时间:2018-12-06 作者:英语课 分类:48 The Mystery Bookstore


英语课

That afternoon, Benny looked for Miss Chase from the parlor 1 window. Finally, very late in the day, she came around the corner. Benny flew downstairs, through the courtyard, and out to the street.



“Goodness, I didn’t know we were expecting Hurricane Benny,” Miss Chase said with a laugh. “What’s up? Watching the bookshop get painted can’t be that exciting!”



“This is what’s exciting!” Benny handed Miss Chase the old newspaper with Mabel Post’s picture.



“Phew, you’re going awfully 2 fast for me, Benny,” Miss Chase said. “Let’s go upstairs so I can get my reading glasses. Then I can see what you have here.”



“It’s . . . it’s about Mrs. Post buying a stamp with a flag that’s the wrong way. And Henry said wrong-way stamps are worth lots more than right-way ones.”



“I haven’t a clue what you’re talking about,” Miss Chase said. “And Rex Phillips has been bothering me all day. He tracked me down to the office where I was meeting with some book people and waited for me until I came out. I only got rid of him by telling him that we have our book sale tomorrow, rain or shine.”



“Oops, I almost forgot,” Benny said. “He told us to tell you he wanted to buy all the books all by himself and not have the book sale. But Henry said no way. And know what else?”



Miss Chase laughed again. “No, what?”



“He said he wasn’t in our pictures and that he went to a stamp show.”



By this time, Benny and Miss Chase were back in the apartment with the other Aldens.



Miss Chase rummaged 3 in her purse for her reading glasses. Then she took a good long look at the old newspaper Benny handed her and read the headline: “FLOODWATERS DAMAGE HISTORIC 4 FRENCH QUARTER.”



“No, not that side.” Jessie flipped 5 over the page so Miss Chase could see Mabel Post’s picture. “This side.”



“My goodness, doesn’t Mabel look young here?” Miss Chase said. “This is way before I moved to New Orleans, of course. Ah yes, I’d heard these stories about her buying a valuable stamp in a box of old books at a yardsale. But Mabel never admitted to it, and I never bothered to track down the story. Now I see why people didn’t really remember the facts too well.”



“Why’s that, Miss Chase?” Henry asked.



Miss Chase flipped over the newspaper page. “Mabel’s picture appeared on the same day as a terrible flood here in New Orleans. We get many of them during hurricane season. The day Mrs. Post’s picture was in the paper was one of the worst floods ever. No wonder people don’t remember about the stamp.”



“Did Mrs. Post ever mention the backwards 6 flag stamp to you?” Jessie asked.



Miss Chase thought a bit. “Not really. Sometimes when Rex came around, she’d joke about having lots of valuable stamps hidden away. But she always wound up telling Rex that stamp collecting was just child’s play or that stories about her having a valuable stamp were nothing but fairy tales. Of course, this upset Rex to no end. Pretty soon he’d try to get something out of her. But as far as I know, he never had a bit of luck.”



“Speaking of luck, we didn’t have any luck finding the missing books,” Violet said.



“It’s just the oddest thing the way those books just disappeared off the sleeping porch,” Jessie said. “I bet Mr. Bindry had something to do with it. He was in the courtyard this morning.”



“And after that he shooed me and Violet away,” Benny complained. “Anyhow, at least I found this boring old newspaper in the mouse hole.”



Miss Chase patted Benny’s hand. “Now, Benny, a good detective like you knows that a clue doesn’t have to look exciting to be exciting.”



This got Benny thinking. He picked up the old newspaper and went over to the mirror with it. Holding it up, he said: “Now the stamp doesn’t look backwards. It looks like a regular old stamp now. But everything else in the picture looks backwards.” Then he put the newspaper on the table and ran over to Miss Chase’s desk. “Can I borrow the magnifying 7 glass?”



“Sure,” Miss Chase answered. “Do you want a better look at the stamp?”



“Not the stamp!” Benny cried. He slid the newspaper under the light over the kitchen table.



