
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_65' name='page_65'></SPAN>65</span>
they ever get in sight of a bear!” He made
a gesture as much as to say, “Let him look
out.”</p>
<p>“What are their names?” said Tommy,
who always wanted to know every one’s
name.</p>
<p>“Buster and Muster and Fluster, and
Joe and Rob and Mac.”</p>
<p>“Ain’t one of them named Towser?”
asked Tommy. “I thought one was always
named Towser.”</p>
<p>“No, that’s a book-name,” said Santa
Claus so scornfully that Tommy was sorry
he had asked him, especially as he added,
“Isn’t, not ain’t.”</p>
<p>“But they haint any harness,” said Tommy,
using the word Peake always used,—“I
mean, hisn’t any—no, I mean haven’t
any harness. I wish I had some harness
for them.”
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_66' name='page_66'></SPAN>66</span></p>
<p>“Pooh! wishing doesn’t do anything by
itself,” said Santa Claus.</p>
<p>“Oh! I tell you. I’ve a lot of string
that came off some Christmas things
my mother got for some poor people. I
put it in my pocket to give it to Johnny
to mend his goat-harness with, and I
never thought of it when I saw him last
night.”</p>
<p>“So,” said Santa Claus. “That’s better.
Let’s see it.”</p>
<p>Tommy felt in his pocket, and at first he
could not find it. “I’ve lost it,” he said
sorrowfully.</p>
<p>“Try again,” said Santa Claus.</p>
<p>Tommy felt again in a careless sort of
way.</p>
<p>“No, I’ve lost it,” he said. “It must
have dropped out.”</p>
<p>“You’re always losing something,” said
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_67' name='page_67'></SPAN>67</span>
Santa Claus. “Now, Johnny would have
used that. You are sure you had it?”</p>
<p>Tommy nodded. “Sure; I put it right
in this pocket.”</p>
<p>“Then you’ve got it now. Feel in your
other pockets.”</p>
<p>“I’ve felt there two times,” said Tommy.</p>
<p>“Then feel again,” said Santa Claus.
And Tommy felt again, and sure enough,
there it was. He pulled it out, and as it
came it turned to harness—six sets of wonderful
dog-harness, made of curious leather-thongs,
and on every breast-strap was the
name of the dog.</p>
<p>As Tommy made a dive for it and began
to put the harness on the dogs, Santa Claus
said, “String on bundles bought for others
sometimes comes in quite handy.”</p>
<p>Even then Tommy did not know how to
put the harness on the dogs. As fast as he
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_68' name='page_68'></SPAN>68</span>
got it on one, Sate would begin to play with
him and he would get all tangled up in it.
Tommy could have cried with shame, but
he remembered what his father had told
him about, “Trying instead of crying”; so
he kept on, and the first thing he knew they
were all harnessed. Just then he heard a
noise behind him and there was Johnny
with another team of dogs just like his,
hitched to his box-sled, on which they had
come, and on it a great pile of things tied,
and in his hand a list of what he had—food
of all kinds in little cans; bread and butter,
and even cake, like that he had given away;
dried beef; pemmican; coffee and tea, all
put up in little cases; cooking utensils; a
frying-pan and a coffee-pot and a few other
things—tin-cups and so forth; knives and
everything that he had read that boys had
when they went camping, matches and a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_69' name='page_69'></SPAN>69</span>
flint-stone in a box with tinder, in case the
matches gave out or got wet; hatchets and
saws and tools to make ice-houses or to
mend their sleds with, in fact, everything
that Tommy’s father had ever told him
men used when they went into the woods.
And on top of all, in cases, was the ammunition
they would need.</p>
<p>“Now, if we had a tent,” said Johnny.
