Tove Jansson by unknow

Tove Jansson by unknow

Author:unknow
Language: eng
Format: mobi
Published: 2011-10-03T23:23:48+00:00


CHAPTER 5

In which (besides giving a little specimen of my intellectual powers), I describe the Mymble family and the Surprise Party which brought me some bewitching tokens of honour from the hand of the Autocrat.

PERHAPS you've noticed the peculiar way my mind works? There's simply a sudden click! - and the situation is saved. Like this one, for instance.

Here's the Booble, grumbling, bumbling and shouting at us, and here are we, looking rather foolish, and then I say (quite calmly): 'Hullo, uncle! Glad to see you again!' And of course this doesn't stop him shouting, but I don't mind at all. I just ask him whether his feet are sore still.

'You have the nerve to ask me that!' roars Edward the Booble. 'You water-flea! You nightmare! Yes, my feet are sore! Yes, my behind is sore tool'

'Well, in that case,' I answer in a perfectly controlled voice, 'in that case the present we've brought you will suit you all the better. Three genuine eider-down Booble sleeping-bags!'

(Rather smart, wasn't it?)

'Sleeping-bags? Eider-down?' Edward the Booble said suspiciously and carefully felt our clouds with one foot. 'You're deceiving me again, aren't you, you dish-rags? I suppose they're stuffed with rocks...'

He hauled the clouds up on the wharf and sniffed at them.

'Sit down, Edward, please!' cried Hodgkins. 'Nice and soft!'

'I've heard that before,' grumbled the Booble. 'Nice, smooth sand bottom, you said. And what was it? The hardest, knobbliest, stoniest, pestilentiallest...'

And Edward the Booble carefully sank down on the clouds.

'Well?' we cried expectantly.

'Hrrumph,' said the Booble sourly. 'There seem indeed to be a few soft spots. I'll sit here and think for a while until I've decided what to do with you.'

But we didn't care to wait. With great speed we made fast the hawser and stole past behind the Booble. And then we ran.

'You did rather well,' said the Joxter.

'Just an idea,' I said modestly.

'I know,' said Hodgkins. 'Empty place, this.'

Round green hills rose everywhere around us, with single big trees laden with bunches of green and yellow berries. We could see a few small straw huts huddling in the valleys between low stone walls stretching over the hillsides.

But all was silent. Not a trace of the excited crowd we had imagined would come running to look at The Oshun Oxtra and ourselves, and to ask us all about the hurricane.

'Perhaps Edward the Booble has frightened them away,' I said a little disappointedly.

We went up the nearest hill.

'There's a house,' said the Joxter. 'I'd like to see if the door's locked.'

It was a small hut, not very well built of board ends and large stiff leaves.

We knocked four times, but nobody opened.

'Ahoy!' Hodgkins shouted. 'Anybody home?'

Then we heard a small voice that answered: 'No, no! Nobody at all!'

'That's funny,' I said. 'Then who's talking?'

'I'm the Mymble's little daughter,' said the voice. 'But you'll have to go away quickly, because I'm not allowed to open the door to anybody until mother comes back.'

'Where's mother, then?' Hodgkins asked.

'She's gone to the garden party,' the little voice answered sadly.



Download



Copyright Disclaimer:
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.