【英文短篇小说】The Clothes They Stood Up In(1)
时间:2019-02-16 作者:英语课 分类:英文短篇小说
英语课
The Ransomes had been burgled. “Robbed,” Mrs. Ransome said. “Burgled,” Mr. Ransome corrected. Premises 2 were burgled; persons were robbed. Mr. Ransome was a solicitor 3 by profession and thought words mattered. Though “burgled” was the wrong word too. Burglars select; they pick; they remove one item and ignore others. There is a limit to what burglars can take: they seldom take easy chairs, for example, and even more seldom settees. These burglars did. They took everything.
The Ransomes had been to the opera, to Così fan tutte (or Così as Mrs. Ransome had learned to call it). Mozart played an important part in their marriage. They had no children and but for Mozart would probably have split up years ago. Mr. Ransome always took a bath when he came home from work and then he had his supper. After supper he took another bath, this time in Mozart. He wallowed in Mozart; he luxuriated in him; he let the little Viennese soak away all the dirt and disgustingness he had had to sit through in his office all day. On this particular evening he had been to the public baths, Covent Garden, where their seats were immediately behind the Home Secretary. He too was taking a bath and washing away the cares of his day, cares, if only in the form of a statistic 5, that were about to include the Ransomes.
On a normal evening, though, Mr. Ransome shared his bath with no one, Mozart coming personalized via his headphones and a stack of complex and finely balanced stereo equipment that Mrs. Ransome was never allowed to touch. She blamed the stereo for the burglary as that was what the robbers were probably after in the first place. The theft of stereos is common; the theft of fitted carpets is not.
“Perhaps they wrapped the stereo in the carpet,” said Mrs. Ransome.
Mr. Ransome shuddered 6 and said her fur coat was more likely, whereupon Mrs. Ransome started crying again.
It had not been much of a Così. Mrs. Ransome could not follow the plot and Mr. Ransome, who never tried, found the performance did not compare with the four recordings 8 he possessed 9 of the work. The acting 10 he invariably found distracting. “None of them knows what to do with their arms,” he said to his wife in the interval 11. Mrs. Ransome thought it probably went further than their arms but did not say so. She was wondering if the casserole she had left in the oven would get too dry at Gas Mark 4. Perhaps 3 would have been better. Dry it may well have been but there was no need to have worried. The thieves took the oven and the casserole with it.
The Ransomes lived in an Edwardian block of flats the color of ox blood not far from Regent’s Park. It was handy for the City, though Mrs. Ransome would have preferred something farther out, seeing herself with a trug in a garden, vaguely 12. But she was not gifted in that direction. An African violet that her cleaning lady had given her at Christmas had finally given up the ghost that very morning and she had been forced to hide it in the wardrobe out of Mrs. Clegg’s way. More wasted effort. The wardrobe had gone too.
They had no neighbors to speak of, or seldom to. Occasionally they ran into people in the lift and both parties would smile cautiously. Once they had asked some newcomers on their floor around to sherry, but he had turned out to be what he called “a big band freak” and she had been a dental receptionist with a time-share in Portugal, so one way and another it had been an awkward evening and they had never repeated the experience. These days the turnover 13 of tenants 14 seemed increasingly rapid and the lift more and more wayward. People were always moving in and out again, some of them Arabs.
“I mean,” said Mrs. Ransome, “it’s getting like a hotel.”
“I wish you wouldn’t keep saying ‘I mean,’ ” said Mr. Ransome. “It adds nothing to the sense.”
He got enough of what he called “this sloppy 15 way of talking” at work; the least he could ask for at home, he felt, was correct English. So Mrs. Ransome, who normally had very little to say, now tended to say even less.
When the Ransomes had moved into Naseby Mansions 16 the flats boasted a commissionaire in a plum-colored uniform that matched the color of the building. He had died one afternoon in 1982 as he was hailing a taxi for Mrs. Brabourne on the second floor, who had forgone 17 it in order to let it take him to hospital. None of his successors had shown the same zeal 18 in office or pride in the uniform and eventually the function of commissionaire had merged 19 with that of the caretaker, who was never to be found on the door and seldom to be found anywhere, his lair 20 a hot scullery behind the boiler 21 room where he slept much of the day in an armchair that had been thrown out by one of the tenants.
On the night in question the caretaker was asleep, though unusually for him not in the armchair but at the theater. On the lookout 22 for a classier type of girl he had decided 23 to attend an adult education course where he had opted 24 to study English; given the opportunity, he had told the lecturer, he would like to become a voracious 25 reader. The lecturer had some exciting though not very well formulated 26 ideas about art and the workplace, and learning he was a caretaker had got him tickets for the play of the same name, thinking the resultant insights would be a stimulant 27 to group interaction. It was an evening the caretaker found no more satisfying than the Ransomes did Così and the insights he gleaned 28 limited: “So far as your actual caretaking was concerned,” he reported to the class, “it was bollocks.” The lecturer consoled himself with the hope that, unknown to the caretaker, the evening might have opened doors. In this he was right: the doors in question belonged to the Ransomes’ flat.
The police came around eventually, though there was more to it than picking up the phone. The thieves had done that anyway, all three phones in fact, neatly 29 snipping 30 off the wire flush with the skirting board so that, with no answer from the flat opposite (“Sharing time in Portugal, probably,” Mr. Ransome said, “or at a big band concert”), he was forced to sally forth 31 in search of a phone box. “No joke,” as he said to Mrs. Ransome now that phone boxes doubled as public conveniences. The first two Mr. Ransome tried didn’t even do that, urinals solely 32, the phone long since ripped out. A mobile would have been the answer, of course, but Mr. Ransome had resisted this innovation (“Betrays a lack of organization”), as he resisted most innovations except those in the sphere of stereophonic reproduction.
He wandered on through deserted 33 streets, wondering how people managed. The pubs had closed, the only place open a launderette with, in the window, a pay phone. This struck Mr. Ransome as a stroke of luck; never having had cause to use such an establishment he had not realized that washing clothes ran to such a facility; but being new to launderettes meant also that he was not certain if someone who was not actually washing clothes was permitted to take advantage of it. However, the phone was currently being used by the sole occupant of the place, an old lady in two overcoats who had plainly not laundered 34 her clothes in some time, so Mr. Ransome took courage.
She was standing 35 with the phone pressed to her dirty ear, not talking, but not really listening either.
“Could you hurry, please,” Mr. Ransome said. “This is an emergency.”
“So is this, dear,” said the woman. “I’m calling Padstow, only they’re not answering.”
“I want to call the police,” said Mr. Ransome.
“Been attacked, have you?” said the woman. “I was attacked last week. It’s par 4 for the course these days. He was only a toddler. It’s ringing but there’s a long corridor. They tend to have a hot drink about this time. They’re nuns 36,” she said explanatorily.
“Nuns?” said Mr. Ransome. “Are you sure they won’t have gone to bed?”
“No. They’re up and down all night having the services. There’s always somebody about.”
She went on listening to the phone ringing in Cornwall.
“Can’t it wait?” asked Mr. Ransome, seeing his effects halfway 37 up the M1. “Speed is of the essence.”
“I know,” said the old lady, “whereas nuns have got all the time in the world. That’s the beauty of it except when it comes to answering the phone. I aim to go on retreat there in May.”
“But it’s only February,” Mr. Ransome said. “I . . .”
“They get booked up,” explained the old lady. “There’s no talking and three meals a day so do you wonder? They use it as a holiday home for religious of both sexes.You wouldn’t think nuns needed holidays. Prayer doesn’t take it out of you. Not like bus conducting. Still ringing. They’ve maybe finished their hot drink and adjourned 38 to the chapel 39. I suppose I could ring later, only . . .” She looked at the coins waiting in Mr. Ransome’s hand. “I’ve put my money in now.”
Mr. Ransome gave her a pound and she took the other 50p besides, saying, “You don’t need money for 999.”
She put the receiver down and her money came back of its own accord, but Mr. Ransome was so anxious to get on with his call he scarcely noticed. It was only later, sitting on the floor of what had been their bedroom, that he said out loud, “Do you remember Button A and Button B? They’ve gone, you know. I never noticed.”
“Everything’s gone,” said Mrs. Ransome, not catching 40 his drift, “the air freshener, the soap dish. They can’t be human; I mean they’ve even taken the lavatory 41 brush.”
“Fire, police, or ambulance?” said a woman’s voice.
“Police,” said Mr. Ransome. There was a pause.
“I feel better for that banana,” said a man’s voice. “Yes? Police.” Mr. Ransome began to explain but the man cut him short. “Anyone in danger?” He was chewing.
“No,” said Mr. Ransome, “but . . .”
“Any threat to the person?”
“No,” said Mr. Ransome, “only . . .”
“Slight bottleneck 42 at the moment, chief,” said the voice. “Bear with me while I put you on hold.”
Mr. Ransome found himself listening to a Strauss waltz.
“They’re probably having a hot drink,” said the old lady, who he could smell was still at his elbow.
“Sorry about that,” the voice said five minutes later. “We’re on manual at the moment. The computer’s got hiccups 43. How may I help you?”
Mr. Ransome explained there had been a burglary and gave the address.
“Are you on the phone?”
“Of course,” said Mr. Ransome, “only . . .”
“And the number is?”
“They’ve taken the phone,” said Mr. Ransome.
“Nothing new there,” said the voice. “Cordless job?”
“No,” said Mr. Ransome. “One was in the sitting room, one was by the bed. . . .”
“We don’t want to get bogged 44 down in detail,” said the voice. “Besides, the theft of a phone isn’t the end of the world. What was the number again?”
It was after one o’clock when Mr. Ransome got back and Mrs. Ransome, already beginning to pick up the threads, was in what had been their bedroom, sitting with her back to the wall in the place where she would have been in bed had there been a bed to be in. She had done a lot of crying while Mr. Ransome was out but had now wiped her eyes, having decided she was going to make the best of things.
“I thought you might be dead,” she said.
“Why dead?”
“Well, it never rains but it pours.”
“I was in one of these launderettes if you want to know. It was terrible. What are you eating?”
“A cough sweet. I found it in my bag.” This was one of the sweets Mr. Ransome insisted she take with her whenever they went to the opera ever since she had had a snuffle all the way through Fidelio.
“Is there another?”
“No,” said Mrs. Ransome, sucking. “This is the last.”
Mr. Ransome went to the lavatory, only realizing when it was too late that the burglary had been so comprehensive as to have taken in both the toilet roll and its holder 45.
“There’s no paper,” called Mrs. Ransome.
The only paper in the flat was the program from Così and passing it around the door Mrs. Ransome saw, not without satisfaction, that Mr. Ransome was going to have to wipe his bottom on a picture of Mozart.
