The Eskimo boy had not stopped to close the window after opening it to take the toy he so much wanted. And now the toys, crowding on the sill, which was close to the work bench, looked out in the snow under the window. It was light enough for them to see quite well.
“Come on back here, Plush Bear!” called the Flannel Pig, who was quite friendly with the big toy. “I want to see you turn a somersault.”
“Yes, come on back, unless you’re afraid that I can beat you!” growled the Polar Bear.
“Maybe he is afraid, and ran away,” suggested the Wax Doll, who seemed more friendly to the Polar Bear.
“No, indeed!” squealed the Flannel Pig. “The Plush Bear is a brave fellow, and he is very wise! He would not run away. The window must have come open and he tumbled out.”
“But he isn’t down there in the snow,” said a toy Fireman, looking carefully below. “If he was down there I could fix a ladder for him so he could climb up. But he isn’t there.”
“Where can he be?” asked the Flannel Pig. “He was standing near me one minute, saying how he was going to turn a somersault, and when next I looked he was gone.”
“See! There are footprints in the snow under the window,” said the Polar Bear, who had come to the sill. “Maybe Santa Claus or some of his men came along outside, and took the Plush Bear away.”
“They would not do that,” declared the Wax Doll. “Santa Claus would not take just one of us toys. When he takes any, he takes a whole sleigh-load to Earth for the children. No, there is something strange about this!”
And indeed there was, as we know. The Eskimo boy had the Plush Bear, but the toys knew nothing of this. However, there was nothing they could do.
After calling softly to the Plush Bear to come back, but receiving no answer, about a dozen of the Jumping Jacks, by climbing up and all pulling together on the window, managed to close it to keep out the cold, night air.
“Well, since there is no one else to turn somersaults with me, I’ll do it alone,” said the Polar Bear. So he flipped and flopped over again, and the other toys played games among themselves, but the nice Plush Bear was not among them.
He was under the fur coat of the Eskimo boy, being carried across the snow to the ice hut, or igloo. The door to this igloo was not like the door to your home. It was just a hole, with some pieces of fur and skin hung over it to keep out the cold wind. Ski, which was the name of the Eskimo boy, pushed aside this curtain of fur as he crawled into the igloo, with the Plush Bear beneath his warm jacket. The doorway, or hole, was made small to keep out as much cold as possible, and Ski had to stoop down and crawl on his hands and knees to get in.
Inside the igloo there were no tables and chairs, such as there are in your house. There were just some slabs of ice set here and there, being raised a little from the icy floor. On the floor were skins to make it as warm as possible, and in the middle of the igloo was a sort of lamp, or stove, made of stone, filled with oil in which floated a wick that was burning. This lamp-stove was all the Eskimos had to heat and cook with. But as they wore their fur clothes all winter long, never taking them off, they did not catch cold.