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"Not exactly," says Helen. "I know where I am, I just don't know where my daddy is." (She has learned that the 'mommy' and 'spinach' parts are best left out when talking to strange grown-ups, because they get terribly confused and it's a bother to untangle them.)
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Helen peers at the witches.
"Maybe," she says. "Can you find him? He should be close by. Maybe I should look in the bathroom first."
"Maybe," she says. "Can you find him? He should be close by. Maybe I should look in the bathroom first."
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"I'm going to look in the ladies' room," says Helen.
She goes into the restaurant.
She goes into the restaurant.
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And sure enough, Helen comes out again.
"He wasn't there," she reports. "And I asked somebody to look in the men's room for me and he wasn't there either. I guess he's lost. How are you going to find him? Will you use magic?"
"He wasn't there," she reports. "And I asked somebody to look in the men's room for me and he wasn't there either. I guess he's lost. How are you going to find him? Will you use magic?"
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"I know lots of magic too!" she says. "But I don't know any daddy-finding spells. Will you teach me one? Or are there runes and things in all the ones there are? I don't know runes yet."
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"It's nice to meet you!" she says. "Where are you going to do the spell to find my daddy?"
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She hasn't read it before, but it is cute and she likes it.
"I hope he's not worried," she says when she finishes it, most of the way through the flight.
"I hope he's not worried," she says when she finishes it, most of the way through the flight.
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"I love magic!" says Helen. "It's so much fun! I can count to fifty in Svaaric, but I don't know real words yet."