being accepted to toothbrushing. - Without Fairy, without Animals? I live-live, and in anything, except as in the composition of fairy tales, did not succeed … How the Fairy in general suffers me? Why to it such husband?" From these thoughts which, by the way, appeared in his head for the first time for all the time of their joint life Prinze felt ill at ease. He looked at the reflection in a mirror and, without having kept as the child writhed a mug.
Then, having put on a fresh shirt and trousers, Prinze went down in a refectory. The fairy as the careful bee, similarity to whom to her gave pair of transparent wings behind the back, already imposed pink porridge and spilled pink juice on glasses. The ware to it was given by the Kitten and the Puppy. Oslenk was not visible anywhere. Probably, he washed children.
"Well, here, - again Prinze gloomy thought, - all at affairs, one I live here as a drone! Really I am necessary to the Fairy only in order that to entertain her yes kids to give birth?. What strange, however, visit me thoughts today!"
The refectory represented quite big room which is pasted over with pink wall-paper with the long table laid by a pink cloth. In it there were many big round windows, on two from each party walls, and therefore in a refectory always was light-and it is fresh. On walls the set of beautiful pictures with images of various animals, birds, trees and plants was hanged out. These pictures were made by Prinze by means of the magic crystal presented by the Fairy who could remember an image of any subject, and then display it on any material - whether it be a canvas or a tree. The fairy sometimes gave special tasks to the Prince to take photographs of this or that animal or a plant, sometimes it was a task for all day, and even on two … Try remove some timid leveret - it is necessary to run about fairly!
Pink curtains hung on refectory windows, as well as in all house. In general, this color was darling at the Fairy, and Prinze never dared to challenge her opinion in housekeeping questions. But this time the domination pink in the conditions of the house unpleasantly rezanut to it eyes.
"Really, well why pink?! And I, by the way, love blue and blue! - again discontentedly Prinze thought. - Why it always does as wants?! And I as who in general in this house? A doggie for game or a drone for reproduction?!"
Several chandeliers hung on a refectory ceiling halls. They burned with the multi-colored blinking small lamps in the evenings, each of which was made in the form of the fairy with wings which moved in a magic way on a chandelier circle, as if flew. But also it that morning was not pleasant to Prinze.
"Well why and here fairies? Well really it is impossible to make a chandelier with small animals or birdies?! Everywhere one fairies - on pillows, on sheets, on curtains … Bothered! I want animals and birdies! Here!" - again Prinze angrily thought and itself did not notice how he came to be at a table.
And in a refectory there were several cases with books, but all of them were locked on a magic castle, except one which contained books on flora, fauna and Tselestiya's history. At all these books on the first page it was written by the large red letters "it is approved for instructive reading". These books were interestingly and is fascinating are written. Colourful self-moving pictures were located on everyone to the cream-pink, tartly smelling of honey page. And if to read the necessary spells written on the fly-leaf of books - that and with a soundtrack. The prince could for hours as the child to look at these moving pictures, driving according to them fingers and to listen as elephants, rhinoceroses or other rare animals or birds whom he never before never saw before really roar. The fairy liked to watch it these minutes. She loved in Prinze naive and childly the surprised expression of his eyes which at it arose when reading books, and therefore with great pleasure ordered for it
Carly Phillips
Diane Lee
Barbara Erskine
William G. Tapply
Anne Rainey
Stephen; Birmingham
P.A. Jones
Jessica Conant-Park, Susan Conant
Stephen Carr
Paul Theroux