But Santa Claus said, “You don’t need
tents up there.”</p>
<p>“I know,” said Tommy. “You sleep in
bags made of skin or in houses made of snow.”</p>
<p>Santa Claus gave Johnny a wink. “That
boy is improving,” he said. “He knows
some things;” and with that he took out
of the case and gave both Tommy and
Johnny big heavy coats of whitish fur and
two bags made of skin. “And now,” he
said, “you will have to be off if you want to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_70' name='page_70'></SPAN>70</span>
get back here before I leave, for though the
night is very long, I must be getting away
soon,” and all of a sudden the door opened
and there was the North Star straight ahead,
and at a whistle from Santa Claus away
went the dogs, one sled right behind the
other, and Sate, galloping for life and
barking with joy, alongside.</p>
<p>The last thing Tommy heard Santa Claus
say was, “Load right, aim right, and shoot
right; and stand your ground.”</p>
<p>In a short time they were out of the light
of the buildings and on a great treeless
waste of snow and ice, much rougher than
anything Tommy had ever seen; where it
was almost dark and the ice seemed to turn
up on edge. They had to work their way
along slowly between jagged ice-peaks,
and sometimes they came to places which it
seemed they could never get over, but by
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_71' name='page_71'></SPAN>71</span>
dint of pushing and hauling and pulling,
they always got over in the end. The first
meal they took was only a bite, because
they did not want to waste time, and they
were soon on their sleds again, dashing
along, and Tommy was glad, when, after
some hours of hard work, Johnny said he
thought they had better turn in, as in a few
hours they ought to be where Santa Claus
had told them they could find polar bears,
and they ought to be fresh when they struck
their tracks. They set to work, unhitched
the dogs, untied the packs and got out their
camp-outfit, and having dug a great hole in
the snow behind an ice-peak, where the wind
did not blow so hard, and having gathered
some dry wood, which seemed to have been
caught in the ice as if on purpose for them,
they lit a fire, and getting out their frying-pan
they stuck two chops on sticks and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_72' name='page_72'></SPAN>72</span>
toasted them, and had the best supper
Tommy had ever eaten. The bones they
gave to the dogs. Johnny suggested tying
up the dogs, but Tommy was so sleepy, he
said: “Oh, no, they won’t go away. Besides,
suppose a bear should come while we are
asleep.” They took their guns so as to be
ready in case a polar bear should come
nosing around, and each one crawled into
his bag and was soon fast asleep, Sate having
crawled into Tommy’s bag with him
and snuggled up close to keep him warm.</p>
<p>It seemed to Tommy only a minute before
he heard Johnny calling, and he
crawled out to find him looking around in
dismay. Every dog had disappeared except
Sate.</p>
<p>“We are lost!” said Johnny. “We must
try to get back or we shall freeze to death.”
He climbed up on top of an ice-peak and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_73' name='page_73'></SPAN>73</span>
looked around in every direction; but not
a dog was in sight. “We must hurry up,”
he said, “and go back after them. Why
didn’t we tie them last night! We must
take something to eat with us.” So they
set to work and got out of the bag all they
could carry, and with their guns and ammunition
were about to start back.</p>
<p>“We must hide the rest of the things in
a cache,” said Tommy, “so that if we ever
come back we may find them.”</p>
<p>“What’s a cache?” said Johnny.</p>
<p>Tommy was proud that he knew something
Johnny did not know. He explained
that a “cache” was a hiding-place.</p>
<p>So they put the things back in the bag
and covered them up with snow, and
Tommy, taking up his gun and pack, gave a
whistle to Sate, who was nosing around. Suddenly
the snow around began to move, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_74' name='page_74'></SPAN>74</span>
out from under the snow appeared first the
head of one dog and then of another, until
every one—Buster and Muster and Fluster
and the rest—had come up and stood shaking
himself to get the snow out of his coat.
Then Tommy remembered that his father
had told him that that was the way the
Eskimo dogs often kept themselves warm
when they slept, by boring down deep in
the snow. Never were two boys more
delighted. In a jiffy they had uncovered
the sled, eaten breakfast, fed the dogs and
hitched them up again, and were once more
on their way. They had not gone far,
though it seemed to Tommy a long, long
way, when the ice in the distance seemed
to Tommy to turn to great mountain-like
icebergs. “That’s where they are,” said
Tommy. “They are always on icebergs
in the pictures.” Feeling sure that they
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_75' name='page_75'></SPAN>75</span>
must be near them, they tied their dogs to
the biggest blocks of ice they could find, and
even tied Sate, and taking each his gun and
a bag of extra ammunition, they started
forward on foot. As Tommy’s ammunition
was very heavy, he was glad when Johnny
offered to carry it for him. Even so, they
had not gone very far, though it seemed far
enough to Tommy, when he proposed turning
back and getting something to eat. As
they turned they lost the North Star, and
when they looked for it again they could not
tell which it was. Johnny thought it was
one, Tommy was sure it was another.
