Back to The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
By John Boyne
Day 2 Text
Chapter 3 Audio |
Chapter Three
The Hopeless Case
Bruno was
sure that
it would
have made
a lot
more sense
if they
had left
Gretel behind
in Berlin
to look
after the
house because
she was
nothing but
trouble. In
fact he
had heard
her described
on any number of
occasions as
being Trouble
From Day
One.
Gretel
was three
years older
than Bruno
and she
had made
it clear
to him from
as far back
as he
could
remember that when
it came
to the ways
of the
world,
particularly any
events within
that world
that
concerned the
two of them, she was
in charge.
Bruno
didn't
like to admit that
he was
a little
scared of
her,
but
if he
was honest
with himself
-
which
he always
tried
to be
-
he
would have
admitted that
he was.
She had some
nasty habits,
as was
to be
expected
from
sisters. She
spent far
too long
in the
bathroom in the mornings for
one thing,
and didn't
seem to
mind
if Bruno
was left
outside, hopping
from foot
to
foot, desperate
to go.
She had
a
large collection
of
dolls
positioned on
shelves around
her room
that stared
at Bruno
when he went
inside and
followed him
around, watching whatever he did.
He was
sure that
if he
went exploring
in her
room when
she was
out of
the house,
they
would report
back to
her on
everything he did.
She
had some
very unpleasant
friends too,
who seemed
to think
that it
was clever
to make
fun of
him, a
thing
he never
would have
done if
he had
been three
years
older than
her. All
Gretel's unpleasant friends seemed
to
enjoy nothing
more than
torturing him
and said nasty things to
him whenever
Mother or
Maria were
nowhere
in sight.
'Bruno's
not
nine,
he's
only
six,'
said
one
par
ticular
monster over
and over
again in
a sing-song
voice,
dancing around
him and
poking him
in the
ribs.
'I'm not
six, I'm
nine,' he
protested, trying to
get
away.
'Then
why are
you so
small?' asked
the monster.
'All the
other nine-year-olds
are bigger
than you.'
This
was
true,
and
a
particular
sore
point
for
Bruno.
It was
a source
of constant
disappointment to
him that
he wasn't
as tall
as any
of the
other boys
in
his class.
In fact
he only
came up
to their
shoulders.
Whenever he
walked along
the streets
with Karl,
Daniel
and Martin,
people sometimes
mistook him
for the
younger brother
of one
of them
when in
fact
he
was the
second oldest.
'So
you must
be only
six,' insisted
the monster,
and
Bruno would
run away
and do
his stretching
exercises and
hope that
he would
wake up
one morning
and have
grown an
extra foot
or two.
So one
good thing
about not
being in
Berlin any
more
was the
fact that
none of
them would
be
around to
torture him.
Perhaps if
he was
forced to
stay at
the new
house for
a while,
even as
long as
a
month, he
would have
grown by
the time
they
returned home
and
then
they
wouldn't
be
able
to
be mean
to him
any more.
It was
something to
keep in
mind anyway
if
he
wanted to
do what
Mother had
suggested and make
the best
of a
bad
situation.
He
ran into
Gretel's room
without knocking
and
discovered her
placing her
civilization of
dolls on
various shelves
around the
room.
'What
are
you
doing in
here?'
she
shouted,
spinning round.
'Don't you
know you
don't enter
a
lady's room
without knocking?'
'You didn't
bring all
your dolls
with you
surely?'
asked
Bruno, who
had developed
a habit
of ignoring most
of his sister's
questions and
asking a
few of
his
own
in their
place.
'Of course
I did,'
she replied.
'You don't
think I'd
have
left them
at home?
Why, it
could be
weeks
before we're
back there
again.'
'Weeks?' said
Bruno, sounding
disappointed but
secretly pleased because
he'd resigned
himself to
the idea of
spending a
month there. 'Do you
really think
so?'
'Well,
I asked Father
and he
said we
would be
here
for the
foreseeable future.'
'What
is
the
foreseeable
future
exactly?'
asked
Bruno,
sitting down
on the
side of
her bed.
'It
means weeks
from
now,' said
Gretel with
an
intelligent nod
of
her
head.
'Perhaps
as
long
as
three.'
'That's all right
then,' said
Bruno. 'As
long as
it's
just for
the foreseeable
future and
not for
a month.
I
hate
it here.'
Gretel
looked at
her little
brother and
found her-
self
agreeing with
him for
once. 'I
know what
you mean,' she said. 'It's
not very
nice, is
it?'
