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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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distance that must altogether have been fifteen yards gave each stroke plenty of time to reach the peak of its pain before the next one was delivered.
    On the fourth stroke I would invariably straighten up. I couldn’t help it. It was an automatic defence reaction from a body that had had as much as it could stand.
    ‘You flinched,’ Foxley would say. ‘That one doesn’t count. Go on – down you get.’
    The next time I would remember to grip my ankles.
    Afterwards he would watch me as I walked over – very stiff now and holding my backside – to put on my dressing-gown, but I would always try to keep turned away from him so he couldn’t see my face. And when I went out, it would be, ‘Hey, you! Come back!’
    I was in the passage then, and I would stop and turn and stand in the doorway, waiting.
    ‘Come here. Come on, come back here. Now – haven’t you forgotten something?’
    All I could think of at that moment was the excruciating burning pain in my behind.
    ‘You strike me as being an impudent and ill-mannered boy,’ he would say, imitating my father’s voice. ‘Don’t they teach you better manners than that at this school?’
    ‘Thank… you,’ I would stammer. ‘Thank… you… for the beating.’
    And then back up the dark stairs to the dormitory and it became much better then because it was all over and the pain was going and the others were clustering round and treating me with a certain rough sympathy born of having gone through the same thing themselves, many times.
    ‘Hey, Perkins, let’s have a look.’
    ‘How many d’you get?’
    ‘Five, wasn’t it? We heard them easily from here.’
    ‘Come on, man. Let’s see the marks.’
    I would take down my pyjamas and stand there while this group of experts solemnly examined the damage.
    ‘Rather far apart, aren’t they? Not quite up to Foxley’s usual standard.’
    ‘Two of them are close. Actually touching. Look – these two are beauties!’
    ‘That low one was a rotten shot.’
    ‘Did he go right down the basin-passage to start his run?’
    ‘You got an extra one for flinching, didn’t you?’
    ‘By golly, old Foxley’s really got it in for
you
, Perkins.’
    ‘Bleeding a bit too. Better wash it, you know.’
    Then the door would open and Foxley would be there, and everyone would scatter and pretend to be doing his teeth or saying his prayers while I was left standing in the centre of the room with my pants down.
    ‘What’s going on here?’ Foxley would say, taking a quick look at his own handiwork. ‘You – Perkins! Put your pyjamas on properly and get into bed.’
    And that was the end of a day.
    Through the week, I never had a moment of time to myself. If Foxley saw me in the study taking up a novel or perhaps opening my stamp album, he would immediately find something for me to do. One of his favourites, especially when it was raining outside, was, ‘Oh, Perkins, I think a bunch of wild irises would look rather nice on my desk, don’t you?’
    Wild irises grew only around Orange Ponds. Orange Ponds was two miles down the road and half a mile across the fields. I would get up from my chair, put on my raincoat and my straw hat, take my umbrella – my brolly – and set off on this long and lonely trek. The straw hat had to be worn at all times outdoors, but it was easily destroyed by rain; therefore the brolly was necessary to protect the hat. On the other hand, you can’t keep a brolly over your head while scrambling about on a woody bank looking for irises, so to save my hat from ruin I would put it on the ground under my brolly while I searched for flowers. In this way, I caught many colds.
    But the most dreaded day was Sunday. Sunday was for cleaning the study, and how well I can remember the terror of those mornings, the frantic dusting and scrubbing, and then the waiting for Foxley to come in to inspect.
    ‘Finished?’ he would ask.
    ‘I… I think so.’
    Then he would stroll over to the drawer of his desk and take out a single white glove, fitting it slowly on to his right hand, pushing each finger well home, and I would stand there watching and trembling as he moved around the room running his white-gloved forefinger along the picture tops, the skirting, the shelves, the window sills, the lamp shades, I never took my eyes off that finger. For me it was an instrument of doom. Nearly always, it managed to discover some tiny crack that I had overlooked or perhaps hadn’t even thought about; and

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