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Arbeit Macht Frei!
An excerpt from the novel Arbeit Macht Frei! by Lucia Daramus Hannya I This story, dear folks, is a real one. You will get your gains if your patience lasts two chapters â a time youâll spend in childrenâs shoes. But donât worry: your beloved grown-up peopleâs condition will be waiting for you right after! So, then⌠the story starts in 1944 when Hannya â the girl with a smile about her lips â was taken from her cozy bed into a train together with her family and others just like them. It was called the death train by the many, just like they had the death chambers or the death holes, because the machinery had proven a huge blackened-eye iron monster whose giant mouth gulped souls by the hundreds. To Hannya â the girl with a starry smile â it had turned to be lifeâs train. It was nighttime and very, very hot. The children were sobbing, the grown-ups were trying to comfort them. That night Hannya was holding onto her fatherâs hand, tightly. She didnât understand it. So she cuddled her luggage â a tiny bundle, and letting go of the dark wagon deck, she started to explore the mysterious land known only to her friends and herself. This dreamland⌠it really exists: it is LIMELFIA. Hannya and her three friends Sooty, Yolky and Reddy had already been there several times. I forgot to tell you: Hannya was a very beautiful and forbearing Jewish little girl who just loved reading. She enjoyed stories and she even made up tales herself. She also liked painting. That is what you would have found in her bag â had you searched it â : a blank-page book where she hid her tales, Sooty, Yolky, Reddy, and lots of colours. So as stood crowded among the other Jews, she heard voices coming out from her magic bag. âHey, Hanny, take us outâ, said the first elf. Hannya loosened it up just to give the three of them a fresh breath and took a glimpse to see âŚ. what?! The land of Limelfia, shining full nested in Reddyâs cap. The girl smiled a wide smile. The wagon door banged open and the moon shone directly in the soldierâs unkind face. Several tens of other Jews were standing out waiting to be loaded, but the train was overcrowded. He eyed Hannyaâs lively countenance first thing. He didnât like it: âWer ist das?â, he asked in a pressing, malicious voice. âDas ist Reddy, tinkled the girlâs. âHe is my friend. Yolky and Sooty are his brothers. They are the three elves I got last year from a German gentleman.â She took all three out: âTalk to the gentleman, he is very kind. Come on, say Gutten Abend!â She looked up to the soldier and explained: âThey are child-elves and theyâd rather draw and paint. Reddy paints poppies, Sooty paints tulips and Yolky paints sunflowers. They are very good. That is why in the summer poppies offer you their fiery red, in the spring tulips play Blackest-Black with the raw earth and the sunflower, ⌠the sunflower trusts itself into the hands of Yolky the painter who makes it the most beautiful. It has won a beauty contest, too. Sheâs been wearing the crown the sun presented her ever since. This luggage is mine. There are paints in it, and there is âŚ. Sooty!?, have you hidden my book? Wo ist das Buch? A-ha, there it was!⌠my blank book. I stuff all my stories into itâ, said the girl and spread her little hands empty. âBut do they fit?â, asked the soldier, his frown melting at the thought she was a smart spontaneous child. He, too, had a daughter back home. âMy book is just like this trainâ, Hanny went on, âthe more Jews on it, the larger it gets. My stories pile up on top of each other, like us. They donât argue, because they are many kinds, and they love each other. Iâm Hannya. Wie heiBen Sie?â âIch heiBe Bohm.â Mr. Bohm was staring in amazement at brave little Hannyaâs face. For a second he thought the Jews were also people and stopped pushing and hitting them. The wagon door banged again. In the dark they could long hear the heavy thump of wardens patrolling along the train, German words, and, occasionally, gunfire coming from a distance. The Jews in the train hoped for tomorrow. They wished some place would get them, somewhere the yellow star on their coats wouldnât have prompted anger, mockery and fury in the passers-by. They were trying to put themselves to sleep, hope alive. Hannya didnât understand why they had to sleep standing. And, as was her habit whenever something went wrong, she opened her eyes wide and started stringing words together to go straight into her book. âHey, wake up, Missâ, Yolky said and began snarling a little song: Thousands of white birdies Animals, some large, some small Flying, singing, grazing, all In the green-green fields are waiting, Come away, oh, dear child In the magic fairy land Call its name â Limelfia. Zeenurfs float in sugar mist Bathing in the seas of Dream: The sunâs lazy spying glass. âWhat a beautiful metaphor you coinedâ, said Sooty. âIt is a plastic metaphor, isnât it?