So they tried first one and then the other,
and finally gave themselves up as lost.
They went supperless to bed that night or
rather that time, and Tommy never wished
himself in bed at home so much, or said his
prayers harder, or prayed for the poor more
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_76' name='page_76'></SPAN>76</span>
earnestly. They were soon up again and
were working along through the ice-peaks,
growing hungrier and hungrier, when, going
over a rise of ice, they saw not far off a little
black dot on the snow which they thought
might be bear or seal. With gun in hand
they crept along slowly and watchfully, and
soon they got close enough to see that there
was a little man, an Eskimo, armed with a
spear and bow and arrows and with four or
five dogs and a rough little sled, something
like Johnny’s sled, but with runners made of
frozen salmon. At first he appeared rather
afraid of them, but they soon made signs to
him that they were friends and were lost
and very hungry. With a grin which
showed his white teeth he pointed to his
runners, and borrowing Tommy’s knife,
he clipped a piece off of them for each of
them and handed it back with the knife;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_77' name='page_77'></SPAN>77</span>
Tommy knew that he ought not to eat with
his knife, but he was so hungry that he
thought it would be overlooked. Having
breakfasted on frozen runner, they were
fortunate enough to make the Eskimo
understand that they wanted to find a polar
bear. He made signs to them to follow him
and he would guide them where they would
find one. “Can you shoot?” he asked,
making a sign with his bow and arrow.</p>
<p>“Can we shoot!” laughed both Tommy
and Johnny. “Watch us. See that big
green piece of ice there?” They pointed
at an ice-peak near by. “Well, watch us!”
And first Johnny and then Tommy blazed
away at it, and the way the icicles came
clattering down satisfied them. They wished
all that trip that the ice-peak had been a
bear. So they followed him, and a great
guide he was. He showed them how to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_78' name='page_78'></SPAN>78</span>
avoid the rough places in the ice-fields, and,
in fact, seemed quite as much at home in
that waste of ice and snow as Johnny was
back in town.</p>
<p>He always kept near the coast, he said, as
he could find both bear and seal there.
They had reached a very rough place,
when, as they were going along, he stopped
suddenly and pointed far off across the ice.
Neither Tommy nor Johnny could see anything
except ice and snow, try as they
might. But they understood from his excitement
that somewhere in the distance
was a seal or possibly even a polar bear
and, gun in hand, with beating hearts, they
followed him as he stole carefully through
the ice-peaks, working his way along, and
every now and then cautioning them to
stoop so as not to be seen.</p>
<p>So they crept along until they reached
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_79' name='page_79'></SPAN>79</span>
the foot of a high ridge of ice piled up below
a long ledge of black rock which seemed to
rise out of the frozen sea. Up this they
worked their way, stooping low, the guide
in front, clutching his bow and arrow,
Johnny next, clutching his gun, and Tommy
behind, clutching his, each treading in the
other’s tracks. Suddenly, as he neared the
top, the guide dropped flat on the snow.