'It's horrible,'
said Bruno.
'Well,
yes,' said
Gretel, acknowledging
that.
'It's
horrible right
now. But
once the
house is
smartened up
a bit
it probably
won't seem
so bad.
I heard
Father say
that whoever
lived here
at Out-With
before us
lost their
job very
quickly and
didn't have
time to
make the
place nice
for us.'
'Out-With?' asked
Bruno. 'What's
an Out-With?'
'It's not
an
Out-With, Bruno,' said
Gretel with
a
sigh.
'It's just
Out-With.'
'Well,
what's
Out-With
then?'
he
repeated.
'Out
with
what?'
'That's the
name of
the house,'
explained Gretel.
'Out-With.'
Bruno considered
this. He
hadn't seen
any sign
on the
outside to
say that
was what
it was
called, nor
had he
seen any
writing on
the front
door. His
own house
back in
Berlin didn't
even have
a name;
it was just
called number
four.
'But what
does it
mean?' he
asked in
exasperation.
'Out
with what?'
'Out with
the people
who lived
here before
us, I
expect,' said
Gretel. 'It
must have
to do
with the
fact that
he didn't
do a
very good
job and
someone said out
with him
and let's
get a
man in
who can
do it right.'
'You
mean Father.'
'Of course,'
said Gretel,
who always
spoke of
Father as
if he
could never
do any
wrong and
never got
angry and
always came
in to
kiss her
goodnight before
she went
to sleep
which, if
Bruno was
to be
really fair
and not
just sad
about moving
houses, he
would have
admitted Father
did for
him too.
'So
we're here
at Out-With
because someone
said
out with
the people
before us?'
'Exactly, Bruno,'
said Gretel.
'Now get
off my
bed spread.
You're messing
it up.'
Bruno jumped
off the
bed and
landed with
a thud
on the
carpet. He
didn't like
the sound
it made.
It was
very hollow
and
he
immediately
decided
he'd
better
not go
jumping around
this house
too often
or
it
might collapse
around their
ears.
'I
don't like
it here,'
he said
for the
hundredth
time.
'I
know you don't,'
said Gretel.
'But
there's
nothing we
can do
about it,
is there?'
'I miss
Karl and
Daniel and
Martin,' said
Bruno.
'And
I miss
Hilda and
Isabel and
Louise,' said
Gretel, and
Bruno tried
to remember
which of
those
three girls
was the
monster.
'I
don't
think
the
other
children
look
at all
friendly,'
said Bruno,
and Gretel
immediately
stopped putting
one of
her more
terrifying dolls on
a
shelf and turned
round to
stare at
him.
'What did
you just
say?' she
asked.
'I
said I
don't think
the other
children look'
at all
friendly,' he
repeated.
'The
other
children?'
said
Gretel,
sounding
con
fused.
'What other
children? I haven't seen
any other
children.'
Bruno looked
around the
room. There
was a
window here
but Gretel's
room was
on the
opposite
side
of the
hall, facing
his, and
so looked
in a
totally
different direction. Trying not
to appear
too obvious,
he
strolled casually
towards it.
He placed
his hands
in
the pockets
of his
short trousers
and attempted
to
whistle
a song he knew
while not
looking at
his sister
at
all.
'Bruno?'
asked
Gretel.
'What
on
earth
are
you
doing?
Have you
gone mad?'
He continued
to
stroll
and
whistle
and
he
continued
not
to
look
until
he
reached
the
window
which,
by a stroke of
luck, was
also low
enough for'
him
to be
able to
see out
of. He
looked outside
and
saw the
car they
had arrived
in, as
well as
three or
four
others belonging
to the
soldiers who
worked for
Father, some of
whom were
standing around
smok
ing
cigarettes and laughing
about something
while
looking nervously
up at
the house.
Beyond that
was
the driveway
and further
along a
forest which
seemed ripe
for exploration.
'Bruno,
will you
please explain
to me
what you
meant by
that last
remark?' asked
Gretel.
'There's a
forest over
there,' said
Bruno, ignoring her.
'Bruno!' snapped
Gretel,
marching towards
him
so
quickly that he
jumped back
from the
window
and
backed up
against a
wall.
'What?'
he asked,
pretending not to
know what
she
was talking
about.
'The
other children,'
said Gretel.
'You said
they
don't look at
all friendly.'
'Well,
they don't,'
said Bruno,
not wishing
to
judge them
before he
met them but
going by
appearances, which Mother
had told
him time
and time
again
not to
do.
'But
what
other children?' asked Gretel.
