The Grand High Witch Part 1
A 1.The next day, a man in a black
suit arrived at the house carrying a brief-case, and he held a long conversation
with my grandmother in the livingroom. 2.I was not allowed in while he
was there, but when at last he went away, my grandmother came in to me, walking
very slowly and looking very sad. 3."That man was reading me
your father's will," she said. 4."What is a will?" I
asked her. 5."It is something you write
before you die," she said.
B 1."And in it you say who is
going to have your money and your property. 2.But most important of all, it
says who is going to look after your child if both the mother and father are
dead." 3.A fearful panic took hold of
me. 4."It did say you,
Grandmamma?" I cried. 5."I don't have to go to
somebody else, do I?"
C 1."No," she
said."Your father would never have done that. 2.He has asked me to take care of
you for as long as I live, but he has also asked that I take you back to your
own house in England. 3.He wants us to stay
there.""But why?" I said. 4."Why can't we stay here in
Norway? You would hate to live anywhere else! You told me you would!" 5."I know," she
said."But there are a lot of complications with money and with the house
that you wouldn't understand.
D 1.Also, it said in the will that
although all your family is Norwegian, you were born in England and you have
started your education there and he wants you to continue going to English
schools." 2."Oh Grandmamma!" I
cried."You don't want to go and live in our English house, I know you
don't!" 3."Of course I don't,"
she said."But I am afraid I must. 4.The will said that your mother
felt the same way about it, and it is important to respect the wishes of the
parents."
E 1.There was no way out of it. 2.We had to go to England, and my
grandmother started making arrangements at once. 3."Your next school term
begins in a few days," she said, "so we don't have any time to waste." 4.On the evening before we left
for England, my grandmother got on to her favourite subject once again. 5."There are not as many
witches in England as there are in Norway," she said.
F 1."I'm sure I won't meet
one," I said. 2."I sincerely hope you won't,"
she said, "because those English witches are probably the most vicious in
the whole world." 3.As she sat there smoking her
foul cigar and talking away, I kept looking at the hand with the missing thumb. 4.I couldn't help it.I was
fascinated by it and I kept wondering what awful thing had happened that time
when she had met a witch.
G 1.It must have been something
absolutely appalling and gruesome otherwise she would have told me about it. 2.Maybe the thumb had been
twisted off. 3.Or perhaps she had been forced
to jam her thumb down the spout of a boiling kettle until it was steamed away. 4.Or did someone pull it out of
her hand like a tooth? I couldn't help trying to guess. 5."Tell me what those
English witches do, Grandmamma," I said.
H 1."Well," she said,
sucking away at her stinking cigar, "their favourite ruse is to mix up a
powder that will turn a child into some creature or other that all grown-ups
hate." 2."What sort of a creature,
Grandmamma?" 3."Often it's a slug,"
she said. 4."A slug is one of their
favourites. 5.Then the grown-ups step on the
slug and squish it without knowing it's a child." 6."That's perfectly
beastly!" I cried. 7."Or it might be a
flea," my grandmother said.
I
1."They might turn you into
a flea, and without realising what she was doing your own mother would get out
the flea-powder and then it's goodbye you." 2."You're making me nervous,
Grandmamma. 3.I don't think I want to go back
to England." 4."I've known English
witches", she went on, "who have turned children into pheasants and
then sneaked the pheasants up into the woods the very day before the
pheasant-shooting season opened." |
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