Johnny followed his example and Tommy
did the same. They knew that they must
be close to the bear and they held their
breath; for the guide, having examined his
bow and arrows carefully, began to wriggle
along on his stomach. Johnny and Tommy
wriggled along behind him, clutching their
guns. Just at the top of the ledge the guide
quietly slipped an arrow out of his quiver
and held it in his hand, as he slowly raised
his head and peeped over. Johnny and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_80' name='page_80'></SPAN>80</span>
Tommy, guns in hand, crept up beside him
to peep also. At that instant, however, before
Tommy could see anything, the guide
sprang to his feet. “Whiz,” by Tommy’s
ear went an arrow at a great white object
towering above them at the entrance of
what seemed a sort of cave, and two more
arrows followed it, whizzing by his ear
so quickly that they were all three sticking
in deep before Tommy took in that the
object was a great white polar bear, with
his head turned from them, in the act of
going in the cave. As the arrows struck him,
he twisted himself and bit savagely at them,
breaking off all but one, which was lodged
back of his shoulder. As he reared up on
his hind legs and tried to get at this arrow,
he seemed to Tommy as high as the great
wardrobe at home. Tommy, however, had
no time to do much thinking, for in twisting
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_81' name='page_81'></SPAN>81</span>
around the bear caught sight of them. As
he turned toward them, the guide with a
yell that sounded like “Look out!” dodged
behind, but both Tommy and Johnny threw
up their guns and pulled the trigger. What
was their horror to find that they both had
forgotten to load their guns after showing
the guide how they could shoot. The next
second, with jaws wide open, the bear made
a dash for them. Tommy’s heart leapt into
his throat. He glanced around to see if he
could run and climb a tree, for he knew that
grizzlies could not climb, and he hoped that
polar bears could not climb either, while
Tommy prided himself on climbing and
had often climbed the apple-tree in the
pasture at home; but there was not a tree
or a shrub in sight, and all he saw was the
little guide running for life and disappearing
behind an ice-peak.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_82' name='page_82'></SPAN>82</span></p>
<p>“Run, Johnny!” cried Tommy, and,
“Run, Tommy!” cried Johnny at the same
moment. But they had no time to run, for
the next second the bear was upon them,
his eyes glaring, his great teeth gleaming,
his huge jaws wide open, from which came
a growl that shook the ice under their feet.
As the bear sprang for them Johnny was
more directly in his way, but, happily, his
foot slipped from under him and he fell
flat on his back just as the bear lit, or he
would have been crushed instantly. Even
as it was, he was stunned and lay quite still
under the bear, which for the moment
seemed to be dazed. Either he could not
tell what had become of Johnny, or else he
could not make up his mind whether to eat
Johnny up at once or to leave him and
catch Tommy first and then eat them both
together. He seemed to decide on the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_83' name='page_83'></SPAN>83</span>
latter, for, standing up, he fixed his eyes on
Tommy and took a step across Johnny’s
prostrate body, with his mouth open wider
than before, his eyes glaring more fiercely,
and with a roar and a growl that made the
ice-peaks shed a shower of icicles. Then it
was that Tommy seemed to have become a
different boy. In fact, no sooner had
Johnny gone down than Tommy forgot all
about himself and his own safety, and
thought only of Johnny and how he could
save him. And, oh, how sorry he was
that he had let Johnny carry all the ammunition,
even though it was heavy! For
his gun was empty and Johnny had every
cartridge. Tommy was never so scared
in all his life. He tried to cry out, but
his throat was parched, so he began to
say his prayers, and remembering what
Santa Claus had said about boys who
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_84' name='page_84'></SPAN>84</span>
asked only for themselves, he tried to pray
for Johnny.</p>
<div class='figcenter'>
<SPAN name='linki_5' id='linki_5'></SPAN>
<ANTIMG src='images/c005.jpg' width-obs='400' height-obs='605' alt='' title='' /><br/>
<span class='caption'>
What was their horror to find that they both had forgotten<br/>
to load their guns.
<br/>
</span></div>
<p>At this moment happened what appeared
almost a miracle. By Tommy dashed a
little hairy ball and flew at the bear like
a tiger; and there was Sate, a part of his
rope still about his neck, clinging to the
bear for life. The bear deliberately stopped
and looked around as if he were too surprised
to move; but Sate’s teeth were in
him, and then the efforts of the bear to
catch him were really funny. He snapped
and snarled and snarled and snapped; but
Sate was artful enough to dodge him, and
the bear’s huge paws simply beat the air
and knocked up the snow. Do what he
might, he could not touch Sate. Finally the
bear did what bears always do when bees
settle on them when they are robbing their
hives—he began to roll over and over, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_85' name='page_85'></SPAN>85</span>
the more he rolled the more he tied himself
up in the rope around Sate. As he rolled
away from Johnny, Tommy dashed forward
and picked up Johnny’s gun, coolly loaded
it, loading it right, too, and, springing forward,
raised the gun to his shoulder. The
bear, however, rolled so rapidly that Tommy
was afraid he might shoot Sate, and before
he could fire, the bear, with Sate still clinging
to him, rolled inside the mouth of the
cave. Tommy was in despair. At this
moment, however, he heard a sound, and
there was Johnny just getting on his feet.
