It's Off to Work We Go! Part 1
A 1.For supper that evening my
grandmother had a plain omelette and one slice of bread. 2.I had a piece of that brown
Norwegian goats' milk cheese known as gjetost which I had loved even when I was
a boy. 3.We ate in front of the fire, my
grandmother in her armchair and me on the table with my cheese on a small
plate. 4."Grandmamma," I said,
"now that we have done away with The Grand High Witch, will all the other
witches in the world gradually disappear?" 5."I'm quite sure they
won't," she answered.
B 1.I stopped chewing and stared at
her."But they must!" I cried."Surely they must!" 2."I'm afraid not," she
said."But if she's not there any longer how are they going to get all the
money they need? 3.And who is going to give them
orders and jazz them up at the Annual Meetings and invent all their magic
formulas for them?" 4."When a queen bee dies,
there is always another queen in the hive ready to take her place," my
grandmother said. 5."It's the same with
witches.
C 1.In the great Headquarters where
The Grand High Witch lives, there is always another Grand High Witch waiting in
the wings to take over should anything happen." 2."Oh no!" I
cried."That means everything we did was for nothing! Have I become a mouse
for nothing at all?" 3."We saved the children of
England," she said."I don't call that nothing." 4."I know, I know!" I
cried."But that's not nearly good enough! 5.I felt sure that all the
witches of the world would slowly fade away after we had got rid of their
leader! 6.Now you tell me that everything
is going to go on just the same as before!"
D 1."Not exactly as
before," my grandmother said. 2."For instance, there are
no longer any witches in England. 3.That's quite a triumph, isn't
it?""But what about the rest of the world?" I cried. 4."What about America and
France and Holland and Germany? And what about Norway?" 5."You must not think I have
been sitting back and doing nothing these last few days," she said.
E 1."I have been giving a
great deal of thought and time to that particular problem." 2.I was looking up at her face
when she said this, and all at once I noticed that a little secret smile was
beginning to spread slowly around her eyes and the corners of her mouth. 3."Why are you smiling,
Grandmamma?" I asked her. 4."I have some rather
interesting news for you," she said.
F 1."What
news?""Shall I tell it to you right from the beginning?" 2."Yes please," I
said."I like good news." 3.She had finished her omelette,
and I had had enough of my cheese. 4.She wiped her lips with a
napkin and said, "As soon as we arrived back in Norway, I picked up the
telephone and made a call to England."
G 1."Who in England,
Grandmamma?""To the Chief of Police in Bournemouth, my darling. 2.I told him I was the Chief of
Police for the whole of Norway and that I was interested in the peculiar
happenings that had taken place recently in the Hotel Magnificent." 3."Now hang on a sec,
Grandmamma," I said. 4."There's no way an English
policeman is going to believe that you are the Head of the Norwegian
Police."
H 1."I am very good at
imitating a man's voice," she said. 2."Of course he believed me. 3.The policeman in Bournemouth
was honoured to get a call from the Chief of Police for the whole of
Norway." 4."So what did you ask
him?" 5."I asked him for the name
and address of the lady who had been living in Room 454 in the Hotel
Magnificent, the one who disappeared." 6."You mean The Grand High
Witch!" I cried."Yes, my darling."And did he give it to
you?"
I 1.Naturally he gave it to me. One
policeman will always help another policeman.’ 2.By golly, you've got a nerve,
Grandmamma!’ 3.I wanted her address,’ my
grandmother said.But did he know her address?’ 4.He did indeed. They had found
her passport in her room and her address was in it. It was also in the hotel
register.
J 1.Everyone who stays in a hotel
has to put a name and address in the book.’ 2.But surely The Grand High Witch
wouldn't have put her real name and address in the hotel register?’ I said. 3.Why ever not?’ my grandmother
said. 4.‘Nobody in the world had the
faintest idea who she was except the other witches. Wherever she went, people
simply knew her as a nice lady.
5.You, my darling, and you alone,
were the only non-witch ever to see her with her mask off. 6.Even in her home
district, in the village where she lived, people knew her as a kindly and very
wealthy Baroness who gave large sums of money to charity. |
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