â âBeg-your-par-don?! A plastic metaphor?!â Reddy commented. âNo, dope, plastic as in plastic arts. A plastic image, that is.â âYou are the dope now. You can make plastic⌠pails uh, hmmm⌠or plastic⌠huh, anyway, not metaphorsâ Reddy said emphatically, snotty-nosed with intellectual pride. Sooty went black with anger. He lifted his hand and whoosh, slammed his head. âThere you go, you deserved it! Where were you when we studied the metaphor?! If only Miss Dwarfeen had heard youâŚ.â âHa-ha-haâ, burst out laughing the other two. You mean to say Miss Elfeen. Elfeen, not Dwarfeen.â âStop itâ, Hannya interposed, ânone of you is much of a school-goer. It would do no harm to really open up you minds this once to what Iâm going to say. And youâd better lock it up right after, lest these things should fly who knows where. Metaphors fall into two categories: the revealing sort and the plastic one. Thatâs all for now, itâs time for us to fly to Limelfia. Reddy, which part will you take us to?â âRight off its borders. There will be plenty of water for these train-people there. Itâs just that I need lots and lots of steamâ, he sniveled and conscientiously blew his big red nose in a maple leaf. âShouldnât worry, Iâll get it! All youâve got to do is get the cap ready.â Reddy took his cap off and pushed it towards the girl. Hannyaâs eyes were riveted to the cracks in the wagonâs top where moonbeams shone. She said: âLady Moon, Lady Moon, please tell your volcanoes to hatch and when they have heated up enough and start coughing, please tell them to purse up their lips to Reddyâs cap. We want to get off Limelfiaâs borders.â âWhat will my gain be if I do as you ask?â The Moon gave its vaporous dress a slick trim and then glanced into the magic mirror she always carried with her. Thatâs how her graceful body gets into each and every water on earth every night. The child took a momentâs thought and answered: âThat part of Limelfia is rich in clouds and rainfalls. The local zeenurfs even look a bit rained-under. They really work hard. They are almost all in trading, selling clouds to the zeenurfs that inhabit the inner border of Limelfia. Thereâs no rain there, only the desert. No wonder the outer zeenurfs are tired. Iâll join them and sell clouds myself. Whatever money I raise will buy you⌠Dolphins to enchant your sight, Singing to your heartâs delight And a nursing maid from me With a basketful of anchovy.â âIâm content with your offer. But tell me yet, why do you want to travel there?â âItâs because my place now isnât very comfortable anymore. There are hundreds of us. And the wagonâs got hot. Some people canât breathe. And others are dying of thirst. Remember last night when I visited you, I said you could come along in my bed to rest when you got tired. I would have given you vanilla ice-cream, too⌠I could see you were hot. But now, I donât know why they turned us out into this place. Iâve got to save the people, just like I wanted to help you. Iâve got to fetch water from Limelfia.â Lady Moon stretched her arms to lift Hannyta closer to her eyes behind the wagon cracks and smiled lovingly. âWell, then, letâs get the volcanoes to work. But we must put them to sleep first. It is only when their sleep reaches its bottom that they start boiling and steaming and coughing.â âVery well, madam. Sleep they will. Weâll keep quiet.â âThey need lulling to go to sleep, my dear. Iâm no good at singing, so you do it.â Hannytaâs song started trickling soft and clear. It told about the One Who had created all the beautiful things that there were in the sky and upon earth. It was Eli,Eli! â a little song her mom would murmur in the evenings, at bedtime. That language was very dear to her â the old landâs language, brimming full of so many real stories. People made the mountains weep and the dead talk in these stories, their staffs would turn into snakes and the waters into blood. He believed every word her parents used to tell her Jewish stories. And oftentimes these melodious words that came from so far back soothed her sleep. But now it was her turn to sing them. Their many-thousand-year-old magic would tame the world. Hannya believed in them. All the stars elbowed their way to the first skies to catch a glimpse of the tiny human whose beautiful voice had reached them and their hearts. Its crystal harmony blanketed the soldiersâ heavy trot, the scary shouts and the sobbing within the wagons. But the voice had discomforted the soldiers who were now smacking the wagonsâ sides yelling: âShut up! Quiet!