He had never been so glad to see any one.</p>
<p>“Where is the bear?” asked Johnny,
looking around, still a little dazed. Tommy
pointed to the cave.</p>
<p>“In there, with Sate tied to him.”</p>
<p>“We must save him,” said Johnny.</p>
<p>Carefully dividing the ammunition now,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_86' name='page_86'></SPAN>86</span>
both boys loaded their guns, and hurrying
down the icy slope, carefully approached
the mouth of the cave, guns in hand, in
case the bear should appear.</p>
<p>Inside it was so dark that they could at
first see nothing, but they could hear the
sound of the struggle going on between
Sate and the bear. Suddenly Sate changed
his note and gave a little cry as of pain.
At the sound of his distress Tommy forgot
himself.</p>
<p>“Follow me!” he cried. “He is choking!”
and not waiting even to look behind
to see whether Johnny was with him, he
dashed forward into the cave, gun in hand,
thinking only to save Sate. Stumbling and
slipping, he kept on, and turning a corner
there right in front of him were the two
eyes of the bear, glaring in the darkness like
coals of fire. Pushing boldly up and aiming
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_87' name='page_87'></SPAN>87</span>
straight between the two eyes, Tommy
pulled the trigger. With a growl which
mingled with the sound of the gun, the bear
made a spring for him and fell right at his
feet, rolled up in a great ball. Happily for
Sate, he lit just on top of the ball. Tommy
whipped out his knife and cut the cord
from about Sate’s throat, and had him in
his arms when Johnny came up.</p>
<p>The next thing was to skin the bear, and
this the boys expected to find as hard work
as ever even Johnny had done; but, fortunately,
the bear had been so surprised at
Tommy’s courage and skill in aiming that
when the bullet hit him he had almost
jumped out of his skin. So, after they had
worked a little while, the skin came off
quite easily. What surprised Johnny was
that it was all tanned, but Tommy had
always rather thought that bears wore their
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_88' name='page_88'></SPAN>88</span>
skin tanned on the inside and lined, too.
The next thing was to have a dinner of bear-meat,
for, as Tommy well remembered, all
bear-hunters ate bear-steaks. They were
about to go down to the shore to hunt along
for driftwood, when, their eyes becoming
accustomed to the darkness, they found a
pile of wood in the corner of the cave, which
satisfied them that at some time in the past
this cave had been used by robbers or pirates,
who probably had been driven away by this
great bear, or possibly might even have been
eaten up by him.</p>
<p>At first they had some little difficulty in
making a fire, as their matches, warranted
water-proof, had all got damp when Tommy
fell into the water—an incident I forgot
to mention; but after trying and trying,
the tinder caught from the flint and they
quickly had a fine fire crackling in a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_89' name='page_89'></SPAN>89</span>
corner of the cave, and here they cooked
bear-steak and had the finest dinner they
had had since they came into the Arctic
Regions. They were just thinking of going
after the dogs and the sleds, when up came
the dogs dragging the sleds behind them,
and without a word, pitched in to make a
hearty meal of bear-meat themselves. It
seemed as if they had got a whiff of the
fresh steak and pulled the sleds loose from the
ice points to which they were fastened. They
were not, however, allowed to eat in any
peace until they had all recognized that
Sate was the hero of this bear fight, for
he gave himself as many airs as though he
had not only got the bear, but had shot and
skinned it.</p>
<p>It was at this moment that the Eskimo
guide came back, jabbering with delight,
and with his white teeth shining, just as if
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_90' name='page_90'></SPAN>90</span>
he had been as brave as Sate. At first,
Tommy and Johnny were inclined to be
very cold to him and pointed their fingers
at him as a coward, but when he said he
had only one arrow left and had wanted
that to get a sealskin coat for Tommy’s