Both unwieldy and unyielding the glossy 46 brochure (sponsored by Barclays Bank PLC) was uncomfortable to use and unsinkable afterwards, and three flushes notwithstanding, the fierce eye of Sir Georg Solti still came squinting 47 resentfully around the bend of the pan.
“Better?” said Mrs. Ransome.
“No,” said her husband and settled down beside her against the wall. However, finding the skirting board dug into her back Mrs. Ransome changed her position to lie at right angles to her husband so that her head now rested on his thigh 48, a situation it had not been in for many a long year. While telling himself this was an emergency it was a conjunction Mr. Ransome found both uncomfortable and embarrassing, but which seemed to suit his wife as she straightaway went off to sleep, leaving Mr. Ransome staring glumly 49 at the wall opposite and its now uncurtained window, from which, he noted 50 wonderingly, the burglars had even stolen the curtain rings.
It was four o’clock before the police arrived, a big middle-aged 51 man in a raincoat, who said he was a detective sergeant 52, and a sensitive-looking young constable 53 in uniform, who didn’t say anything at all.
“You’ve taken your time,” said Mr. Ransome.
“Yes,” said the sergeant. “We would have been earlier but there was a slight . . . ah, glitch 54 as they say. Rang the wrong doorbell. The fault of mi-laddo here. Saw the name Hanson and . . .”
“No,” said Mr. Ransome. “Ransome.”
“Yes. We established that . . . eventually. Just moved in, have you?” said the sergeant, surveying the bare boards.
“No,” said Mr. Ransome. “We’ve been here for thirty years.”
“Fully furnished, was it?”
“Of course,” said Mr. Ransome. “It was a normal home.”
“A settee, easy chairs, a clock,” said Mrs. Ransome. “We had everything.”
“Television?” said the constable, timidly.
“Yes,” said Mrs. Ransome.
“Only we didn’t watch it much,” said Mr. Ransome.
“Video recorder?”
“No,” said Mr. Ransome. “Life’s complicated enough.”
“CD player?”
“Yes,” said Mrs. Ransome and Mr. Ransome together.
“And my wife had a fur coat,” said Mr. Ransome. “My insurers have a list of the valuables.”
“In that case,” said the sergeant, “you are laughing. I’ll just have a little wander round if you don’t mind, while Constable Partridge takes down the details. People opposite see the intruder?”
“Away in Portugal,” said Mr. Ransome.
“Caretaker?”
“Probably in Portugal too,” said Mr. Ransome, “for all we see of him.”
“Is it Ransom 1 as in king’s?” said the constable. “Or Ransome as in Arthur?”
“Partridge is one of our graduate entrants,” said the sergeant, examining the front door. “Lock not forced, I see. He’s just climbing the ladder. There wouldn’t be such a thing as a cup of tea, would there?”
“No,” said Mr. Ransome shortly, “because there wouldn’t be such a thing as a teapot. Not to mention a tea bag to put in it.”
“I take it you’ll want counseling,” said the constable.
“What?”
“Someone comes along and holds your hand,” said the sergeant, looking at the window. “Partridge thinks it’s important.”
“We’re all human,” said the constable.
“I’m a solicitor,” said Mr. Ransome.
“Well,” said the sergeant, “perhaps your missus could give it a try. We like to keep Partridge happy.”
Mrs. Ransome smiled helpfully.
“I’ll put yes,” said the constable.
“They didn’t leave anything behind, did they?” asked the sergeant, sniffing 55 and reaching up to run his hand along the picture-rail.
“No,” said Mr. Ransome testily 56. “Not a thing. As you can see.”
“I didn’t mean something of yours,” said the sergeant. “I meant something of theirs.” He sniffed 57 again, inquiringly. “A calling card.”
“A calling card?” said Mrs. Ransome.
“Excrement 58,” said the sergeant. “Burglary is a nervous business. They often feel the need to open their bowels 59 when doing a job.”
“Which is another way of saying it, sergeant,” said the constable.
“Another way of saying what, Partridge?”
“Doing a job is another way of saying opening the bowels. In France,” said the constable, “it’s known as posting a sentry 60.”
“Oh, teach you that at Leatherhead, did they?” said the sergeant. “Partridge is a graduate of the police college.”
“It’s like a university,” explained the constable, “only they don’t have scarves.”
“Anyway,” said the sergeant, “have a scout 61 around. For the excrement, I mean. They can be very creative about it. Burglary in Pangbourne I attended once where they done it halfway up the wall in an eighteenth-century light fitting. Any other sphere and they’d have got the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award.”
“You’ve perhaps not noticed,” Mr. Ransome said grimly, “but we don’t have any light fittings.”
“Another one in Guildford did it in a bowl of this potpourri 62.”
“That would be irony,” said the constable.
“Oh would it?” said the sergeant. “And there was me thinking it was just some foul-assed, light-fingered little smackhead afflicted 63 with incontinence. Still, while we’re talking about bodily functions, before we take our leave I’ll just pay a visit myself.”
Too late Mr. Ransome realized he should have warned him and took refuge in the kitchen.
The sergeant came out shaking his head.
“Well at least our friends had the decency 64 to use the toilet but they’ve left it in a disgusting state. I never thought I’d have to do a Jimmy Riddle 65 over Dame 66 Kiri Te Kanawa. Her recording 7 of West Side Story is one of the gems 67 of my record collection.”
“To be fair,” said Mrs. Ransome, “that was my husband.”
“Dear me,” said the sergeant.
“What was?” said Mr. Ransome, coming back into the room.
“Nothing,” said his wife.
“Do you think you’ll catch them?” said Mr. Ransome as he stood at the door with the two policemen.
The sergeant laughed.
“Well, miracles do happen, even in the world of law enforcement. Nobody got a grudge 68 against you, have they?”
“I’m a solicitor,” said Mr. Ransome. “It’s possible.”
“And it’s not somebody’s idea of a joke?”
“A joke?” said Mr. Ransome.
“Just a thought,” said the sergeant. “But if it’s your genuine burglar, I’ll say this: he always comes back.”
The constable nodded in sage 69 confirmation 70; even Leatherhead was agreed on this. “Come back?” said Mr. Ransome bitterly, looking at the empty flat. “Come back? What the fuck for?”
Mr. Ransome seldom swore and Mrs. Ransome, who had stayed in the other room, pretended she hadn’t heard. The door closed.
“Useless,” said Mr. Ransome, coming back. “Utterly useless. It makes you want to swear.”
“Well,” said Mrs. Ransome a few hours later, “we shall just have to camp out. After all,” she added not unhappily, “it could be fun.”
“Fun?” said Mr. Ransome. “Fun?”
He was unshaven, unwashed, his bottom was sore and his breakfast had been a drink of water from the tap. Still, no amount of pleading on Mrs. Ransome’s part could stop him going heroically off to work, with his wife instinctively 71 knowing even in these unprecedented 72 circumstances that her role was to make much of his selfless dedication 73.
Even so, when he’d gone and with the flat so empty, Mrs. Ransome missed him a little, wandering from room to echoing room not sure where she should start. Deciding to make a list she forgot for the moment she had nothing to make a list with and nothing to make a list on. This meant a visit to the newsagents for pad and pencil where, though she’d never noticed it before, she found there was a café next door. It seemed to be doing hot breakfasts, and, though in her opera clothes she felt a bit out of place among the taxi drivers and bicycle couriers who comprised most of the clientele, nobody took much notice of her, the waitress even calling her “duck” and offering her a copy of The Mirror to read while she waited for her bacon, egg, baked beans and fried bread. It wasn’t a paper she would normally read, but bacon, egg, baked beans and fried bread wasn’t a breakfast she would normally eat either, and she got so interested in the paper’s tales of royalty 74 and its misdemeanors that she propped 75 it up against the sauce bottle so that she could read and eat, completely forgetting that one of the reasons she had come into the café was to make herself a list.
Wanting a list, her shopping was pretty haphazard 76. She went off to Boots first and bought some toilet rolls and some paper plates and cups, but she forgot soap. And when she remembered soap and went back for it, she forgot tea bags, and when she remembered tea bags, she forgot paper towels, until what with trailing halfway to the flats then having to go back again, she began to feel worn out.
It was on the third of these increasingly flustered 77 trips (now having forgotten plastic cutlery) that Mrs. Ransome ventured into Mr. Anwar’s. She had passed the shop many times as it was midway between the flats and St. John’s Wood High Street; indeed she remembered it opening and the little draper’s and babies’ knitwear shop which it had replaced and where she had been a loyal customer. That had been kept by a Miss Dorsey, from whom over the years she had bought the occasional tray cloth or hank of Sylko but, on a much more regular basis, plain brown paper packets of what in those days were called “towels.” The closing-down of the shop in the late sixties had left Mrs. Ransome anxious and unprotected and it came as a genuine surprise on venturing into Timothy White’s to find that technology in this intimate department had lately made great strides that were unreflected in Miss Dorsey’s ancient stock, of which Mrs. Ransome, as the last of a dwindling 78 clientele, had been almost the sole consumer. She was old-fashioned, she knew that, but snobbery 79 had come into it too, Mrs. Ransome feeling it vaguely classier to have her requirements passed wordlessly across the counter with Miss Dorsey’s patient, suffering smile (“Our cross,” it said) rather than taken from some promiscuous 80 shelf in Timothy White’s. Though it was not long before Timothy White’s went the same way as Miss Dorsey, swallowed whole by Boots. Though Boots too, she felt, was a cut above the nearest chemist, Superdrug, which didn’t look classy at all.
The closing-down of Miss Dorsey’s (she was found laid across the counter one afternoon, having had a stroke) left the premises briefly 81 empty until, passing one morning on the way to the High Street, Mrs. Ransome saw that the shop had been taken over by an Asian grocer and that the pavement in front of the window where nothing had previously 82 stood except the occasional customer’s pram 83 was now occupied by boxes of unfamiliar 84 vegetables—yams, papaws, mangoes and the like, together with many sacks, sacks, Mrs. Ransome felt, that dogs could all too easily cock their legs against.
So it was partly out of loyalty 85 to Miss Dorsey and partly because it wasn’t really her kind of thing that Mrs. Ransome had not ventured into the shop until this morning when, to save her trailing back for the umpteenth 86 time to the High Street, she thought she might go in and ask if they had such a thing as boot polish (there were more pressing requirements, as she would have been the first to admit, only Mr. Ransome was very particular about his shoes). Though over twenty years had passed, the shop was still recognizably what it had been in Miss Dorsey’s day because, other than having introduced a freezer and cold cupboards, Mr. Anwar had simply adapted the existing fixtures 87 to his changed requirements. Drawers that had previously been devoted 88 to the genteel accoutrements of a leisured life—knitting patterns, crochet 89 hooks, Rufflette—now housed nan and pita bread; spices replaced bonnets 90 and booties; and the shelves and deep drawers that once were home to hosiery and foundation garments were now filled with rice and chickpeas.