'Where
are
they?'
Bruno smiled
and walked
towards the
door, indicating
that Gretel
should follow
him. She
gave out a deep
sigh as
she did
so, stopping
to put
the doll
on the
bed but
then changing
her mind
and picking it
up and holding
it close
to her
chest as she
went into her
brother's room,
where she
was nearly
knocked over
by Maria
storming out
of it holding
something that closely
resembled a
dead mouse.
'They're out
there,' said
Bruno, who
had walked
over
to his
own window
again and
was looking
out of it. He didn't
turn back
to check that
Gretel was
in
the
room; he
was too
busy watching
the children.
For
a few
moments he
forgot that
she was
even there.
Gretel was
still a
few feet
away and
desperately wanted
to look
for herself,
but something
about the
way he
had said
it and
something about
the way
he was watching made her
feel suddenly
nervous. Bruno
had never
been able
to trick
her before
about
anything and
she was
fairly sure
that he
wasn't trick
ing her
now, but
there was
something about
the way he
stood there
that made
her feel
as if
she wasn't
sure she
wanted to
see these children
at aiL
She swallowed nervously and
said a
silent prayer
that
they would
indeed be
returning to
Berlin in
the fore
seeable future
and not
in a
month as
Bruno had
suggested.
'Well?' he
said, turning
round now
and seeing
his sister
standing in
the doorway, clutching
the doll,
her golden pigtails
perfectly balanced
on each
shoulder, ripe for
the pulling.
'Don't
you want
to see
them?'
'Of
course I
do,' she
replied and
walked hesitantly
towards
him.
'Step
out
of the
way
then,'
she said, elbowing
him aside.
It
was
a bright,
sunny day
that first
afternoon at
Out-With
and the
sun reappeared
from behind
a
cloud
just as
Gretel looked
through the window, but
after a
moment her
eyes adjusted
and the
sun dis
appeared
again and
she saw
exactly what
Bruno had
been
talking about.
Chapter 4 Audio |
Chapter
Four
To
begin with,
they weren't
children at
all. Not all
of
them,
at least.
There were
small boys
and big
boys,
fathers
and grandfathers.
Perhaps a
few uncles too.
And
some of
those people
who live
on their own
on
everybody's
road but
don't seem
to have
any relatives
at
all. They
were everyone.
'Who
are they?'
asked Gretel,
as open-mouthed
as her
brother often
was these
days. 'What
sort of
place is
this?'
'I'm
not sure,'
said Bruno,
sticking as
close to
the truth
as possible. 'But it's
not as
nice as
home, I
do know
that
much.'
'And
where are
all the
girls?' she
asked. 'And
the
mothers? And
the grandmothers?'
'Perhaps they
live in
a different
part,' suggested
Bruno.
Gretel agreed. She
didn't want
to go
on staring
but it
was very
difficult to
turn her eyes
away. So
far, all
she had
seen was
the forest
facing her
own window, which looked a
little dark
but a
good place
for picnics
if there
was any
sort of
clearing further
along it.
But from
this side
of the
house the
view was
very different.
It
started off nicely enough.
There was
a garden
directly beneath Bruno's
window. Quite
a large
one too,
and full
of flowers
which grew
in neat
orderly sections
in soil
that looked
as if
it was
tended very
carefully by
someone who
knew that
growing flowers in
a place
like this
was something
good that
they could
do, like
putting a
tiny candle of
light in the
corner of a
huge castle
on a
misty moor
on a
dark winter's
night.
Past
the flowers
there was
a very pleasant
pave
ment with a
wooden bench
on it,
where Gretel
could imagine
sitting in
the sunshine and
reading a
book. There
was a
plaque attached
to the top of
the bench
but she
couldn't read
the inscription from this
distance. The
seat was turned
to face
the house
-
which, usually,
would be
a strange
thing to
do but
on this
occasion she
could understand why.
About
twenty feet
further along
from the
garden
and
the flowers
and the
bench with
the plaque
on it,
everything
changed. There
'vas a
huge ‘ire
fence
that ran
along the
length of
the house
and turned
in at the top,
extending further
along in
either
direction,
further than
she could
possibly see.
The
fence
was very
high, higher
even than
the house
they were standing in,
and there
were huge
wooden posts,
like telegraph
poles, dotted
along it,
holding it
up. At the
top of
the fence
enormous bales
of barbed
wire were
tangled in
spirals, and
Gretel felt
an unexpected pain inside
her as
she looked
at the
sharp spikes
sticking out
all the
way round
it.
