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Tales of the Unexpected

Tales of the Unexpected

Titel: Tales of the Unexpected Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Roald Dahl
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we?’
    ‘What do you want to do?’
    ‘Why, it’s obvious. Can’t you see?’
    ‘No, I can’t.’
    ‘All we’ve got to do is put a microphone in their room.’ I admit I was expecting something pretty bad, but when she said this I was so shocked I didn’t know what to answer.
    ‘That’s exactly what we’ll do,’ she said.
    ‘Here!’ I cried. ‘No. Wait a minute. You can’t do that.’
    ‘Why not?’
    ‘That’s about the nastiest trick I ever heard of. It’s like – why, it’s like listening at keyholes, or reading letters, only far far worse. You don’t mean this seriously, do you?’
    ‘Of course I do.’
    I knew how much she disliked being contradicted but there were times when I felt it necessary to assert myself, even at considerable risk. ‘Pamela,’ I said, snapping the words out sharply, ‘I forbid you to do it!’
    She took her feet down from the sofa and sat up straight. ‘What in God’s name are you trying to pretend to be, Arthur? I simply don’t understand you.’
    ‘That shouldn’t be too difficult.’
    ‘Tommyrot! I’ve known you do lots of worse things than this before now.’
    ‘Never!’
    ‘Oh yes I have. What makes you suddenly think you’re a so much nicer person than I am?’
    ‘I’ve never done things like that.’
    ‘All right, my boy,’ she said, pointing her finger at me like a pistol. ‘What about the time at the Milfords’ last Christmas? Remember? You nearly laughed your head off and I had to put my hand over your mouth to stop them hearing us. What about that for one?’
    ‘That was different,’ I said. ‘It wasn’t our house. And they weren’t our guests.’
    ‘It doesn’t make any difference at all.’ She was sitting very upright, staring at me with those round grey eyes, and the chin was beginning to come up high in a peculiarly contemptuous manner. ‘Don’t be such a pompous hypocrite,’ she said. ‘What on earth’s come over you?’
    ‘I really think it’s a pretty nasty thing, you know, Pamela. I honestly do.’
    ‘But listen, Arthur. I’m a
nasty
person. And so are you – in a secret sort of way. That’s why we get along together.’
    ‘I never heard such nonsense.’
    ‘Mind you, if you’ve suddenly decided to change your character completely, that’s another story.’
    ‘You’ve got to stop talking this way, Pamela.’
    ‘You see,’ she said, ‘if you really
have
decided to reform, then what on earth am I going to do?’
    ‘You don’t know what you’re saying.’
    ‘Arthur, how could a nice person like you want to associate with a stinker?’
    I sat myself down slowly in the chair opposite her, and she was watching me all the time. You understand, she was a big woman, with a big white face, and when she looked at me hard, as she was doing now, I became – how shall I say it – surrounded, almost enveloped by her, as though she were a great tub of cream and I had fallen in.
    ‘You don’t honestly want to do this microphone thing, do you?’
    ‘But of course I do. It’s time we had a bit of fun around here. Come on, Arthur. Don’t be so stuffy.’
    ‘It’s not right, Pamela.’
    ‘It’s just as right’ – up came the finger again – ‘just as right as when you found those letters of Mary Probert’s in her purse and you read them through from beginning to end.’
    ‘We should never have done that.’
    ‘
We!

    ‘You read them afterwards, Pamela.’
    ‘It didn’t harm anyone at all. You said so yourself at the time. And this one’s no worse.’
    ‘How would
you
like it if someone did it to
you
?’
    ‘How could I
mind
if I didn’t know it was being done? Come on, Arthur. Don’t be so flabby.’
    ‘I’ll have to think about it.’
    ‘Maybe the great radio engineer doesn’t know how to connect the mike to the speaker?’
    ‘That’s the easiest part.’
    ‘Well, go on then. Go on and do it.’
    ‘I’ll think about it and let you know later.’
    ‘There’s no time for that. They might arrive any moment.’
    ‘Then I won’t do it. I’m not going to be caught red-handed.’
    ‘If they come before you’re through, I’ll simply keep them down here. No danger. What’s the time, anyway?’
    It was nearly three o’clock.
    ‘They’re driving down from London,’ she said, ‘and they certainly won’t leave till after lunch. That gives you plenty of time.’
    ‘Which room are you putting them in?’
    ‘The big yellow room at the end of the corridor. That’s not too far

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