Mrs. Ransome thought it unlikely they had polish in stock (did they wear normal shoes?), but she was weary enough to give it a try, though, since oxblood was what she wanted (or Mr. Ransome required), she thought vaguely it might be a shade to which they had religious objections. But plump and cheerful Mr. Anwar brought out several tins for her kind consideration and while she was paying she spotted 91 a nailbrush they would be needing; then the tomatoes looked nice and there was a lemon, and while she was at it the shop seemed to sell hardware so she invested in a colander 92. As she wandered around the shop the normally tongue-tied Mrs. Ransome found herself explaining to this plump and amiable 93 grocer the circumstances that had led her to the purchase of such an odd assortment 94 of things. And he smiled and shook his head in sympathy while at the same time suggesting other items she would doubtless be needing to replace and that he would happily supply. “They cleaned you out of house and home, the blighters. You will not know whether you are coming or going. You will need washing-up liquid and one of these blocks to make the toilet a more savory 95 place.”
So she ended up buying a dozen or so items, too many for her to carry, but this didn’t matter either as Mr. Anwar fetched his little boy from the flat upstairs (I hope I’m not dragging him away from the Koran, she thought) and he followed Mrs. Ransome home in his little white cap, carrying her shopping in a cardboard box.
“Seconds probably,” said Mr. Ransome later. “That’s how they make a profit.”
Mrs. Ransome didn’t quite see how there could be seconds in shoe polish but didn’t say so.
“Hopefully,” she said, “they’ll deliver.”
“You mean,” said Mr. Ransome (and it was old ground), “you hope they’ll deliver. ‘Hopefully they’ll deliver’ means that deliveries are touch and go” (though that was probably true too).
“Anyway,” said Mrs. Ransome defiantly 96, “he stays open till ten at night.”
“He can afford to,” said Mr. Ransome. “He probably pays no wages. I’d stick to Marks and Spencer.”
Which she did, generally speaking. Though once she popped in and bought a mango for her lunch and another time a papaw; small adventures, it’s true, but departures nevertheless, timorous 97 voyages of discovery which she knew her husband well enough to keep to herself.
The Ransomes had few friends; they seldom entertained, Mr. Ransome saying that he saw quite enough of people at work. On the rare occasions when Mrs. Ransome ran into someone she knew and ventured to recount their dreadful experience she was surprised to find that everyone, it seemed, had their own burglar story. None, she felt, was so stark 98 or so shocking as to measure up to theirs, which ought in fairness to have trumped 99 outright 100 these other less flamboyant 101 break-ins, but comparison scarcely seemed to enter into it: the friends only endured her story as an unavoidable prelude 102 to telling her their own. She asked Mr. Ransome if he had noticed this.
“Yes,” he said shortly. “Anybody would think it happened every day.”
Which, of course, it did but not, he was certain, as definitively 103, as out-and-outedly, as altogether epically 104 as this.
“Everything,” Mr. Ransome told Gail, his longtime secretary, “every single thing.”
Gail was a tall, doleful-looking woman, which normally suited Mr. Ransome very well as he could not abide 105 much of what he called “silliness”—i.e., femininity. Had Gail been a bit sillier, though, she might have been more sympathetic, but like everyone else she weighed in with a burglar story of her own, saying she was surprised it hadn’t happened before as most people she knew had been burgled at least once and her brother-in-law, who was a chiropodist in Ilford, twice, one of which had been a ram-raid while they were watching television.
“What you have to watch out for is the trauma 106; it takes people in different ways. Hair loss is often a consequence of burglary apparently 107 and my sister came out in terrible eczema. Mind you,” Gail went on, “it’s always men.”
“Always men what?” said Mr. Ransome.
“Who burgle.”
“Well, women shoplift,” said Mr. Ransome defensively.
“Not to that extent,” said Gail. “They don’t clean out the store.”
Not sure how he had ended up on the wrong side of the argument, Mr. Ransome felt both irritated and dissatisfied, so he tried Mr. Pardoe from the firm next door but with no more success. “Cleaned you out completely? Well, be grateful you weren’t in. My dentist and his wife were tied up for seven hours and counted themselves lucky not to be raped 108. Balaclavas, walkie-talkies. It’s an industry nowadays. I’d castrate them.”
That night Mr. Ransome took out a dictionary from his briefcase 109, both dictionary and briefcase newly acquired. The dictionary was Mr. Ransome’s favorite book.
“What are you doing?” asked Mrs. Ransome.
“Looking up ‘lock, stock and barrel.’ I suppose it means the same as ‘the whole shoot.’ ”
Over the next week or so Mrs. Ransome assembled the rudiments—two camp beds plus bedding, towels, a card table and two folding chairs. She bought a couple of what she called beanbags, though the shop called them something else; they were quite popular apparently, even among people who had not been burgled, who used them to sit on the floor by choice. There was even (this was Mr. Ransome’s contribution) a portable CD player and a recording of The Magic Flute 110.
Mrs. Ransome had always enjoyed shopping so this obligatory 111 re-equipment with the essentials of life was not without its pleasures, though the need was so pressing that choice scarcely entered into it. Hitherto anything electrical had always to be purchased by, or under the supervision 112 of, Mr. Ransome, a sanction that applied 113 even with an appliance like the vacuum cleaner, which he never wielded 114, or the dishwasher, which he seldom stacked. However, in the special circumstances obtaining after the burglary, Mrs. Ransome found herself licensed 115 to buy whatever was deemed necessary, electrical or otherwise; not only did she get an electric kettle, she also went in for a microwave oven, an innovation Mr. Ransome had long resisted and did not see the point of.
That many of these items (the beanbags for instance) were likely to be discarded once the insurance paid out and they acquired something more permanent did not diminish Mrs. Ransome’s quiet zest 116 in shopping for them. Besides, the second stage was likely to be somewhat delayed as the insurance policy had been stolen too, together with all their other documents, so compensation, while not in doubt, might be slow in coming. In the meantime they lived a stripped-down sort of life which seemed to Mrs. Ransome, at least, not unpleasant.
“Hand to mouth,” said Mr. Ransome.
“Living out of a suitcase,” said Croucher, his insurance broker 117.
“No,” said Mr. Ransome. “We don’t have a suitcase.”
“You don’t think,” asked Croucher, “it might be some sort of joke?”
“People keep saying that,” said Mr. Ransome. “Jokes must have changed since my day. I thought they were meant to be funny.”
“What sort of CD equipment was it?” said Croucher.
“Oh, state-of-the-art,” said Mr. Ransome. “The latest and the best. I’ve got the receipts somewhere . . . oh no, of course. I was forgetting.”
Though this was a genuine slip it was perhaps fortunate that the receipts had been stolen along with the equipment that they were for, because Mr. Ransome was telling a little lie. His sound equipment was not quite state-of-the-art, as what equipment is? Sound reproduction is not static; perfection is on-going and scarcely a week passes without some technical advance. As an avid 118 reader of hi-fi magazines, Mr. Ransome often saw advertised refinements he
The Ransomes had been to the opera, to Così fan tutte (or Così as Mrs. Ransome had learned to call it). Mozart played an important part in their marriage. They had no children and but for Mozart would probably have split up years ago. Mr. Ransome always took a bath when he came home from work and then he had his supper. After supper he took another bath, this time in Mozart. He wallowed in Mozart; he luxuriated in him; he let the little Viennese soak away all the dirt and disgustingness he had had to sit through in his office all day. On this particular evening he had been to the public baths, Covent Garden, where their seats were immediately behind the Home Secretary. He too was taking a bath and washing away the cares of his day, cares, if only in the form of a statistic 5, that were about to include the Ransomes.
On a normal evening, though, Mr. Ransome shared his bath with no one, Mozart coming personalized via his headphones and a stack of complex and finely balanced stereo equipment that Mrs. Ransome was never allowed to touch. She blamed the stereo for the burglary as that was what the robbers were probably after in the first place. The theft of stereos is common; the theft of fitted carpets is not.
“Perhaps they wrapped the stereo in the carpet,” said Mrs. Ransome.
Mr. Ransome shuddered 6 and said her fur coat was more likely, whereupon Mrs. Ransome started crying again.
It had not been much of a Così. Mrs. Ransome could not follow the plot and Mr. Ransome, who never tried, found the performance did not compare with the four recordings 8 he possessed 9 of the work. The acting 10 he invariably found distracting. “None of them knows what to do with their arms,” he said to his wife in the interval 11. Mrs. Ransome thought it probably went further than their arms but did not say so. She was wondering if the casserole she had left in the oven would get too dry at Gas Mark 4. Perhaps 3 would have been better. Dry it may well have been but there was no need to have worried. The thieves took the oven and the casserole with it.
The Ransomes lived in an Edwardian block of flats the color of ox blood not far from Regent’s Park. It was handy for the City, though Mrs. Ransome would have preferred something farther out, seeing herself with a trug in a garden, vaguely 12. But she was not gifted in that direction. An African violet that her cleaning lady had given her at Christmas had finally given up the ghost that very morning and she had been forced to hide it in the wardrobe out of Mrs. Clegg’s way. More wasted effort. The wardrobe had gone too.
They had no neighbors to speak of, or seldom to. Occasionally they ran into people in the lift and both parties would smile cautiously. Once they had asked some newcomers on their floor around to sherry, but he had turned out to be what he called “a big band freak” and she had been a dental receptionist with a time-share in Portugal, so one way and another it had been an awkward evening and they had never repeated the experience. These days the turnover 13 of tenants 14 seemed increasingly rapid and the lift more and more wayward. People were always moving in and out again, some of them Arabs.
“I mean,” said Mrs. Ransome, “it’s getting like a hotel.”
“I wish you wouldn’t keep saying ‘I mean,’ ” said Mr. Ransome. “It adds nothing to the sense.”
He got enough of what he called “this sloppy 15 way of talking” at work; the least he could ask for at home, he felt, was correct English. So Mrs. Ransome, who normally had very little to say, now tended to say even less.
When the Ransomes had moved into Naseby Mansions 16 the flats boasted a commissionaire in a plum-colored uniform that matched the color of the building. He had died one afternoon in 1982 as he was hailing a taxi for Mrs. Brabourne on the second floor, who had forgone 17 it in order to let it take him to hospital. None of his successors had shown the same zeal 18 in office or pride in the uniform and eventually the function of commissionaire had merged 19 with that of the caretaker, who was never to be found on the door and seldom to be found anywhere, his lair 20 a hot scullery behind the boiler 21 room where he slept much of the day in an armchair that had been thrown out by one of the tenants.