There
wasn't any
grass after
the fence;
in fact
there was
no greenery
anywhere to
be seen in
the distance.
Instead the
ground was
made of
a sand-like
sub stance,
and as
far as
she could
make out
there was
nothing but
low huts
and large
square buildings dotted around and
one or
two smoke
stacks in
the distance.
She opened
her mouth
to
say
something, but when
she did
she realized
that she
couldn't find any
words to
express her
surprise, and
so she·did
the only
sensible thing
she could
think of
and closed
it agam.
'You see?'
said Bruno
from the
corner of
the room, feeling quietly pleased
with himself
because whatever
it
was that
was out
there
-
and
whoever
they were
-
he
had seen
it first
and he
could see
it whenever
he wanted
because they
were outside
his bedroom
window
and not
hers and
therefore they belonged
to him
and he
':vas the
king of everything
thejr
surveyed and
she was his lowly
subject.
'I don't
understand,' said
Gretel. 'Who
would
build
such a
nasty-looking place?'
'It is a nasty-looking
place, isn't
it?' agreed
Bruno.
'I think
those huts
have only
one floor
too. Look
how
low they
are.'
'They
must
be
modern
types
of
houses,'
said
Gretel. 'Father
hates modern
things.'
'Then
he won't
like them
very much,'
said Bruno.
'No,' replied
Gretel. She
stood still
for a long time staring
at them.
She
was twelve
years old
and was
considered to
be
one
of
the
brightest
girls
in
her
class, so
she squeezed
her lips
together and
narrowed her
eyes and
forced her
brain to
understand what
she was
looking at.
Finally she
could think
of only
one
explanation.
'This must
be the
countryside,' said
Gretel, turn
ing
round to
look at
her brother
triumphantly.
'The
countryside?'
'Yes, it's
the only explanation, don't
you see?
When
we're at
home, in
Berlin, we're
in the
city.
That's why
there are
so many
people and
so many
houses
and the schools are
full and
you can't
make
your
way through
the centre
of town
on a
Saturday
afternoon without getting
pushed from
pillar to
post.'
'Yes
..
.'
said Bruno,
nodding his
head, trying
to
keep up.
'But
we
learned
in
geography
class
that
in
the countryside, where all
the farmers
are and
the
animals, and they
grow all
the food,
there are
huge
areas
like this
where people
live and
work and
send all the food to
feed us.'
She looked
out of
the window again at
the huge
area spread
out before
her
and
the distances that existed
between each
of the huts. 'This
must be
it. It's
the countryside.
Perhaps
this
is our holiday home,'
she added
hopefully.
Bruno
thought
about
it
and shook
his
head. 'I
don't think
so,' he
said with
great conviction.
'You're
nine,' countered Gretel.
'How would
you
know?
When you
get to
my age
you'll understand
these things
a lot
better.'
'That might
be so,'
said Bruno,
who knew
that he
was
younger but
didn't agree
that that
made him
less
likely to
be right,
'but if this is
the countryside
like
you
say it
is, then
where are
all the
animals you're
talking
about?'
Gretel opened
her mouth
to answer
him but
couldn't think
of a
suitable reply,
so she
looked out
of
the window
again instead
and peered
around for
them, but
they were
nowhere to
be seen.
'There should
be cows and pigs
and sheep
and
horses,' said Bruno.
'If
it
was a
farm, I mean.
Not to
mention chickens
and ducks.'
'And
there aren't
any,' admitted
Gretel quietly.
'And if
they grew
food here,
like you
suggested,'
continued
Bruno, enjoying
himself enormously, 'then I
think the
ground would
have to
look a
lot better
than that,
don't you?
I don't
think you
could grow
anything in
all that
dirt.'
Gretel looked
at it again and
nodded, because
she
was
not so
silly as
to insist
on being
in the
right all
the
time when
it was
clear the
argument stood against her.
'Perhaps it's
not a
farm then,'
she said.
'It's
not,' agreed
Bruno.
'Which means
this mightn't
be the
countryside,'
she
continued.
'No,
I don't
think it
is,' he
replied.
'Which also
means that
this probably
isn't
our
holiday
home after all,'
she concluded.
'I
don't think
so,' said
Bruno.
He sat
down on
the bed
and for
a moment
wished
that
Gretel would
sit down
beside him
and put
her
arm
around him
and tell
him that
it was
all going
to
·
be
all right
and that
sooner or
later they'd
get to
like
it
here and
they'd never
want to
go back
to Berlin.