â Hannyta went on. Soon the moon volcanoes were all sleeping tight. The snoring had just started and steam was coming out rolling through their nostrils. Occasionally, they choked and coughed. Redddyâs capswelled with a powerful very warm breeze. They had hardly thanked the Moon for her help that they were off and into Limelfia, their beloved country. The zeenurfs knew they they would come and had been waiting. And yet, to get into this place, one had to be tried. At the Great Gate, there was a Baediantrope, a cheerful round thing with a big red nose and incredibly long arms who assisted people through Big-One, Little-One?test. Hannyaâs first trial surely looked simple but it really wasnât. A green white-and-yellow flowery carpet was unrolled in front of her. Right in the middle, there was a hop-scotch to go through. Piece of cake, isnât it, my dear Big Ones? Hannya threw the stone and started hopping â always on one foot â through the squares. When she reached the stone the carpet gave way, and she fell into a big hole. He tumbled down the hop-scotch spirals to the very last room which appeared to be a deadend. However, there was parchment right in the middle of the table (there was a table, too). This great-great-grandparent of the book stood there wrapped in a literally royal posture, in spite of all its scratches and animal odour. The old letters were strung out in long sentences with none of the usual breaking that we have now. Hannya read: âEvery human is the metaphor of a gem. Living polishes him to the limit. All unnecessary corners are ground away. His beauty and radiance are but a reflection of his contributions to others. In the end man takes the appearance of a gem. He becomes one. If you want one, prove your mere kindness.â Having read this, Hannya started thinking. âWhat am I supposed to do?â, she wondered. She took one of the streets on the right. They were the streets of the ** rainbow that hung up the branch of a tree. She walked and walked until she got hungry. And since there was nothing to eat, she sang. Her words kept rolling, the very words that had once created light and the waters and the earth, until they made an opening in the walls of the ** rainbow. Hanya watched it in amazement, the hole growing wider and wider as her voice poured strength in the old words. There were people there, beyond these walls, all chained up, everyone who had once been a child but forgot it and thus couldnât remember the word kindness, mere kindness.. She couldnât leave them there. She had to rescue them. She asked them to come over. They stepped over the threshold and fell into the big dark scoop of a scallop which immediately closed. A voice spoke full of grace, as if coming from deep waters. âThe grown ups can only enter Limelfia carried on your voice. For this you must remained sealed in the scallop forever and sing. It is your choice.â The girl did not hesitate much. She swam through the transparent waters, carried by a seahorse at times, and humming a merry tune she used to sing on *Hanuka. It was her favourite holiday and she would get ready for it almost a month in advance. She rehearsed everything at the piano with her father. She put on every dress in the wardrobe and passed everyone in the familyto see how many compliments a particular dress would earn. That helped her make up her mind. And still on Hanuka, the lucky dress was a different one. She always stayed in the balcony at the synagogue. It was from there that she could best see the great rabbi taking out the Torah, saying the prayers, praying for her, getting into the special clothes. To the little girl everything was touched by a mysterious aura. It made her feel safe, just as she felt when she was sick and her mother would hold her tight, so tight she felt the warm breath. It relieved her and she went to sleep in seconds. But the dearest moment was when all the children were called upon to sing and dance holding hands. The merry tune spoke of Eliâs kindness, his keeping Menora aflame for eight nights and days, defeating the darkness. The grown-ups would join in: Mi Camoha Baelim Hahsem? (Who, among the mighty, is like you, oh, Lord?). When it was over, the little ones were given nickels, sweets and apples. Her mom baked and coated the apples in cinnamon and sugar. Hannya would sing and sing. She was going through the water, unafraid, on the seahorseâs back, her memories summoned back by the song. It was all there, the holiday of light, fresh caramel scent in her nostrils and she could almost taste apple sap on her tongue. Well, things did not just freeze. Hannya did not remain encapsulated in the scallop. Her three friends, though absent from the metaphor class, were very skilled with words. They showed up before the Baediantrope and proceeded: âI am Reddy and I speak a red tongue The girl â red Hannya â red Little one â red, warm-hearted â red Proved herself to be.â âI am Yolky and I speak a yellow tongue Hannya â yellow innocent child â yellow Twice â yellow â sheâs sacrificedâŚâ âI am Sooty and I speak a black tongue Hannya â black, water â black The Jews â black, the train â blackâŚ.â Reddy and Yolky burst out laughing : âI wonder, is there such thing as black dumbness?!