On the night in question the caretaker was asleep, though unusually for him not in the armchair but at the theater. On the lookout 22 for a classier type of girl he had decided 23 to attend an adult education course where he had opted 24 to study English; given the opportunity, he had told the lecturer, he would like to become a voracious 25 reader. The lecturer had some exciting though not very well formulated 26 ideas about art and the workplace, and learning he was a caretaker had got him tickets for the play of the same name, thinking the resultant insights would be a stimulant 27 to group interaction. It was an evening the caretaker found no more satisfying than the Ransomes did Così and the insights he gleaned 28 limited: “So far as your actual caretaking was concerned,” he reported to the class, “it was bollocks.” The lecturer consoled himself with the hope that, unknown to the caretaker, the evening might have opened doors. In this he was right: the doors in question belonged to the Ransomes’ flat.
The police came around eventually, though there was more to it than picking up the phone. The thieves had done that anyway, all three phones in fact, neatly 29 snipping 30 off the wire flush with the skirting board so that, with no answer from the flat opposite (“Sharing time in Portugal, probably,” Mr. Ransome said, “or at a big band concert”), he was forced to sally forth 31 in search of a phone box. “No joke,” as he said to Mrs. Ransome now that phone boxes doubled as public conveniences. The first two Mr. Ransome tried didn’t even do that, urinals solely 32, the phone long since ripped out. A mobile would have been the answer, of course, but Mr. Ransome had resisted this innovation (“Betrays a lack of organization”), as he resisted most innovations except those in the sphere of stereophonic reproduction.
He wandered on through deserted 33 streets, wondering how people managed. The pubs had closed, the only place open a launderette with, in the window, a pay phone. This struck Mr. Ransome as a stroke of luck; never having had cause to use such an establishment he had not realized that washing clothes ran to such a facility; but being new to launderettes meant also that he was not certain if someone who was not actually washing clothes was permitted to take advantage of it. However, the phone was currently being used by the sole occupant of the place, an old lady in two overcoats who had plainly not laundered 34 her clothes in some time, so Mr. Ransome took courage.
She was standing 35 with the phone pressed to her dirty ear, not talking, but not really listening either.
“Could you hurry, please,” Mr. Ransome said. “This is an emergency.”
“So is this, dear,” said the woman. “I’m calling Padstow, only they’re not answering.”
“I want to call the police,” said Mr. Ransome.
“Been attacked, have you?” said the woman. “I was attacked last week. It’s par 4 for the course these days. He was only a toddler. It’s ringing but there’s a long corridor. They tend to have a hot drink about this time. They’re nuns 36,” she said explanatorily.
“Nuns?” said Mr. Ransome. “Are you sure they won’t have gone to bed?”
“No. They’re up and down all night having the services. There’s always somebody about.”
She went on listening to the phone ringing in Cornwall.
“Can’t it wait?” asked Mr. Ransome, seeing his effects halfway 37 up the M1. “Speed is of the essence.”
“I know,” said the old lady, “whereas nuns have got all the time in the world. That’s the beauty of it except when it comes to answering the phone. I aim to go on retreat there in May.”
“But it’s only February,” Mr. Ransome said. “I . . .”
“They get booked up,” explained the old lady. “There’s no talking and three meals a day so do you wonder? They use it as a holiday home for religious of both sexes.You wouldn’t think nuns needed holidays. Prayer doesn’t take it out of you. Not like bus conducting. Still ringing. They’ve maybe finished their hot drink and adjourned 38 to the chapel 39. I suppose I could ring later, only . . .” She looked at the coins waiting in Mr. Ransome’s hand. “I’ve put my money in now.”
Mr. Ransome gave her a pound and she took the other 50p besides, saying, “You don’t need money for 999.”
She put the receiver down and her money came back of its own accord, but Mr. Ransome was so anxious to get on with his call he scarcely noticed. It was only later, sitting on the floor of what had been their bedroom, that he said out loud, “Do you remember Button A and Button B? They’ve gone, you know. I never noticed.”
“Everything’s gone,” said Mrs. Ransome, not catching 40 his drift, “the air freshener, the soap dish. They can’t be human; I mean they’ve even taken the lavatory 41 brush.”
“Fire, police, or ambulance?” said a woman’s voice.
“Police,” said Mr. Ransome. There was a pause.
“I feel better for that banana,” said a man’s voice. “Yes? Police.” Mr. Ransome began to explain but the man cut him short. “Anyone in danger?” He was chewing.
“No,” said Mr. Ransome, “but . . .”
“Any threat to the person?”
“No,” said Mr. Ransome, “only . . .”
“Slight bottleneck 42 at the moment, chief,” said the voice. “Bear with me while I put you on hold.”
Mr. Ransome found himself listening to a Strauss waltz.
“They’re probably having a hot drink,” said the old lady, who he could smell was still at his elbow.
“Sorry about that,” the voice said five minutes later. “We’re on manual at the moment. The computer’s got hiccups 43. How may I help you?”
Mr. Ransome explained there had been a burglary and gave the address.
“Are you on the phone?”
“Of course,” said Mr. Ransome, “only . . .”
“And the number is?”
“They’ve taken the phone,” said Mr. Ransome.
“Nothing new there,” said the voice. “Cordless job?”
“No,” said Mr. Ransome. “One was in the sitting room, one was by the bed. . . .”
“We don’t want to get bogged 44 down in detail,” said the voice. “Besides, the theft of a phone isn’t the end of the world. What was the number again?”
It was after one o’clock when Mr. Ransome got back and Mrs. Ransome, already beginning to pick up the threads, was in what had been their bedroom, sitting with her back to the wall in the place where she would have been in bed had there been a bed to be in. She had done a lot of crying while Mr. Ransome was out but had now wiped her eyes, having decided she was going to make the best of things.
“I thought you might be dead,” she said.
“Why dead?”
“Well, it never rains but it pours.”
“I was in one of these launderettes if you want to know. It was terrible. What are you eating?”
“A cough sweet. I found it in my bag.” This was one of the sweets Mr. Ransome insisted she take with her whenever they went to the opera ever since she had had a snuffle all the way through Fidelio.
“Is there another?”
“No,” said Mrs. Ransome, sucking. “This is the last.”
Mr. Ransome went to the lavatory, only realizing when it was too late that the burglary had been so comprehensive as to have taken in both the toilet roll and its holder 45.
“There’s no paper,” called Mrs. Ransome.
The only paper in the flat was the program from Così and passing it around the door Mrs. Ransome saw, not without satisfaction, that Mr. Ransome was going to have to wipe his bottom on a picture of Mozart.
Both unwieldy and unyielding the glossy 46 brochure (sponsored by Barclays Bank PLC) was uncomfortable to use and unsinkable afterwards, and three flushes notwithstanding, the fierce eye of Sir Georg Solti still came squinting 47 resentfully around the bend of the pan.
“Better?” said Mrs. Ransome.
“No,” said her husband and settled down beside her against the wall. However, finding the skirting board dug into her back Mrs. Ransome changed her position to lie at right angles to her husband so that her head now rested on his thigh 48, a situation it had not been in for many a long year. While telling himself this was an emergency it was a conjunction Mr. Ransome found both uncomfortable and embarrassing, but which seemed to suit his wife as she straightaway went off to sleep, leaving Mr. Ransome staring glumly 49 at the wall opposite and its now uncurtained window, from which, he noted 50 wonderingly, the burglars had even stolen the curtain rings.
It was four o’clock before the police arrived, a big middle-aged 51 man in a raincoat, who said he was a detective sergeant 52, and a sensitive-looking young constable 53 in uniform, who didn’t say anything at all.
“You’ve taken your time,” said Mr. Ransome.
“Yes,” said the sergeant. “We would have been earlier but there was a slight . . . ah, glitch 54 as they say. Rang the wrong doorbell. The fault of mi-laddo here. Saw the name Hanson and . . .”
“No,” said Mr. Ransome. “Ransome.”
“Yes. We established that . . . eventually. Just moved in, have you?” said the sergeant, surveying the bare boards.
“No,” said Mr. Ransome. “We’ve been here for thirty years.”
“Fully furnished, was it?”
“Of course,” said Mr. Ransome. “It was a normal home.”
“A settee, easy chairs, a clock,” said Mrs. Ransome. “We had everything.”
“Television?” said the constable, timidly.
“Yes,” said Mrs. Ransome.
“Only we didn’t watch it much,” said Mr. Ransome.
“Video recorder?”
“No,” said Mr. Ransome. “Life’s complicated enough.”
“CD player?”
“Yes,” said Mrs. Ransome and Mr. Ransome together.
“And my wife had a fur coat,” said Mr. Ransome. “My insurers have a list of the valuables.”
“In that case,” said the sergeant, “you are laughing. I’ll just have a little wander round if you don’t mind, while Constable Partridge takes down the details. People opposite see the intruder?”
“Away in Portugal,” said Mr. Ransome.
“Caretaker?”
“Probably in Portugal too,” said Mr. Ransome, “for all we see of him.”
“Is it Ransom 1 as in king’s?” said the constable. “Or Ransome as in Arthur?”
“Partridge is one of our graduate entrants,” said the sergeant, examining the front door. “Lock not forced, I see. He’s just climbing the ladder. There wouldn’t be such a thing as a cup of tea, would there?”
“No,” said Mr. Ransome shortly, “because there wouldn’t be such a thing as a teapot. Not to mention a tea bag to put in it.”
“I take it you’ll want counseling,” said the constable.
“What?”
“Someone comes along and holds your hand,” said the sergeant, looking at the window. “Partridge thinks it’s important.”
“We’re all human,” said the constable.
“I’m a solicitor,” said Mr. Ransome.
“Well,” said the sergeant, “perhaps your missus could give it a try. We like to keep Partridge happy.”
Mrs. Ransome smiled helpfully.
“I’ll put yes,” said the constable.
“They didn’t leave anything behind, did they?” asked the sergeant, sniffing 55 and reaching up to run his hand along the picture-rail.
“No,” said Mr. Ransome testily 56. “Not a thing. As you can see.”
“I didn’t mean something of yours,” said the sergeant. “I meant something of theirs.” He sniffed 57 again, inquiringly. “A calling card.”
“A calling card?” said Mrs. Ransome.
“Excrement 58,” said the sergeant. “Burglary is a nervous business. They often feel the need to open their bowels 59 when doing a job.”
“Which is another way of saying it, sergeant,” said the constable.
“Another way of saying what, Partridge?”
“Doing a job is another way of saying opening the bowels. In France,” said the constable, “it’s known as posting a sentry 60.”
“Oh, teach you that at Leatherhead, did they?” said the sergeant. “Partridge is a graduate of the police college.”
“It’s like a university,” explained the constable, “only they don’t have scarves.”