But
she was
still watching
from the
window and
this
time
she wasn't
looking at
the flowers or
the pave
ment
or the
bench with
the plaque
on it
or the
tall fence or the
wooden telegraph
poles or
the barbed wire bales or
the hard
ground beyond
them or
the
huts
or the
small buildings
or the
smoke stacks;
instead
she was
looking at
the people.
'Who
are all
those people?'
she
asked in
a quiet
voice, almost as
if she
wasn't asking
Bruno but
look ing
for an
answer from
someone else.
'And what
are they
all doing
there?'
Bruno stood
up, and for the
first time
they stood
there
together, shoulder to
shoulder, and stared
at
what
was happening
not fifty
feet away
from their
new
home.
Everywhere
they
looked
they
could
see
people,
tall, short,
old, young,
all
moving
around. Some
stood
perfectly still in
groups, their
hands by
their sides, trying to keep
their heads
up, as a soldier
marched in
front of
them, his
mouth opening
and
closing quickly
as if
he were
shouting something
at
them.
Some were
formed into
a sort of
chain gang
and
pushing
wheelbarrows
from
one
side of
the
camp to the
other, appearing
from a
place out
of
sight
and taking
their wheelbarrows
further along
behind
a hut, where they
disappeared again. A
few
stood
near the
huts in
quiet groups,
staring at
the ground as
if it
was the
sort of
game where
they didn't
want
to be
spotted. Others
were on
crutches and
many
had
bandages around
their
heads.
Some
carried spades
and
were being
led
by
groups of
soldiers to a
place where
they could
no longer
be
seen.
Bruno
and
Gretel
could see
hundreds
of
people,
but
there \vere
so many
huts before
them, and
the
camp
spread out
so much further
than they
could
possibly see,
that it
looked as
though there
must be
thousands out
there.
'And
all living
so close
to us,'
said Gretel,
frowning.
'In Berlin, on
our nice
quiet street,
we only
had six
houses. And
now there
are so
many. Why
would Father
take a
new job
here in
such a
nasty place
and with
so many
neighbours?
It
doesn't
make
any
sense.'
'Look over
there,' said
Bruno, and
Gretel followed
the
direction of
the finger
he was
pointing and
saw,
emerging from
a hut
in the
distance, a
group of
children huddled together
and being
shouted at
by a
group
of soldiers.
The more
they were
shouted at,
the closer
they huddled
together, but
then one of
the
soldiers lunged
towards them and
they separated
and seemed to do
what he
had wanted
them to
do all
along, which
was to
stand in
a single
line. When
they
did,
the soldiers all
started to laugh
and applaud them.
'It
must
be
some
sort
of
rehearsal,'
suggested
Gretel, ignoring
the fact
that some
of the
children,
even
some of
the older
ones, even
the ones
as grown up
as her, looked
as if they
were crying.
'I
told you
there were
children here,'
said Bruno.
'Not
the type
of children
I
want
to play
with,' said
Gretel in a
determined voice. 'They
look filthy.
Hilda and
Isobel and
Louise have
a bath
every morn
ing and
so do
I.
Those
children look
like they've
never had
a bath
in their
lives.'
'It
does look
very dirty
over there,'
said Bruno.
'But maybe
they don't
have any
baths?'
'Don't be
stupid,' said
Gretel, despite
the fact
that
she
had been
told time
and time
again that
she was
not
to call
her brother
stupid. 'What
kind of
people
don't
have baths?'
'I don't
know,' said Bruno. 'People who
don't have
any
hot water?'
Gretel
watched for
another few
moments before shivering and turning
away. 'I'm
going back
to my room
to arrange my
dolls,' she
said. 'The
view is decidedly nicer from
there.'
With that
remark she
walked away,
returning
across the
hallway to
her bedroom
and closing
the door behind
her, but
she didn't
go back
to arranging her dolls quite
yet. Instead
she sat
down on
the bed
and a
lot of
things went
through her
head.
And one
final thought came into her
brother's head as he
watched the
hundreds of
people in
the distance going about their
business, and
that was
the
fact that
all of
them
-
the
small boys,
the big
boys,
the fathers,
the grandfathers,
the uncles,
the
people
who lived
on their
own on
everybody's road
but didn't
seem to
have any
relatives at
all
-
were
wearing the
same clothes
as each
other: a
pair of
grey striped
pajamas with
a grey
striped cap
on their
heads.
'How
extraordinary,' he muttered,
before turning
away.
Day 3 Text | The Boy in the Striped Pajamas |
English I Stories | Evans Homepage |