Part 3 A 1."Does that make it
difficult to walk?" I asked. 2."Not at all," my
grandmother said. 3."But it does give them a
problem with their shoes. 4.All ladies like to wear small
rather pointed shoes, but a witch, whose feet are very wide and square at the
ends, has the most awful job squeezing her feet into those neat little pointed
shoes." B 1."Why doesn't she wear wide
comfy shoes with square ends?" I asked. 2."She dare not," my
grandmother said. 3."Just as she hides her baldness
with a wig, she must also hide her ugly witch's feet by squeezing them into
pretty shoes." 4."Isn't that terribly
uncomfortable?" I said. 5."Extremely
uncomfortable," my grandmother said. C 1."But she has to put up
with it." 2."If she's wearing ordinary
shoes, it won't help me to recognise her, will it, Grandmamma?" 3."I'm afraid it
won't," my grandmother said. 4."You might possibly see
her limping very slightly, but only if you were watching closely." 5."Are those the only
differences then, Grandmamma?" D 1."There's one more,"
my grandmother said. 2."Just one
more.""What is it, Grandmamma?" 3."Their spit is
blue.""Blue!" I cried. 4."Not blue! Their spit
can't be blue!""Blue as a bilberry," she said. 5."You don't mean it,
Grandmamma! Nobody can have blue spit!" E 1."Witches can," she
said."Is it like ink?" I asked. 2."Exactly," she
said."They even use it to write with. 3.They use those old-fashioned
pens that have nibs and they simply lick the nib." 4."Can you notice the blue
spit, Grandmamma? If a witch was talking to me, would I be able to notice
it?" 5."Only if you looked
carefully," my grandmother said. F 1."If you looked very
carefully you would probably see a slight blueish tinge on her teeth. 2.But it doesn't show
much.""It would if she spat," I said. 3."Witches never spit,"
my grandmother said. 4."They daren't."I
couldn't believe my grandmother would be lying to me. 5.She went to church every
morning of the week and she said grace before every meal, and somebody who did
that would never tell lies. G 1.I was beginning to believe
every word she spoke. 2."So there you are,"
my grandmother said. 3."That's about all I can
tell you.None of it is very helpful. 4.You can still never be
absolutely sure whether a woman is a witch or not just by looking at her. 5.But if she is wearing the
gloves, if she has the large nose-holes, the queer eyes and the hair that looks
as though it might be a wig, and if she has a blueish tinge on her teeth--- 6.if she has all of these things,
then you run like mad." H 1."Grandmamma," I said,
"when you were a little girl, did you ever meet a witch?" 2."Once," my
grandmother said."Only once.""What happened?" 4."I'm not going to tell
you," she said. 5."It would frighten you out
of your skin and give you bad dreams." 6."Please tell me," I
begged."No," she said. 7."Certain things are too
horrible to talk about." I 1."Does it have something to
do with your missing thumb?" I asked. 2.Suddenly, her old wrinkled lips
shut tight as a pair of tongs and the hand that held the cigar (which had no
thumb on it.) began to quiver very slightly. 3.I waited.She didn't look at me. 4.She didn't speak. J 1.All of a sudden she had shut
herself off completely. 2.The conversation was finished. 3."Goodnight,
Grandmamma," I said, rising from the floor and kissing her on the cheek. 4.She didn't move. 5.I crept out of the room and
went to my bedroom. |
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