“Anyway,” said the sergeant, “have a scout 61 around. For the excrement, I mean. They can be very creative about it. Burglary in Pangbourne I attended once where they done it halfway up the wall in an eighteenth-century light fitting. Any other sphere and they’d have got the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award.”
“You’ve perhaps not noticed,” Mr. Ransome said grimly, “but we don’t have any light fittings.”
“Another one in Guildford did it in a bowl of this potpourri 62.”
“That would be irony,” said the constable.
“Oh would it?” said the sergeant. “And there was me thinking it was just some foul-assed, light-fingered little smackhead afflicted 63 with incontinence. Still, while we’re talking about bodily functions, before we take our leave I’ll just pay a visit myself.”
Too late Mr. Ransome realized he should have warned him and took refuge in the kitchen.
The sergeant came out shaking his head.
“Well at least our friends had the decency 64 to use the toilet but they’ve left it in a disgusting state. I never thought I’d have to do a Jimmy Riddle 65 over Dame 66 Kiri Te Kanawa. Her recording 7 of West Side Story is one of the gems 67 of my record collection.”
“To be fair,” said Mrs. Ransome, “that was my husband.”
“Dear me,” said the sergeant.
“What was?” said Mr. Ransome, coming back into the room.
“Nothing,” said his wife.
“Do you think you’ll catch them?” said Mr. Ransome as he stood at the door with the two policemen.
The sergeant laughed.
“Well, miracles do happen, even in the world of law enforcement. Nobody got a grudge 68 against you, have they?”
“I’m a solicitor,” said Mr. Ransome. “It’s possible.”
“And it’s not somebody’s idea of a joke?”
“A joke?” said Mr. Ransome.
“Just a thought,” said the sergeant. “But if it’s your genuine burglar, I’ll say this: he always comes back.”
The constable nodded in sage 69 confirmation 70; even Leatherhead was agreed on this. “Come back?” said Mr. Ransome bitterly, looking at the empty flat. “Come back? What the fuck for?”
Mr. Ransome seldom swore and Mrs. Ransome, who had stayed in the other room, pretended she hadn’t heard. The door closed.
“Useless,” said Mr. Ransome, coming back. “Utterly useless. It makes you want to swear.”
“Well,” said Mrs. Ransome a few hours later, “we shall just have to camp out. After all,” she added not unhappily, “it could be fun.”
“Fun?” said Mr. Ransome. “Fun?”
He was unshaven, unwashed, his bottom was sore and his breakfast had been a drink of water from the tap. Still, no amount of pleading on Mrs. Ransome’s part could stop him going heroically off to work, with his wife instinctively 71 knowing even in these unprecedented 72 circumstances that her role was to make much of his selfless dedication 73.
Even so, when he’d gone and with the flat so empty, Mrs. Ransome missed him a little, wandering from room to echoing room not sure where she should start. Deciding to make a list she forgot for the moment she had nothing to make a list with and nothing to make a list on. This meant a visit to the newsagents for pad and pencil where, though she’d never noticed it before, she found there was a café next door. It seemed to be doing hot breakfasts, and, though in her opera clothes she felt a bit out of place among the taxi drivers and bicycle couriers who comprised most of the clientele, nobody took much notice of her, the waitress even calling her “duck” and offering her a copy of The Mirror to read while she waited for her bacon, egg, baked beans and fried bread. It wasn’t a paper she would normally read, but bacon, egg, baked beans and fried bread wasn’t a breakfast she would normally eat either, and she got so interested in the paper’s tales of royalty 74 and its misdemeanors that she propped 75 it up against the sauce bottle so that she could read and eat, completely forgetting that one of the reasons she had come into the café was to make herself a list.
Wanting a list, her shopping was pretty haphazard 76. She went off to Boots first and bought some toilet rolls and some paper plates and cups, but she forgot soap. And when she remembered soap and went back for it, she forgot tea bags, and when she remembered tea bags, she forgot paper towels, until what with trailing halfway to the flats then having to go back again, she began to feel worn out.
It was on the third of these increasingly flustered 77 trips (now having forgotten plastic cutlery) that Mrs. Ransome ventured into Mr. Anwar’s. She had passed the shop many times as it was midway between the flats and St. John’s Wood High Street; indeed she remembered it opening and the little draper’s and babies’ knitwear shop which it had replaced and where she had been a loyal customer. That had been kept by a Miss Dorsey, from whom over the years she had bought the occasional tray cloth or hank of Sylko but, on a much more regular basis, plain brown paper packets of what in those days were called “towels.” The closing-down of the shop in the late sixties had left Mrs. Ransome anxious and unprotected and it came as a genuine surprise on venturing into Timothy White’s to find that technology in this intimate department had lately made great strides that were unreflected in Miss Dorsey’s ancient stock, of which Mrs. Ransome, as the last of a dwindling 78 clientele, had been almost the sole consumer. She was old-fashioned, she knew that, but snobbery 79 had come into it too, Mrs. Ransome feeling it vaguely classier to have her requirements passed wordlessly across the counter with Miss Dorsey’s patient, suffering smile (“Our cross,” it said) rather than taken from some promiscuous 80 shelf in Timothy White’s. Though it was not long before Timothy White’s went the same way as Miss Dorsey, swallowed whole by Boots. Though Boots too, she felt, was a cut above the nearest chemist, Superdrug, which didn’t look classy at all.
The closing-down of Miss Dorsey’s (she was found laid across the counter one afternoon, having had a stroke) left the premises briefly 81 empty until, passing one morning on the way to the High Street, Mrs. Ransome saw that the shop had been taken over by an Asian grocer and that the pavement in front of the window where nothing had previously 82 stood except the occasional customer’s pram 83 was now occupied by boxes of unfamiliar 84 vegetables—yams, papaws, mangoes and the like, together with many sacks, sacks, Mrs. Ransome felt, that dogs could all too easily cock their legs against.
So it was partly out of loyalty 85 to Miss Dorsey and partly because it wasn’t really her kind of thing that Mrs. Ransome had not ventured into the shop until this morning when, to save her trailing back for the umpteenth 86 time to the High Street, she thought she might go in and ask if they had such a thing as boot polish (there were more pressing requirements, as she would have been the first to admit, only Mr. Ransome was very particular about his shoes). Though over twenty years had passed, the shop was still recognizably what it had been in Miss Dorsey’s day because, other than having introduced a freezer and cold cupboards, Mr. Anwar had simply adapted the existing fixtures 87 to his changed requirements. Drawers that had previously been devoted 88 to the genteel accoutrements of a leisured life—knitting patterns, crochet 89 hooks, Rufflette—now housed nan and pita bread; spices replaced bonnets 90 and booties; and the shelves and deep drawers that once were home to hosiery and foundation garments were now filled with rice and chickpeas.
Mrs. Ransome thought it unlikely they had polish in stock (did they wear normal shoes?), but she was weary enough to give it a try, though, since oxblood was what she wanted (or Mr. Ransome required), she thought vaguely it might be a shade to which they had religious objections. But plump and cheerful Mr. Anwar brought out several tins for her kind consideration and while she was paying she spotted 91 a nailbrush they would be needing; then the tomatoes looked nice and there was a lemon, and while she was at it the shop seemed to sell hardware so she invested in a colander 92. As she wandered around the shop the normally tongue-tied Mrs. Ransome found herself explaining to this plump and amiable 93 grocer the circumstances that had led her to the purchase of such an odd assortment 94 of things. And he smiled and shook his head in sympathy while at the same time suggesting other items she would doubtless be needing to replace and that he would happily supply. “They cleaned you out of house and home, the blighters. You will not know whether you are coming or going. You will need washing-up liquid and one of these blocks to make the toilet a more savory 95 place.”
So she ended up buying a dozen or so items, too many for her to carry, but this didn’t matter either as Mr. Anwar fetched his little boy from the flat upstairs (I hope I’m not dragging him away from the Koran, she thought) and he followed Mrs. Ransome home in his little white cap, carrying her shopping in a cardboard box.
“Seconds probably,” said Mr. Ransome later. “That’s how they make a profit.”
Mrs. Ransome didn’t quite see how there could be seconds in shoe polish but didn’t say so.
“Hopefully,” she said, “they’ll deliver.”
“You mean,” said Mr. Ransome (and it was old ground), “you hope they’ll deliver. ‘Hopefully they’ll deliver’ means that deliveries are touch and go” (though that was probably true too).
“Anyway,” said Mrs. Ransome defiantly 96, “he stays open till ten at night.”
“He can afford to,” said Mr. Ransome. “He probably pays no wages. I’d stick to Marks and Spencer.”
Which she did, generally speaking. Though once she popped in and bought a mango for her lunch and another time a papaw; small adventures, it’s true, but departures nevertheless, timorous 97 voyages of discovery which she knew her husband well enough to keep to herself.
The Ransomes had few friends; they seldom entertained, Mr. Ransome saying that he saw quite enough of people at work. On the rare occasions when Mrs. Ransome ran into someone she knew and ventured to recount their dreadful experience she was surprised to find that everyone, it seemed, had their own burglar story. None, she felt, was so stark 98 or so shocking as to measure up to theirs, which ought in fairness to have trumped 99 outright 100 these other less flamboyant 101 break-ins, but comparison scarcely seemed to enter into it: the friends only endured her story as an unavoidable prelude 102 to telling her their own. She asked Mr. Ransome if he had noticed this.
“Yes,” he said shortly. “Anybody would think it happened every day.”
Which, of course, it did but not, he was certain, as definitively 103, as out-and-outedly, as altogether epically 104 as this.
“Everything,” Mr. Ransome told Gail, his longtime secretary, “every single thing.”
Gail was a tall, doleful-looking woman, which normally suited Mr. Ransome very well as he could not abide 105 much of what he called “silliness”—i.e., femininity. Had Gail been a bit sillier, though, she might have been more sympathetic, but like everyone else she weighed in with a burglar story of her own, saying she was surprised it hadn’t happened before as most people she knew had been burgled at least once and her brother-in-law, who was a chiropodist in Ilford, twice, one of which had been a ram-raid while they were watching television.
“What you have to watch out for is the trauma 106; it takes people in different ways. Hair loss is often a consequence of burglary apparently 107 and my sister came out in terrible eczema. Mind you,” Gail went on, “it’s always men.”
“Always men what?” said Mr. Ransome.
“Who burgle.”
“Well, women shoplift,” said Mr. Ransome defensively.
“Not to that extent,” said Gail. “They don’t clean out the store.”
Not sure how he had ended up on the wrong side of the argument, Mr. Ransome felt both irritated and dissatisfied, so he tried Mr. Pardoe from the firm next door but with no more success. “Cleaned you out completely? Well, be grateful you weren’t in. My dentist and his wife were tied up for seven hours and counted themselves lucky not to be raped 108. Balaclavas, walkie-talkies. It’s an industry nowadays. I’d castrate them.”