“What do you see?” Violet asked when she looked over Benny’s shoulder. “Omigosh! Look what else is in the picture! Mrs. Post is holding the boxed set of fairy tales on her lap with one hand and the stamp album with the other!”



Now everyone crowded around to see what Benny and Violet were hollering about.



“You’re quite right, children,” Miss Chase said when she got a good look at the photo, too. “Mabel Post has her other hand resting right on The Little Mermaid 8.”



1 parlor
n.店铺,营业室;会客室,客厅
  • She was lying on a small settee in the parlor.她躺在客厅的一张小长椅上。
  • Is there a pizza parlor in the neighborhood?附近有没有比萨店?
2 awfully
adv.可怕地,非常地,极端地
  • Agriculture was awfully neglected in the past.过去农业遭到严重忽视。
  • I've been feeling awfully bad about it.对这我一直感到很难受。
3 rummaged
翻找,搜寻( rummage的过去式和过去分词 ); 已经海关检查
  • I rummaged through all the boxes but still could not find it. 几个箱子都翻腾遍了也没有找到。
  • The customs officers rummaged the ship suspected to have contraband goods. 海关人员仔细搜查了一艘有走私嫌疑的海轮。
4 historic
adj.历史上著名的,具有历史意义的
  • This is a historic occasion.这是具有重大历史意义的时刻。
  • We are living in a great historic era.我们正处在一个伟大的历史时代。
5 flipped
轻弹( flip的过去式和过去分词 ); 按(开关); 快速翻转; 急挥
  • The plane flipped and crashed. 飞机猛地翻转,撞毁了。
  • The carter flipped at the horse with his whip. 赶大车的人扬鞭朝着马轻轻地抽打。
6 backwards
adv.往回地,向原处,倒,相反,前后倒置地
  • He turned on the light and began to pace backwards and forwards.他打开电灯并开始走来走去。
  • All the girls fell over backwards to get the party ready.姑娘们迫不及待地为聚会做准备。
7 magnifying
放大的
  • Fame is a magnifying-glass. 名誉是放大镜。
  • It is unusual for people to press their differences by magnifying them. 对人们来说,以夸大差异的方式强调差异是不正常的。
8 mermaid
n.美人鱼
  • How popular would that girl be with the only mermaid mom!和人鱼妈妈在一起,那个女孩会有多受欢迎!
  • The little mermaid wasn't happy because she didn't want to wait.小美人鱼不太高兴,因为她等不及了。
学英语单词
accelerating plastic flow
across flow
administrative decision
airbrake switch
amberol resin
amitoses
amplifying system
appellate jurisdiction
articuli capitulorum
autobacteriophage
avantgardistic
b-quad
Bardney
berdes
bimodal curve
bipedal sympus
boat haven
buoyant raft
buthids
calcium phosphite
cat's foot
caudled
causticness
charcoal gas
clanism
clovers
cociuba mare
component symbol
computer-age
controlgear compartment
corporeal hereditament
cranberg
delamination of plywood
diet pyramid
dugnad
eleoplast
epicodakia bella
equiano
eurybathyal organism
family plasmodiophoraceaes
fieldpiece
fore-spinning machine
free speed
French caviar
fruticous
gatchina
general considerations
geotectogene
gift voucher
give birth
golf ball printer
greythorne
high-altitude station
horselberg
kledi
kneading machine
Leuciscus
London tuft
look ahead data staging architecture
M.T.B.E.
mahogany families
maledicted
marly slate
mental labor
merkingdom
MetroPCS
minie
Navajo Indian Reservation
non-powered fishing craft
none at all
nonrenewable energy source
normal test mode
nyctalus noctula
ombu
oneiromancers
over head projector
paid in capital from retirement of preferred stock
party and play
peach-wood
pepe holder
rear blinker
red dysentery
replicas
screw-and-nut mechanism
Sharman
Sinimax
slow-release relay
Small Office Home Office
somebodys
spectral band replication
Stanley, Edward George Geoffrey Smith, 14th Earl of Derby
Tajuňa, R.
technical analyses
to take a shit
unarmedness
universal operaation table
unscholarly
videobombing
white violet
x-press
yvonna
Zahiris