â The Baediantrope couldnât help it, either. Rolled back, his huge belly upwards, he was laughing his head off: âSo gifted are you at the gab that I got it straight: itâs colourful!!! Oh, I had a good laugh today. Hey, he turned to the Minor Baediantropes, bring the little girl to me!â He was the Major Baediantrope. On reaching him, Hannya explained why she was there. Everybody was seized by compassion deeming the child a very model of kindness. The Baediantrope caught hold of Limelfiaâs Oceanâs nine corners and gave it a good shake so that a portion of it spilled over in large drops that eventually reached the Jew-packed wagons and dripped through the cracks. Hannya did not forget her promise to Lady Moon. She stuffed a couple of clouds in Yolkyâs cap which she sold in Desertland. It really looked deserted there. Though half-plagued by draught, the cacti were each jealously guarded by strange creatures, half lizard-half dragon. Our three fellows Sooty, Yolky and Reddy took them for exotic fruit and even ate some. Whatever their effects and whatever adventures lay ahead of them and bright warm-hearted Hannya you will find out after Mr. Bohmâs story. You do remember Mr. Bohm, donât you? Heâs the one Hannya managed to give a flicker of a smile. Oh, yes, and you must write to Hannya, lest the words in this book should vanish and take hannya and her friends with them. Here is the address: To Hannya and her three friends, Street: ** Rainbow County: Limelfia Country: TREEBRANCH Young Bohm II It was raining. The luminous early-summer night was sliced through by large drops hitting the wagontops. From a distance, such as from Mr. Bohmâs window, this rain seemed a fluttering lace curtain. The moonbeams pierced it every now and then. Mr Bohm lived in one of the rooms in the house next to the station platform. He was sleepless. The intense heat of the summer night kept him awake. He paced his room up and down. âTomorrowâs going to be another day, for sureâ, he whispered. He was to escort the train to Auschwitz. He didnât really like this thing. He had already been to that place where the word kinder was not mentioned. Where everybody â children, grown-ups, old people â were called by the name Haftling He had seen little ones whipped with horsewhips and wireropes, hit with riffle butts and heavy military boots. His own daughter Hildaâs image often had him think plainly of the Jewish children, as of any children, although he sometimes felt guilty with the thought. He did know these kids were not part of the new human species â a pure one, but of an impure race that the world had to be rid of. All these ideas came along in the ideology classes. Although a medical student, he had taken them too. And he had never practiced. War took all by surprise. After all, an Arianâs life most important goal â to purge the world, to rid it of impure species, was far more important! As he stood by the window, feeling rather lonely with his thoughts and all, he startled at the sight of a whirlwind coming straight to him. âCome, get onâ, a strange voice bellowed. âWhat?â, gasped a flabbergasted Mr. Bohm, his eyesockets barely doing their job. âYou think I have all night for this?â, asked the funny creature, coming in sight His voice sounded merry and, for all its oddity, his whole apparel matched the sound: a winged bright-spirited golden-headed little chick dressed in what appeared to be a yellow jellyfish. âGet on the bike!â âBike?! What bike?â, Mr. Bohm gasped again. He couldnât believe his eyes. âOoooh!â went on the cuddly freak in a slightly reproachful tone, .âdraw it! Green frame-red wheels-blue handlebars-yellow brakes-silver spokes-all in a golden haze. Ready!â He had uttered it all in one breath so for a moment the soldier was left agape although he had always thought of himself as rather atop. âWhere should I buy all these colours? Weâre at war, shops donât take such orders anymore.â âOne has to buy it all here, doesnât one?â, the zeenurf inquired. âCome along.â The chick grabbed Mr Bohm and dashed into the neighbouring grainfields where he collected the yellow. The soldier was not very accustomed to roaming the fields, but there was no way around. The ears kind of prickled, but he did manage to gather a pocketful of yellow. âWhatâs next, blue?!â âIâm the guide, so I say blue. Look up!â By now, you have certainly understood that the zeenurf was a chick-zeenurf. They bolted upwards into the skies. This reminded Mr. Bohm of his own childhood when such flights were quite of the ordinary. Heâd even drawn a map, a real sky-map. He would point to the Swan blindfoldedly, he knew every corner of the Greater Bear and the Lesser Bear alike. Not to mention the many times he had ridden the Milky Way on either of them. It took him seven days and nights on average. If he got hungry, all he had to do was thrust hands into the road and drink the milk. These memories gave him butterflies. He was sure he would hear the starsâ crystal song again, that the Swan would recite for him and the Bears would shake in hope of a lollypop. At least, thatâs how it used to be. âOh, please, do be more careful! Youâll crease my wings if you donât stop fidgetingâ, the chick-zeenurf snorted. âWhere is your head? I tell you it will do no harm to have a star fall down on it and give you a splinter of mind!