That night Mr. Ransome took out a dictionary from his briefcase 109, both dictionary and briefcase newly acquired. The dictionary was Mr. Ransome’s favorite book.
“What are you doing?” asked Mrs. Ransome.
“Looking up ‘lock, stock and barrel.’ I suppose it means the same as ‘the whole shoot.’ ”
Over the next week or so Mrs. Ransome assembled the rudiments—two camp beds plus bedding, towels, a card table and two folding chairs. She bought a couple of what she called beanbags, though the shop called them something else; they were quite popular apparently, even among people who had not been burgled, who used them to sit on the floor by choice. There was even (this was Mr. Ransome’s contribution) a portable CD player and a recording of The Magic Flute 110.
Mrs. Ransome had always enjoyed shopping so this obligatory 111 re-equipment with the essentials of life was not without its pleasures, though the need was so pressing that choice scarcely entered into it. Hitherto anything electrical had always to be purchased by, or under the supervision 112 of, Mr. Ransome, a sanction that applied 113 even with an appliance like the vacuum cleaner, which he never wielded 114, or the dishwasher, which he seldom stacked. However, in the special circumstances obtaining after the burglary, Mrs. Ransome found herself licensed 115 to buy whatever was deemed necessary, electrical or otherwise; not only did she get an electric kettle, she also went in for a microwave oven, an innovation Mr. Ransome had long resisted and did not see the point of.
That many of these items (the beanbags for instance) were likely to be discarded once the insurance paid out and they acquired something more permanent did not diminish Mrs. Ransome’s quiet zest 116 in shopping for them. Besides, the second stage was likely to be somewhat delayed as the insurance policy had been stolen too, together with all their other documents, so compensation, while not in doubt, might be slow in coming. In the meantime they lived a stripped-down sort of life which seemed to Mrs. Ransome, at least, not unpleasant.
“Hand to mouth,” said Mr. Ransome.
“Living out of a suitcase,” said Croucher, his insurance broker 117.
“No,” said Mr. Ransome. “We don’t have a suitcase.”
“You don’t think,” asked Croucher, “it might be some sort of joke?”
“People keep saying that,” said Mr. Ransome. “Jokes must have changed since my day. I thought they were meant to be funny.”
“What sort of CD equipment was it?” said Croucher.
“Oh, state-of-the-art,” said Mr. Ransome. “The latest and the best. I’ve got the receipts somewhere . . . oh no, of course. I was forgetting.”
Though this was a genuine slip it was perhaps fortunate that the receipts had been stolen along with the equipment that they were for, because Mr. Ransome was telling a little lie. His sound equipment was not quite state-of-the-art, as what equipment is? Sound reproduction is not static; perfection is on-going and scarcely a week passes without some technical advance. As an avid 118 reader of hi-fi magazines, Mr. Ransome often saw advertised refinements he
n.赎金,赎身;v.赎回,解救
- We'd better arrange the ransom right away.我们最好马上把索取赎金的事安排好。
- The kidnappers exacted a ransom of 10000 from the family.绑架者向这家人家勒索10000英镑的赎金。
n.建筑物,房屋
- According to the rules,no alcohol can be consumed on the premises.按照规定,场内不准饮酒。
- All repairs are done on the premises and not put out.全部修缮都在家里进行,不用送到外面去做。
n.初级律师,事务律师
- The solicitor's advice gave me food for thought.律师的指点值得我深思。
- The solicitor moved for an adjournment of the case.律师请求将这个案件的诉讼延期。
n.标准,票面价值,平均数量;adj.票面的,平常的,标准的
- Sales of nylon have been below par in recent years.近年来尼龙织品的销售额一直不及以往。
- I don't think his ability is on a par with yours.我认为他的能力不能与你的能力相媲美。
n.统计量;adj.统计的,统计学的
- Official statistics show real wages declining by 24%.官方统计数字表明实际工资下降了24%。
- There are no reliable statistics for the number of deaths in the battle.关于阵亡人数没有可靠的统计数字。
v.战栗( shudder的过去式和过去分词 );发抖;(机器、车辆等)突然震动;颤动
- He slammed on the brakes and the car shuddered to a halt. 他猛踩刹车,车颤抖着停住了。 来自《简明英汉词典》
- I shuddered at the sight of the dead body. 我一看见那尸体就战栗。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.录音,记录
- How long will the recording of the song take?录下这首歌得花多少时间?
- I want to play you a recording of the rehearsal.我想给你放一下彩排的录像。
n.记录( recording的名词复数 );录音;录像;唱片
- a boxed set of original recordings 一套盒装原声录音带
- old jazz recordings reissued on CD 以激光唱片重新发行的老爵士乐
adj.疯狂的;拥有的,占有的
- He flew out of the room like a man possessed.他像着了魔似地猛然冲出房门。
- He behaved like someone possessed.他行为举止像是魔怔了。
n.演戏,行为,假装;adj.代理的,临时的,演出用的
- Ignore her,she's just acting.别理她,她只是假装的。
- During the seventies,her acting career was in eclipse.在七十年代,她的表演生涯黯然失色。
n.间隔,间距;幕间休息,中场休息
- The interval between the two trees measures 40 feet.这两棵树的间隔是40英尺。
- There was a long interval before he anwsered the telephone.隔了好久他才回了电话。
adv.含糊地,暖昧地
- He had talked vaguely of going to work abroad.他含糊其词地说了到国外工作的事。
- He looked vaguely before him with unseeing eyes.他迷迷糊糊的望着前面,对一切都视而不见。
n.人员流动率,人事变动率;营业额,成交量
- The store greatly reduced the prices to make a quick turnover.这家商店实行大减价以迅速周转资金。
- Our turnover actually increased last year.去年我们的营业额竟然增加了。
n.房客( tenant的名词复数 );佃户;占用者;占有者
- A number of tenants have been evicted for not paying the rent. 许多房客因不付房租被赶了出来。
- Tenants are jointly and severally liable for payment of the rent. 租金由承租人共同且分别承担。
adj.邋遢的,不整洁的
- If you do such sloppy work again,I promise I'll fail you.要是下次作业你再马马虎虎,我话说在头里,可要给你打不及格了。
- Mother constantly picked at him for being sloppy.母亲不断地批评他懒散。
n.宅第,公馆,大厦( mansion的名词复数 )
- Fifth Avenue was boarded up where the rich had deserted their mansions. 第五大道上的富翁们已经出去避暑,空出的宅第都已锁好了门窗,钉上了木板。 来自英汉文学 - 嘉莉妹妹
- Oh, the mansions, the lights, the perfume, the loaded boudoirs and tables! 啊,那些高楼大厦、华灯、香水、藏金收银的闺房还有摆满山珍海味的餐桌! 来自英汉文学 - 嘉莉妹妹
v.没有也行,放弃( forgo的过去分词 )
- Tax expenditures are the revenues forgone due to preferential tax treatment. 税收支出是由于税收优惠待遇而放弃的收入。 来自互联网
- The alternative forgone is called the opportunity cost. 这种选择性的放弃就叫做机会成本。 来自互联网
n.热心,热情,热忱
- Revolutionary zeal caught them up,and they joined the army.革命热情激励他们,于是他们从军了。
- They worked with great zeal to finish the project.他们热情高涨地工作,以期完成这个项目。
(使)混合( merge的过去式和过去分词 ); 相融; 融入; 渐渐消失在某物中
- Turf wars are inevitable when two departments are merged. 两个部门合并时总免不了争争权限。
- The small shops were merged into a large market. 那些小商店合并成为一个大商场。
n.野兽的巢穴;躲藏处
- How can you catch tiger cubs without entering the tiger's lair?不入虎穴,焉得虎子?
- I retired to my lair,and wrote some letters.我回到自己的躲藏处,写了几封信。
n.锅炉;煮器(壶,锅等)
- That boiler will not hold up under pressure.那种锅炉受不住压力。
- This new boiler generates more heat than the old one.这个新锅炉产生的热量比旧锅炉多。
n.注意,前途,瞭望台
- You can see everything around from the lookout.从了望台上你可以看清周围的一切。
- It's a bad lookout for the company if interest rates don't come down.如果利率降不下来,公司的前景可就不妙了。
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的
- This gave them a decided advantage over their opponents.这使他们比对手具有明显的优势。
- There is a decided difference between British and Chinese way of greeting.英国人和中国人打招呼的方式有很明显的区别。
v.选择,挑选( opt的过去式和过去分词 )
- She was co-opted onto the board. 她获增选为董事会成员。
- After graduating she opted for a career in music. 毕业后她选择了从事音乐工作。
adj.狼吞虎咽的,贪婪的
- She's a voracious reader of all kinds of love stories.什么样的爱情故事她都百看不厌。
- Joseph Smith was a voracious book collector.约瑟夫·史密斯是个如饥似渴的藏书家。
v.构想出( formulate的过去式和过去分词 );规划;确切地阐述;用公式表示
- He claims that the writer never consciously formulated his own theoretical position. 他声称该作家从未有意识地阐明他自己的理论见解。 来自《简明英汉词典》
- This idea can be formulated in two different ways. 这个意思可以有两种说法。 来自《现代汉英综合大词典》
n.刺激物,兴奋剂
- It is used in medicine for its stimulant quality.由于它有兴奋剂的特性而被应用于医学。
- Musk is used for perfume and stimulant.麝香可以用作香料和兴奋剂。
v.一点点地收集(资料、事实)( glean的过去式和过去分词 );(收割后)拾穗
- These figures have been gleaned from a number of studies. 这些数据是通过多次研究收集得来的。
- A valuable lesson may be gleaned from it by those who have eyes to see. 明眼人可从中记取宝贵的教训。 来自《现代汉英综合大词典》
adv.整洁地,干净地,灵巧地,熟练地
- Sailors know how to wind up a long rope neatly.水手们知道怎样把一条大绳利落地缠好。
- The child's dress is neatly gathered at the neck.那孩子的衣服在领口处打着整齐的皱褶。
n.碎片v.剪( snip的现在分词 )
- The crew had been snipping it for souvenirs. 舰上人员把它剪下来当作纪念品。 来自辞典例句
- The gardener is snipping off the dead leaves in the garden. 花匠在花园时剪枯叶。 来自互联网
adv.向前;向外,往外
- The wind moved the trees gently back and forth.风吹得树轻轻地来回摇晃。
- He gave forth a series of works in rapid succession.他很快连续发表了一系列的作品。
adv.仅仅,唯一地
- Success should not be measured solely by educational achievement.成功与否不应只用学业成绩来衡量。
- The town depends almost solely on the tourist trade.这座城市几乎完全靠旅游业维持。
adj.荒芜的,荒废的,无人的,被遗弃的
- The deserted village was filled with a deathly silence.这个荒废的村庄死一般的寂静。
- The enemy chieftain was opposed and deserted by his followers.敌人头目众叛亲离。
v.洗(衣服等),洗烫(衣服等)( launder的过去式和过去分词 );洗(黑钱)(把非法收入改头换面,变为貌似合法的收入)
- Send these sheets to be laundered. 把这些床单送去洗熨。 来自辞典例句
- The air seems freshly laundered. Sydney thinks of good drying weather. 空气似乎被清洗过,让悉妮想起晴朗干爽适合晒衣服的好天气。 来自互联网
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的
- After the earthquake only a few houses were left standing.地震过后只有几幢房屋还立着。
- They're standing out against any change in the law.他们坚决反对对法律做任何修改。
n.(通常指基督教的)修女, (佛教的)尼姑( nun的名词复数 )
- Ah Q had always had the greatest contempt for such people as little nuns. 小尼姑之流是阿Q本来视如草芥的。 来自《现代汉英综合大词典》
- Nuns are under vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. 修女须立誓保持清贫、贞洁、顺从。 来自辞典例句
adj.中途的,不彻底的,部分的;adv.半路地,在中途,在半途
- We had got only halfway when it began to get dark.走到半路,天就黑了。
- In study the worst danger is give up halfway.在学习上,最忌讳的是有始无终。
(使)休会, (使)休庭( adjourn的过去式和过去分词 )
- The court adjourned for lunch. 午餐时间法庭休庭。
- The trial was adjourned following the presentation of new evidence to the court. 新证据呈到庭上后,审讯就宣告暂停。
n.小教堂,殡仪馆
- The nimble hero,skipped into a chapel that stood near.敏捷的英雄跳进近旁的一座小教堂里。
- She was on the peak that Sunday afternoon when she played in chapel.那个星期天的下午,她在小教堂的演出,可以说是登峰造极。
adj.易传染的,有魅力的,迷人的,接住
- There are those who think eczema is catching.有人就是认为湿疹会传染。
- Enthusiasm is very catching.热情非常富有感染力。
n.盥洗室,厕所
- Is there any lavatory in this building?这座楼里有厕所吗?