mother, and, as he had the sealskin coat,
they could not contradict him, but graciously
gave him, in exchange for the coat,
the bear-meat which the dogs had not eaten.</p>
<p>Having packed everything on the sled
carefully, with the sealskin coat on top of
the pack and the bear’s fur on top of that,
and having bid their Eskimo friend good-by,
they turned their backs on the North
Pole and struck out for home.</p>
<p>They had hardly started, however, when
the sound of sleigh-bells reached them,
coming from far over the snow, and before
they could tell where it was, who should
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_91' name='page_91'></SPAN>91</span>
appear, sailing along over the ice-peaks, but
Santa Claus himself, in his own sleigh, all
packed with Christmas things, his eight
reindeer shining in the moonlight and his
bells jingling merrily. Such a shout as he
gave when he found that they had actually
got the bear and had the robe to show for
it! It did them good; and both Tommy
and Johnny vied with each other in telling
what the other had done. Santa Claus was
so pleased that he made them both get in his
sleigh to tell him about it. He let Sate get
in too, and snuggle down right at their
feet. Johnny’s box-sled he hitched on behind.
The dogs were turned loose. At
first Tommy feared they might get lost,
but Santa Claus said they would soon find
their way home.</p>
<p>“In fact,” he said with a wink, “you
have not been so far away as you think.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_92' name='page_92'></SPAN>92</span>
Now tell me all about it,” he said. So
Tommy began to tell him, beginning at the
very beginning when Johnny took him on
his sled. But he had only got as far as the
sofa, when he fell asleep, and he never knew
how he got back home. When he waked
up he was in bed.</p>
<hr class='tb' />
<p>He never could recall exactly what happened.
Afterward he recalled Santa Claus
saying to him, “You must show me where
Johnny lives, for I’m afraid I forgot him last
Christmas.” Then he remembered that
once he heard Santa Claus calling to him in
a whisper, “Tommy Trot, Tommy Trot,”
and though he was very sleepy he raised
himself up to find Santa Claus standing up
in the sled in Johnny’s backyard, with
Johnny fast asleep in his arms; and that
Santa Claus said to him, “I want to put
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_93' name='page_93'></SPAN>93</span>
Johnny in bed without waking him up, and
I want you to follow me, and put these
things which I have piled up here on the
sled you made for him, in his stocking by
the fire.” He remembered that at a whistle
to the deer they sprang with a bound to the
roof, the sled sailing behind them; but how
he got down he never could recall, and he
never knew how he got back home.</p>
<div class='figcenter'>
<SPAN name='linki_6' id='linki_6'></SPAN>
<ANTIMG src='images/c006.jpg' width-obs='400' height-obs='599' alt='' title='' /><br/>
<span class='caption'>
Santa Claus said to him, “I want to put Johnny in bed<br/>
without waking him up.”
<br/>
</span></div>
<p>When he waked next morning there was
the polar bearskin which he and Johnny
had brought back with them, not to mention
the sealskin coat, and though Johnny,
when he next saw him, was too much excited
at first by his new sled and the fine
fresh cow which his mother had found in
her cow-house that morning, to talk about
anything else, yet, when he and his mother
came over after breakfast to see Tommy’s
father and thank him for something, they
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_94' name='page_94'></SPAN>94</span>
said that Santa Claus had paid them a visit
such as he never had paid before, and they
brought with them Johnny’s goats, which
they insisted on giving Tommy as a Christmas
present. So Tommy Trot knew that
Santa Claus had got his letter.</p>
<div class='figcenter'>
<ANTIMG src='images/g008.jpg' width-obs='400' height-obs='233' alt='' title='' /><br/></div>
<hr />
<p><strong>Transcriber's Note:</strong></p>
<p>The page numbers in the list of <SPAN href='#illus'>Illustrations</SPAN> have been
changed to match their position in this ebook.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />