The Meeting A 1.Now that the Manager had gone,
I was not particularly alarmed. 2.What better than to be
imprisoned in a room full of these splendid ladies? If I ever got talking to
them, I might even suggest that they come and do a bit of cruelty-to-children
preventing at my school. 3.We could certainly use them
there. 4.In they came, talking their
heads off.
B 1.They began milling round and
choosing their seats, and there was a whole lot of stuff like, "Come and
sit next to me, Millie dear," and "Oh, hel-lo Beatrice! I haven't
seen you since the last meeting! 2.What an adorable dress you have
on!" 3.I decided to stay where I was
and let them get on with their meeting while I got on with my mouse-training,
but I watched them for a while longer through the crack in the screen, waiting
for them to settle down.
C 1.How many were there? I guessed
about two hundred. 2.The back rows filled up first. 3.They all seemed to want to sit
as far back from the platform as possible. 4.There was a lady wearing a tiny
green hat in the middle of the back row who kept scratching the nape of her
neck. 5.She couldn't leave it alone. 6.It fascinated me the way her
fingers kept scratching away at the hair on the back of her neck.
D 1.Had she known somebody was
watching her from behind, I'm sure she would have been embarrassed. 2.I wondered if she had dandruff. 3.All of a sudden, I noticed that
the lady next to her was doing the same thing! 4.And the next one!And the
next!The whole lot of them were doing it. 5.They were all scratching away
like mad at the hair on the backs of their necks!
E 1.Did they have fleas in their
hair? 2.More likely it was nits. 3.A boy at school called Ashton
had had nits in his hair last term and the matron had made him dip his whole
head in turpentine. 4.It killed the nits all right,
but it nearly killed Ashton as well. 5.Half the skin came away from
his scalp.
F 1.I began to be fascinated by
these hair-scratching ladies. 2.It is always funny when you
catch someone doing something coarse and she thinks no one is looking. 3.Nose-picking, for example, or
scratching her bottom. 4.Hair-scratching is very nearly
as unattractive, especially if it goes on and on. 5.I decided it had to be nits.
G 1.Then the most astonishing thing
happened. 2.I saw one lady pushing her
fingers up underneath the hair on her head, and the hair, the entire head of
hair lifted upwards all in one piece, and the hand slid underneath the hair and
went on scratching! 3.She was wearing a wig! She was
also wearing gloves! I glanced swiftly around at the rest of the now seated
audience. 4.Every one of them was wearing
gloves! My blood turned to ice.
H 1.I began to shake all over.I
glanced frantically behind me for a back door to escape through. 2.There wasn't one.Should I leap
out from behind the screen and make a dash for the double-doors? 3.Those double-doors were already
closed and I could see a woman standing in front of them. 4.She was bending forward and
fixing some sort of a metal chain round the two door-handles. 5.Keep still, I told myself.No
one has seen you yet.
I 1.There's no reason in the world
why they should come and look behind the screen. 2.But one false move, one cough,
one sneeze, one nose-blow, one little sound of any sort and it won't be just
one witch that gets you. 3.It'll be two hundred.At that
point, I think I fainted. 4.The whole thing was altogether
too much for a small boy to cope with.
J 1.But I don't believe I was out
for more than a few seconds, and when I came to, I was lying on the carpet and
I was still, thank heavens, behind the screen. 2.There was absolute silence all
around me. 3.Rather shakily, I got to my
knees and peered once again through the crack in the screen. |
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