- The use of the lavatory has been suspended during take-off.在飞机起飞期间,盥洗室暂停使用。
n.瓶颈口,交通易阻的狭口;妨生产流程的一环
- The transportation bottleneck has blocked the movement of the cargo.运输的困难阻塞了货物的流通。
- China's strained railroads already become a bottleneck for the economy.中国紧张的铁路运输已经成为经济增长的瓶颈。
n.嗝( hiccup的名词复数 );连续地打嗝;暂时性的小问题;短暂的停顿v.嗝( hiccup的第三人称单数 );连续地打嗝;暂时性的小问题;短暂的停顿
- I cannot find a rhyme to "hiccups". 我不能找到和hiccups同韵的词。 来自《简明英汉词典》
- Can we rhyme 'hiccups'with 'pick-ups'? 我们能把‘hiccups’同‘pick-ups’放在一起押韵吗? 来自辞典例句
adj.陷于泥沼的v.(使)陷入泥沼, (使)陷入困境( bog的过去式和过去分词 );妨碍,阻碍
- The professor bogged down in the middle of his speech. 教授的演讲只说了一半便讲不下去了。 来自《现代英汉综合大词典》
- The tractor is bogged down in the mud. 拖拉机陷入了泥沼。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.持有者,占有者;(台,架等)支持物
- The holder of the office of chairman is reponsible for arranging meetings.担任主席职位的人负责安排会议。
- That runner is the holder of the world record for the hundred-yard dash.那位运动员是一百码赛跑世界纪录的保持者。
adj.平滑的;有光泽的
- I like these glossy spots.我喜欢这些闪闪发光的花点。
- She had glossy black hair.她长着乌黑发亮的头发。
斜视( squint的现在分词 ); 眯着眼睛; 瞟; 从小孔或缝隙里看
- "More company," he said, squinting in the sun. "那边来人了,"他在阳光中眨巴着眼睛说。
- Squinting against the morning sun, Faulcon examined the boy carefully. 对着早晨的太阳斜起眼睛,富尔康仔细地打量着那个年轻人。
n.大腿;股骨
- He is suffering from a strained thigh muscle.他的大腿肌肉拉伤了,疼得很。
- The thigh bone is connected to the hip bone.股骨连着髋骨。
adv.忧郁地,闷闷不乐地;阴郁地
- He stared at it glumly, and soon became lost in thought. 他惘然沉入了瞑想。 来自子夜部分
- The President sat glumly rubbing his upper molar, saying nothing. 总统愁眉苦脸地坐在那里,磨着他的上牙,一句话也没有说。 来自辞典例句
adj.著名的,知名的
- The local hotel is noted for its good table.当地的那家酒店以餐食精美而著称。
- Jim is noted for arriving late for work.吉姆上班迟到出了名。
adj.中年的
- I noticed two middle-aged passengers.我注意到两个中年乘客。
- The new skin balm was welcome by middle-aged women.这种新护肤香膏受到了中年妇女的欢迎。
n.警官,中士
- His elder brother is a sergeant.他哥哥是个警官。
- How many stripes are there on the sleeve of a sergeant?陆军中士的袖子上有多少条纹?
n.(英国)警察,警官
- The constable conducted the suspect to the police station.警官把嫌疑犯带到派出所。
- The constable kept his temper,and would not be provoked.那警察压制着自己的怒气,不肯冒起火来。
n.干扰;误操作,小故障
- There is a glitch in the computer program somewhere.这个计算机程序中的某个部分有点小问题。
- It could just be a random glitch that can be solved by restarting the machine.可能只是一个小故障,重新启动主机就能解决了。
n.探查法v.以鼻吸气,嗅,闻( sniff的现在分词 );抽鼻子(尤指哭泣、患感冒等时出声地用鼻子吸气);抱怨,不以为然地说
- We all had colds and couldn't stop sniffing and sneezing. 我们都感冒了,一个劲地抽鼻子,打喷嚏。
- They all had colds and were sniffing and sneezing. 他们都伤风了,呼呼喘气而且打喷嚏。 来自《现代英汉综合大词典》
adv. 易怒地, 暴躁地
- He reacted testily to reports that he'd opposed military involvement. 有报道称他反对军队参与,对此他很是恼火。 来自柯林斯例句
v.以鼻吸气,嗅,闻( sniff的过去式和过去分词 );抽鼻子(尤指哭泣、患感冒等时出声地用鼻子吸气);抱怨,不以为然地说
- When Jenney had stopped crying she sniffed and dried her eyes. 珍妮停止了哭泣,吸了吸鼻子,擦干了眼泪。 来自《简明英汉词典》
- The dog sniffed suspiciously at the stranger. 狗疑惑地嗅着那个陌生人。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.排泄物,粪便
- The cage smelled of excrement.笼子里粪臭熏人。
- Clothing can also become contaminated with dust,feathers,and excrement.衣着则会受到微尘、羽毛和粪便的污染。
n.肠,内脏,内部;肠( bowel的名词复数 );内部,最深处
- Salts is a medicine that causes movements of the bowels. 泻盐是一种促使肠子运动的药物。 来自《简明英汉词典》
- The cabins are in the bowels of the ship. 舱房设在船腹内。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.哨兵,警卫
- They often stood sentry on snowy nights.他们常常在雪夜放哨。
- The sentry challenged anyone approaching the tent.哨兵查问任一接近帐篷的人。
n.童子军,侦察员;v.侦察,搜索
- He was mistaken for an enemy scout and badly wounded.他被误认为是敌人的侦察兵,受了重伤。
- The scout made a stealthy approach to the enemy position.侦察兵偷偷地靠近敌军阵地。
n.混合之事物;百花香
- As tobacco cigarette burns,a potpourri of 4000 chemicals is released,including carbon monoxide and hydrocyanic acid.当烟被点燃时,融合了四千种化学品的气体被释放出来,其中包括一氧化碳和氢氰酸。
- Even so,there is a slight odour of potpourri emanating from Longfellow.纵然如此,也还是可以闻到来自朗费罗的一种轻微的杂烩的味道。
使受痛苦,折磨( afflict的过去式和过去分词 )
- About 40% of the country's population is afflicted with the disease. 全国40%左右的人口患有这种疾病。
- A terrible restlessness that was like to hunger afflicted Martin Eden. 一阵可怕的、跟饥饿差不多的不安情绪折磨着马丁·伊登。
n.体面,得体,合宜,正派,庄重
- His sense of decency and fair play made him refuse the offer.他的正直感和公平竞争意识使他拒绝了这一提议。
- Your behaviour is an affront to public decency.你的行为有伤风化。
n.谜,谜语,粗筛;vt.解谜,给…出谜,筛,检查,鉴定,非难,充满于;vi.出谜
- The riddle couldn't be solved by the child.这个谜语孩子猜不出来。
- Her disappearance is a complete riddle.她的失踪完全是一个谜。
n.女士
- The dame tell of her experience as a wife and mother.这位年长妇女讲了她作妻子和母亲的经验。
- If you stick around,you'll have to marry that dame.如果再逗留多一会,你就要跟那个夫人结婚。
growth; economy; management; and customer satisfaction 增长
- a crown studded with gems 镶有宝石的皇冠
- The apt citations and poetic gems have adorned his speeches. 贴切的引语和珠玑般的诗句为他的演说词增添文采。
n.不满,怨恨,妒嫉;vt.勉强给,不情愿做
- I grudge paying so much for such inferior goods.我不愿花这么多钱买次品。
- I do not grudge him his success.我不嫉妒他的成功。
n.圣人,哲人;adj.贤明的,明智的
- I was grateful for the old man's sage advice.我很感激那位老人贤明的忠告。
- The sage is the instructor of a hundred ages.这位哲人是百代之师。
n.证实,确认,批准
- We are waiting for confirmation of the news.我们正在等待证实那个消息。
- We need confirmation in writing before we can send your order out.给你们发送订购的货物之前,我们需要书面确认。
adv.本能地
- As he leaned towards her she instinctively recoiled. 他向她靠近,她本能地往后缩。 来自《简明英汉词典》
- He knew instinctively where he would find her. 他本能地知道在哪儿能找到她。 来自《简明英汉词典》
adj.无前例的,新奇的
- The air crash caused an unprecedented number of deaths.这次空难的死亡人数是空前的。
- A flood of this sort is really unprecedented.这样大的洪水真是十年九不遇。
n.奉献,献身,致力,题献,献辞
- We admire her courage,compassion and dedication.我们钦佩她的勇气、爱心和奉献精神。
- Her dedication to her work was admirable.她对工作的奉献精神可钦可佩。
n.皇家,皇族
- She claims to be descended from royalty.她声称她是皇室后裔。
- I waited on tables,and even catered to royalty at the Royal Albert Hall.我做过服务生, 甚至在皇家阿伯特大厅侍奉过皇室的人。
支撑,支持,维持( prop的过去式和过去分词 )
- He sat propped up in the bed by pillows. 他靠着枕头坐在床上。
- This fence should be propped up. 这栅栏该用东西支一支。
adj.无计划的,随意的,杂乱无章的
- The town grew in a haphazard way.这城镇无计划地随意发展。
- He regrerted his haphazard remarks.他悔不该随口说出那些评论话。
adj.慌张的;激动不安的v.使慌乱,使不安( fluster的过去式和过去分词)
- The honking of horns flustered the boy. 汽车喇叭的叫声使男孩感到慌乱。 来自《现代英汉综合大词典》
- She was so flustered that she forgot her reply. 她太紧张了,都忘记了该如何作答。 来自辞典例句
adj.逐渐减少的v.逐渐变少或变小( dwindle的现在分词 )
- The number of wild animals on the earth is dwindling. 地球上野生动物的数量正日渐减少。 来自《简明英汉词典》
- He is struggling to come to terms with his dwindling authority. 他正努力适应自己权力被削弱这一局面。 来自辞典例句
