That's a really hard one. I've no idea what the answer could be.
I don't even know where to start.″Just try,″ said the professor.
Momo recited the riddle again under her breath. Finally, she shook her head. ″It's no use,″ she said.
The tortoise, which had now rejoined them and was seated at the professor's feet, had been watching Momo intently.
″Well, Cassiopeia,″ said the professor, ″you know everything half an hour in advance.
Will Momo solve the riddle or won't she?″ Cassiopeia's shell lit up.
SHE WILL! it spelled out. ″You see?″ the professor said, turning to Momo.
″You are going to solve it. Cassiopeia has never been wrong yet.″
Momo knit her brow and racked her brains once more. Who were these three brothers that all lived in the same house?
They obviously weren't brothers in the usual sense.
In riddles, ″brothers″ always meant grains of sand or teeth or the like - similar things, at all events.
But these three things somehow turned into each other. What sort of things could do that?
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