Bean’s Secret Cider Cellar
A 1.Mr Fox examined the wall
carefully. 2.He saw that the cement between
the bricks was old and crumbly, so he loosened a brick without much trouble and
pulled it away. 3.Suddenly, out from the hole
where the brick had been, there popped a small sharp face with whiskers, ‘Go
away!’ it snapped.
B 1.‘You can’t come in here! It’s
private!’ 2.‘Good Lord!’ said Badger.‘It’s
Rat!’ 3.‘You saucy beast!’ said Mr Fox. 4.‘I should have guessed we’d
find you down here somewhere.’ 5.‘Go away!’ shrieked Rat. ‘Go
on, beat it! This is my private pitch!’
C 1.‘Shut up,’ said Mr. Fox. ‘I
will not shut up!’ shrieked Rat. 2.‘This is my place! I got here
first!’ 3.Mr Fox gave a brilliant smile,
flashing his white teeth. 4.‘My dear Rat,’ he said softly,
‘I am a hungry fellow and if you don’t hop it quickly I shall
eat-you-up-in-one-gulp!’
D 1.That did it.Rat popped back
fast out of sight. 2.Mr Fox laughed and began
pulling more bricks out of the wall. 3.When he had made a biggish
hole, he crept through it. 4.Badger and the Smallest Fox
followed him in. 5.They found themselves in a
vast, damp, gloomy cellar.
E 1.‘This is it!’ cried Mr. Fox. ‘This
is what?’ said Badger. ‘The place is empty.’ 2.‘Where are the turkeys?’ asked
the Smallest Fox, staring into the gloom. 3.‘I thought Bean was a turkey
man.’ ‘He is a turkey man,’ said Mr Fox. 4.‘But we’re not after turkeys
now.We’ve got plenty of food.’ 5.‘Then what do we need, Dad?’
‘Take a good look round,’ said Mr Fox. 6.‘Don’t you see anything that
interests you?’
F 1.Badger and the Smallest Fox
peered into the half-darkness. 2.As their eyes became accustomed
to the gloom, they began to see what looked like a whole lot of big glass jars
standing upon shelves around the walls. 3.They went closer. They were
jars.
G 1.There were hundreds of them,
and upon each one was written the word CIDER. 2.The Smallest Fox leaped high in
the air. ‘Oh, Dad!’ he cried out. 3.‘Look what we’ve found! It’s
cider!’ ‘Exactly,’ said Mr. Fox. 4.‘Tremendous!’ shouted Badger. ‘Bean’s
Secret Cider Cellar,’ said Mr Fox. 5.‘But go carefully, my dears. Don’t
make a noise. 6.This cellar is right underneath
the farmhouse itself.’
H 1.‘Cider,’ said Badger, ‘is
especially good for Badgers. 2.We take it as medicine – one
large glass three times a day with meals and another at bedtime.’ 3.‘It will make the feast into a
banquet,’ said Mr. Fox. 4.While they were talking, the
Smallest Fox had sneaked a jar off the shelf and had taken a gulp. 5.‘Wow!’ he gasped. ‘Wow-ee!’
I 1.You must understand this was
not the ordinary weak fizzy cider one buys in a store. 2.It was the real stuff, a
home-brewed fiery liquor that burned in your throat and boiled in your stomach. 3.‘Ah-h-h-h-h-h!’ gasped the
Smallest Fox.‘This is some cider!’ 4.‘That’s quite enough of that,’
said Mr Fox, grabbing the jar and putting it to his own lips.
J 1.He took a tremendous gulp. 2.‘It’s miraculous!’ he
whispered, fighting for breath. 3.‘It’s fabulous! It’s
beautiful!’ 4.‘It’s my turn,’ said Badger,
taking the jar and tilting his head well back. 5.The cider gurgled and bubbled
down his throat. 6.‘It’s ...it’s like melted
gold!’ he gasped.
K 1.‘Oh, Foxy, it’s ...like
drinking sunbeams and rainbows!’ 2.‘You’re poaching!’ shrieked
Rat. 3.‘Put that down at once!
There’ll be none left for me!’ 4.Rat was perched upon the
highest shelf in the cellar, peering out from behind a huge jar.
L 1.There was a small rubber tube
inserted in the neck of the jar, and Rat was using this tube to suck out the
cider. 2.‘You’re drunk!’ said Mr
Fox.‘Mind your own business!’ shrieked Rat. 3.‘And if you great clumsy brutes
come messing about in here we’ll all be caught! 4.Get out and leave me to sip my
cider in peace.’
M 1.At that moment they heard a
woman’s voice calling out in the house above them. 2.‘Hurry up and get that cider,
Mabel!’ the voice called. 3.‘You know Mr Bean doesn’t like
to be kept waiting! 4.Especially when he’s been out
all night in a tent!’ The animals froze.
N 1.They stayed absolutely still,
their ears pricked, their bodies tense. 2.Then they heard the sound of a
door being opened. 3.The door was at the top of a
flight of stone steps leading down from the house to the cellar. 4.And now someone was starting to
come down those steps.
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