n. 充绅士气派, 俗不可耐的性格
- Jocelyn accused Dexter of snobbery. 乔斯琳指责德克斯特势力。
- Snobbery is not so common in English today as it was said fifty years ago. 如今"Snobbery"在英语中已不象50年前那么普遍使用。
adj.杂乱的,随便的
- They were taking a promiscuous stroll when it began to rain.他们正在那漫无目的地散步,突然下起雨来。
- Alec know that she was promiscuous and superficial.亚历克知道她是乱七八糟和浅薄的。
adv.简单地,简短地
- I want to touch briefly on another aspect of the problem.我想简单地谈一下这个问题的另一方面。
- He was kidnapped and briefly detained by a terrorist group.他被一个恐怖组织绑架并短暂拘禁。
adv.以前,先前(地)
- The bicycle tyre blew out at a previously damaged point.自行车胎在以前损坏过的地方又爆开了。
- Let me digress for a moment and explain what had happened previously.让我岔开一会儿,解释原先发生了什么。
n.婴儿车,童车
- She sat the baby up in the pram. 她把孩子放在婴儿车里坐着。
- She ran in chase of the pram. 她跑着追那婴儿车。
adj.陌生的,不熟悉的
- I am unfamiliar with the place and the people here.我在这儿人地生疏。
- The man seemed unfamiliar to me.这人很面生。
n.忠诚,忠心
- She told him the truth from a sense of loyalty.她告诉他真相是出于忠诚。
- His loyalty to his friends was never in doubt.他对朋友的一片忠心从来没受到怀疑。
adj.第无数次(个)的
- W; `Qmp`tinW/ pron, det: For the umpteenth time, I tell you I don't know! 我告诉你多少次了,我不知道! 来自辞典例句
- Vera: That's the umpteenth suggestion I've made which you've turned down. 薇拉:这不知是我提出的第几个建议了,你全部不接受。 来自互联网
(房屋等的)固定装置( fixture的名词复数 ); 如(浴盆、抽水马桶); 固定在某位置的人或物; (定期定点举行的)体育活动
- The insurance policy covers the building and any fixtures contained therein. 保险单为这座大楼及其中所有的设施保了险。
- The fixtures had already been sold and the sum divided. 固定设备已经卖了,钱也分了。 来自英汉文学 - 嘉莉妹妹
adj.忠诚的,忠实的,热心的,献身于...的
- He devoted his life to the educational cause of the motherland.他为祖国的教育事业贡献了一生。
- We devoted a lengthy and full discussion to this topic.我们对这个题目进行了长时间的充分讨论。
n.钩针织物;v.用钩针编制
- That's a black crochet waistcoat.那是一件用钩针编织的黑色马甲。
- She offered to teach me to crochet rugs.她提出要教我钩织小地毯。
n.童帽( bonnet的名词复数 );(烟囱等的)覆盖物;(苏格兰男子的)无边呢帽;(女子戴的)任何一种帽子
- All the best bonnets of the city were there. 城里戴最漂亮的无边女帽的妇女全都到场了。 来自辞典例句
- I am tempting you with bonnets and bangles and leading you into a pit. 我是在用帽子和镯子引诱你,引你上钩。 来自飘(部分)
adj.有斑点的,斑纹的,弄污了的
- The milkman selected the spotted cows,from among a herd of two hundred.牛奶商从一群200头牛中选出有斑点的牛。
- Sam's shop stocks short spotted socks.山姆的商店屯积了有斑点的短袜。
n.滤器,漏勺
- When you've boiled the cabbage,strain off the water through a colander.你把卷心菜煮开后,用滤锅把水滤掉。
- If it's got lots of holes,then it's a colander!如果是有很多漏洞,那一个漏勺!
adj.和蔼可亲的,友善的,亲切的
- She was a very kind and amiable old woman.她是个善良和气的老太太。
- We have a very amiable companionship.我们之间存在一种友好的关系。
n.分类,各色俱备之物,聚集
- This shop has a good assortment of goods to choose from.该店各色货物俱全,任君选择。
- She was wearing an odd assortment of clothes.她穿着奇装异服。
adj.风味极佳的,可口的,味香的
- She placed a huge dish before him of savory steaming meat.她将一大盘热气腾腾、美味可口的肉放在他面前。
- He doesn't have a very savory reputation.他的名誉不太好。
adv.挑战地,大胆对抗地
- Braving snow and frost, the plum trees blossomed defiantly. 红梅傲雪凌霜开。 来自《现代汉英综合大词典》
- She tilted her chin at him defiantly. 她向他翘起下巴表示挑衅。 来自《简明英汉词典》
adj.胆怯的,胆小的
- She is as timorous as a rabbit.她胆小得像只兔子。
- The timorous rabbit ran away.那只胆小的兔子跑开了。
adj.荒凉的;严酷的;完全的;adv.完全地
- The young man is faced with a stark choice.这位年轻人面临严峻的抉择。
- He gave a stark denial to the rumor.他对谣言加以完全的否认。
v.(牌戏)出王牌赢(一牌或一墩)( trump的过去分词 );吹号公告,吹号庆祝;吹喇叭;捏造
- That woman trumped up various baseless charges against him. 那个女人捏造种种毫无根据的罪名指控他。 来自《简明英汉词典》
- Several of his colleagues trumped up a complaint to get him removed from the job. 他的几位同事诬告他,使他丟掉了工作。 来自《简明英汉词典》
adv.坦率地;彻底地;立即;adj.无疑的;彻底的
- If you have a complaint you should tell me outright.如果你有不满意的事,你应该直率地对我说。
- You should persuade her to marry you outright.你应该彻底劝服她嫁给你。
adj.火焰般的,华丽的,炫耀的
- His clothes were rather flamboyant for such a serious occasion.他的衣着在这种严肃场合太浮夸了。
- The King's flamboyant lifestyle is well known.国王的奢华生活方式是人尽皆知的。
n.序言,前兆,序曲
- The prelude to the musical composition is very long.这首乐曲的序曲很长。
- The German invasion of Poland was a prelude to World War II.德国入侵波兰是第二次世界大战的序幕。
adv.决定性地,最后地
- None of the three super-states could be definitively conquered even by the other two in combination. 三个超级国家中的任何一国都不可能被任何两国的联盟所绝对打败。 来自英汉文学
- Therefore, nothing can ever be definitively proved with a photograph. 因此,没有什么可以明确了一张照片。 来自互联网
adv.史诗式地,宏伟地
- That74-year span clearly illustrates how consistently, epically bad the Yankees' recent pitching has been. 这74年来显示出洋基投手群的稳定性,也显示出最近投手的状况有多糟。 来自互联网
vi.遵守;坚持;vt.忍受
- You must abide by the results of your mistakes.你必须承担你的错误所造成的后果。
- If you join the club,you have to abide by its rules.如果你参加俱乐部,你就得遵守它的规章。
n.外伤,精神创伤
- Counselling is helping him work through this trauma.心理辅导正帮助他面对痛苦。
- The phobia may have its root in a childhood trauma.恐惧症可能源于童年时期的创伤。
adv.显然地;表面上,似乎
- An apparently blind alley leads suddenly into an open space.山穷水尽,豁然开朗。
- He was apparently much surprised at the news.他对那个消息显然感到十分惊异。
v.以暴力夺取,强夺( rape的过去式和过去分词 );强奸
- A young woman was brutally raped in her own home. 一名年轻女子在自己家中惨遭强暴。 来自辞典例句
- We got stick together, or we will be having our women raped. 我们得团结一致,不然我们的妻女就会遭到蹂躏。 来自辞典例句
n.手提箱,公事皮包
- He packed a briefcase with what might be required.他把所有可能需要的东西都装进公文包。
- He requested the old man to look after the briefcase.他请求那位老人照看这个公事包。
n.长笛;v.吹笛
- He took out his flute, and blew at it.他拿出笛子吹了起来。
- There is an extensive repertoire of music written for the flute.有很多供长笛演奏的曲目。
adj.强制性的,义务的,必须的
- It is obligatory for us to obey the laws.我们必须守法。
- It is obligatory on every citizen to safeguard our great motherland.保卫我们伟大的祖国是每一个公民应尽的义务。
n.监督,管理
- The work was done under my supervision.这项工作是在我的监督之下完成的。
- The old man's will was executed under the personal supervision of the lawyer.老人的遗嘱是在律师的亲自监督下执行的。
adj.应用的;v.应用,适用
- She plans to take a course in applied linguistics.她打算学习应用语言学课程。
- This cream is best applied to the face at night.这种乳霜最好晚上擦脸用。
手持着使用(武器、工具等)( wield的过去式和过去分词 ); 具有; 运用(权力); 施加(影响)
- The bad eggs wielded power, while the good people were oppressed. 坏人当道,好人受气
- He was nominally the leader, but others actually wielded the power. 名义上他是领导者,但实际上是别人掌握实权。
adj.得到许可的v.许可,颁发执照(license的过去式和过去分词)
- The new drug has not yet been licensed in the US. 这种新药尚未在美国获得许可。
- Is that gun licensed? 那支枪有持枪执照吗?
n.乐趣;滋味,风味;兴趣
- He dived into his new job with great zest.他充满热情地投入了新的工作。
- He wrote his novel about his trip to Asia with zest.他兴趣浓厚的写了一本关于他亚洲之行的小说。
n.中间人,经纪人;v.作为中间人来安排
- He baited the broker by promises of higher commissions.他答应给更高的佣金来引诱那位经纪人。
- I'm a real estate broker.我是不动产经纪人。