â The tiny winged creature could not come to terms with grown up clumsiness at all. âHey, cut it a bit shorter, will you? I was thinking of my childhood. I bet you donât know there are caeruleacaeanus flowers on Milky Way far more beautiful and smiling than anything that grows on earth when they bloom. Well⌠do you?â âWhat colour are the caeruleacaeanus flowers?â the little zeenurf wanted to know. âJust a secondâŚ. EhâŚ.â Mr. Bohmâs body was beginning to shrink because, letâs face it, it has been quite a while since his last visit and what with the altitude and the cold⌠and the speed⌠They were doing some 99999999999999 trillion mph! âMr. Bohm, please Mr. Bohmâ, the fair-haired chickâs voice came again, âtell me about the caeruleacaeanus. I beg you.â Mr. Bohm had never been quite able to understand it â childrenâs irrepressible curiosity. âLook, Iâm trying but Iâm no good at wordsâŚâ âNever mind, just keep talking. Itâs easy. They are colourful, arenât they?â âYes, indeed.â âIt takes words to speak, doesnât it?â âOf course it does.â âThen itâs simpleâ the weirdo burst volcano-like. You take the words, then colour them, then whisper them colured in my ear. Iâll get the picture, donât worry.â As they were talking this kind of nonsense, there came big circular splash, echoing very close-by first, then farther and farther, surround-system. They had entered the skyâs waters. âI wonder how come these waters donât get washed down on earth? And what glues the trees in place? Wouldnât it be easier to travel if you drilled the earth? Do you have any idea whatâs on the other side, anyway?â âToo many questions! What? How? Why? Which? Take it easier. On our way back I will stack your arms with some books: physics, geography⌠Or better still, I will stash you in a library.â he shouted. He was trying to get the water out of his eyes, the same gesture some doctors make when they see zeenurfs and they do not know itâs winged aliens they face. As for Mr. Bohm, he really looked gone with the waves. Unawares. The chick shook his head and wings and gave the literatus a big smile. âI donât read. There are no books in my world, just Limelfics which we use Limelfeese for. When one limelfees there is a sound coming out, like silver. Each note of it is a crystalline story, fluttering, trickling down like harp music. As they were paddling their way to the island where the blue was, the zeenurf started limelfeeing. The sounds were magical and as they fell into the rippling waters, they were carried away. So soon the universe resounded. Even I caught some of them and tried to memorize them for you. Arosa nance in the carment his is Cyan adawn letovian through rema The exile of flowers divinely oouzes Cruxlilaceulum hema. Hearida, hearida, moon intasfo Bumbum sinoise redhasnits Fluae, fluae pearleen fresco Fly-yawletuulum heights. Who are you, who are you? butterfly kiss Silver breeze gulping at words Roses through the air, the scent of angel Heraldic circles and violet dreams. Arosa nance in the carment his is Cyan adawn letovian through rema The exile of flowers divinely oouzes Cruxlilaceulum hema. Hearida, hearida, moon intasfo Bumbum sinoise redhasnits Fluae, fluae pearleen fresco Fly-yawletuulum heights. âIs this Limelfeese?â His little friend nodded âIt looks like a caeruleacaeanus flowerâ, added the soldier. The branches of a tree butted into their conversation. They had reached land, the islandâs shores. Mr. Bohm remembered that sort of tree. But this one was a very sorry sight. It was supposed to be blossoming full and its flowers were supposed to be the famous caeruleacaeanus. But here on the far reaching dry branches there were only a few petals, hanging dry too. The island was scorched. It had a bright red colour and a heavy odour, like smoke. They tread on the barren soil among the trees looking for the blue. There it should have been! The fair-haired midge literally sank in and started to sob: âMy flowers, where are the flowers in these trees?â âWait a moment! Is this where the blue was supposed to be? Is it the flowers of these trees?â âYes.â âBut these are the caeruleacaeanus trees. Itâs their flowers that Iâve been talking to you about.â The zeenurf went sadder still. He could not contain himself: âThey are magic trees, they have powers. Whatâs happened to them?â Watching his folded wings, Mr. Bohm startled with a sudden understanding of the meaning of tears. âHush, little one, stop crying. Look, I will draw you a caeruleacaeanus flower when we get back on earth.â But the fair-haired could just not be stopped; he was crying away. âMagic flower trees! My magic island⌠who hurt you?! I want you all back, my flowers, my magic flowers. There is no place else to pick the blue now, no blue for my bike, no magic, no flying!