There would be a prize, a rich one, certainly, perhaps even the jackpot, depending upon whether anyone else had surpassed or matched Mrs. Harris' effort.
One thing, seemed certain, however, the Dior dress, or at least the money for it, was assured, for neither could conceive that the prize for achieving twenty-eight out of thirty games could be less. But there was one great trial yet to be undergone by both. They would have to wait until Wednesday before they would be advised by telegram of the amount of Mrs. Harris' swag.
"Whatever's over from what I need for me dress, I'll split with you (все, что сверх /суммы/, которая мне нужна на мое платье, я разделю с тобой)," the little charwoman told her stout friend in a moment of warm generosity (маленькая уборщица сказала своей полной подруге в минуту сердечной щедрости = великодушия), and meant every word of it (и намеревалась выполнить каждое слово;
generosity ["Genq'rOsItI], emporium [em'pLrIqm], aisle [aIl]
"Whatever's over from what I need for me dress, I'll split with you," the little charwoman told her stout friend in a moment of warm generosity, and meant every word of it. In the first flush of excitement over the winning Mrs. Harris saw herself marching through this Dior's emporium, flanked by scraping and bowing sales personnel. Her handbag would be crammed to bursting with the stuff. She would walk down aisle after aisle, pass rack after rack of wondrous garments standing stiff with satin, lace, velvets and brocades to make her choice finally and say: "I'll 'ave
And yet (но все же) — and yet — naturally gay optimist that she was (по натуре радостная оптимистка, какой она была), Mrs. Harris could not help harboring a suspicion (миссис Харрис не могла не питать подозрения;
precarious [prI'keqrIqs], exquisite ['ekskwIzIt], luxury ['lAkSqrI]
And yet — and yet — naturally gay optimist that she was, Mrs. Harris could not help harboring a suspicion gleaned from the precarious task of the living of daily life and making a go of things that it might not be all that easy. To crave something exquisite but useless, a luxury wholly out of one's reach, to pin one's faith in getting it on a lottery and to draw immediately the winning number, this was storybook stuff.