â The tiny zeenurfâs tears rolled down on the crooked tangle of roots he sat next to, seeping along. Out of the red sky it bloomed. The magic of caeruleacaeanus began. The whole sky went dazzling caeanin blue. The birds, by any account inexistent the moment before, sent their violet-blue trills into the air. âThis man ought to stay on the edge of the skiesâ, sang one, and fell asleep. âJewish children are children, African children are children, German children are children.â, went another one, and fell asleep. âYou forgot to laugh, you forgot to water a flower, you forgot to give a child a hugâ, took over a blue-billed yellow bird, and fell asleep. âThe magic of caeruleacaeanus flowers has vanished when you entered your deep sleep. The flowers needed a kidâs voice, a babyâs innocent whining.â a chaffinch added. It had blue eyes, a red bill and yellow feet. And right after it fell asleep. âHa, will you just believe it, they all fell asleepâ, the fair-haired chickâs voice rang, this time cheerfully. âSo it was you who crushed the magic bloom. This scorcher hereâŚ.â ââŚ. is but a mirror to the fire on earth.â, ended the sentence Mr. Bohm, who by now was fully awake. He was suffering from the pains of every persecuted child on earth. His eyes looked down, heavy with remorse, shame and guilt. He was waiting for the zeenurf to leave so that he might be alone, far from any conceivable eyes. That was how it worked in his world. But not in this one. The midge flew restlessly about, taking each slumbering bird into his palms and kissing them in turn. He then faced Mr. Bohm, as if nothing had happened, and whispered: âI will teach you flying and loving and you will teach me geography and physics. Start with a map, waters first, drawn in starry powder paint. Thus I will be able to drill my way to any point on it and learn it all.â Mr. Bohm burst into laughter. âBut this is not how one studies geography. You ought to âŚâ He took a moment to think. The chick was right, though. He was the one who ought to. He had lost touch with this world so long ago. He would have toâŚbut their conference had to stop with the huge flapping, at least 1998 trillion per second, of the chief bird. âYou would think everything is so simple, wouldnât you? Once the magic of the caeruleacaeanus has disappeared, the great Land Lord, whose life is the source of all life, put a mystery seal on it. If you want their blue, or to partake of their magic, you will have to dig out a nut at the heart of the island first. The mystery is within it. âTo dig?! Mr. Bohm frowned. âDonât worry. Itâs my chance to start geographics.â They needed the caeruleacaeanus flowersâ magic, which was so well kept inside the mystery inside the nut. So they went to the heart of the island and took to digging the earth with sharpened splints of wood. And they really made it! Sweat was coming out in seven waves a time and the sun shone up like lime but they kept digging in spite of everything. When the moon entered the skyâs waters to bathe, which was the cue to sleeping on earth, they came across a trickle of water. âWhere do you come from, flowing crystalleis?â âWhat did you call it?â, Mr. Bohm couldnât refrain. âCrystalleis. Itâs a crystalleis, a thin one. Look, thereâs stars in it! âYes, indeed. Seven,â said the soldier, âhow strange.â The zeenurf started laughing and soon the whole island was echoing with laughter. The seven stars of the crystalleis had opened and other crystalleises were flowing out of them. This wonderous thing filled the little zeenurf with amazement. He grabbed his friend and took him flying over the island in concentric circles. Seen from above, the whole crystalleis blooming looked like a map. The two were so thrilled they could barely talk. âIt is one of the seven roads. It stands to reason. It will take us to the nut.â âWhatâs a reason, can it also fly?â, the little one inquired. âSomething that follows the logic, it can be demonstrated, it follows steps and it takes scientific arguments.â âWhat about arguments? What are they?â âWay too many questions. How about searching for the nut instead?â Mr. Bohm was still clumsy at dressing himself up as a child. Which is worth trying, every now and then! They set off in their adventure, heading westwards from the mother-crystalleis. The map looked like this: The Caeruleaceanus Island All the crystalleises were very important, but number six and seven were topmost. When they left the mother- crystalleis, these two summed up a distance of 999999999999 trillion kilometers, which gives about three standard round flights, or 9.9 thrice multiplied zeenurf flaps. âThere is no doubt, he said, our nut is halfway between the sixth crystalleis and the seventh.â âThatâll be somewhere between 16 and 17 degrees west latitude, right?â |
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