30篇文章贯通考研词汇(MP3+电子书):第12篇
日期:2009-08-04 11:33

(单词翻译:单击)

UNIT 12 Killing Time

This was a common place for me but today I discerned

there was something wrong when I turned around.
Wrong means not right. There were two men in the bank now,
a big guy just inside the door
and a smaller one more like a skeleton
in the middle of the floor.
Big guy was leafing through the leaflets on the counter,
but his eyes were on the door and the eyes of the small guy
never stopped moving and were scouting the scope
and layout of the room,
his head moved like that of a tennis fan sitting at the net.
Small guy was making a thing of deciding which queue to join,
but it was the way he stood that held my attention.
His left arm was tight against his body
and he was wearing a long coat.
Nothing wrong with that,it was winter.
Still wrong. It's transparent to me that
he was carrying a weapon. On closer observation,
big guy was likewise sort of leaning against the counter
and in an instant I knew that he was using his weight
to jam his gun between him and the counter.
A robbery was about to happen.
If I attacked the small guy,
I'd be easily picked off by the big guy
as I struggled to get small guy's gun.
If I walked casually by, and seized the big guy,
the small guy would shoot the customers around him
and take some nice?looking teller as a hostage.
The situation was urgent.
It was better to leave and call for immediate assistance.
Assistance? I wasn't a soldier any more.
I had been retired.
Better to call the police, as normal people do.
I could be anonymous then.
As I walked by, the small guy started to move.
He swung back his coat and revealed a pistol
and started to yell, "Attention, everyb—!"
The small guy was too busy to finish the second word.
In the instant an idea flashed into my mind,
"why the big coat for such a small gun",
then thought "winter" again.
Fortunately for me, it was not I that stopped him
but a keen security guard
who'd obviously seen the same signs I had.
Fortunate for me, but unfortunate for the security?man.
He hadn't noted that the big guy was anaccomplice.
After an interval of a few seconds,
he fired a pistol at the back of the guard's head
as he walked over to check on the dead small guy.
He fell on the body of the small guy,
blood streamed down from his wound.
Big guy stood there, momentarily as if deciding what to do.
His eyes were a little wild but not scared.
I thought again about rushing at him,
but the distance was too great. Better to wait.
All around me, people were screaming
and moaning in shock and some people
were already lying on the ground,
anticipating the big guy's next instruction.
The screaming did not bother him,
which was both good and bad.
It was good because the cool gunman was unlikely
to shoot unnecessarily and bad because he would shoot
without pausing if the situation required it.
It seemed there was chaos in the place.
The only ones standing silent were him and me.
For a moment, our eyes met and gazed at each other.
Did he know me? How could he?
The sound of the approaching alarms broke our gaze
and the big guy calmly and loudly instructed everybody
to lie on the floor.
I did as he bade, but taking as many steps forward
as I dared before lying down.
I was no more than five yards from him.
He gave an imperative order,
"If everybody does what I say, no one will get hurt.
This is just a robbery gone wrong
and I want to use you good people as hostages
so that I can get away!"
He didn't have to say any more than that.
We'd all seen in perspective
what had happened and knew he could kill some of us.
The "hostage" in his short speech made it clear
that he was saying he would threaten
to kill hostages if his demands were not met.
The police arrived and contact was made straight away.
He said that he would kill a hostage every ten minutes
until he was given a clear passage to the private airways strip,
where a helicopter was to take him to Cuba.
He would bring hostages along with him asinsurance
against any unpredictable trouble.
As the first ten?minute deadline approached,
the big guy scanned the hostages in front of him.
His eyes touched mine, but he moved on,
looking for something.
"You! Kid!" Everybody looked back and saw a boy,
about ten years old, cowering behind his mother.
"Get over here! Get over here, NOOOW!"
shouted the big guy, as the boy cowered further.
I could see he would act for the ultimate aim
—to kill a kid and to make them know he was serious.
I couldn't let the tragedy happen.
Could I hide and wait and let all this happen and walk away?
All my training said I could.
"Bad things will happen around you",
said the Controller. "Terrible things.
But if it doesn't happen to you,
it's not your liability to stop them."
I had seen terrible things and walked away.
But not today.
"Take me", I said,
standing up and making another vital step forward.
"Leave the kid and take me".
Everybody looked at me,
some of them taking me for a suicidal person
and thought it was a movie.
This is really happening, their eyes said to me,
for God's sake,to sit down before he would kill you.
It was too late.
"OK, come here by the door and kneel in front of it".
He said this as if he was a surgeon inviting a patient
into his surgery.
"Were you in the army?"
He asked casually as I walked towards him.
"No",I replied. This had to be quick.
I would have no chance to seize him
when I was kneeling at the front door.
"You're saving me from the trouble",
I said, casually setting his mind at ease
so that he needn't worry about
my last?minute efforts for freedom.
If he were wary of me,
he would not take his eyes off me.
In the instant he turned to walk with me towards the door,
I had my arm around his neck.
It broke like a toothpick and he died instantly.
He didn't even get a shot off.
It was done at one stroke without noise
and he slumped into the floor.
I turned around to see people looking at me horrified.
I knew then that I had killed him too easily,too quickly.
One of the tellers picked up the phone
and spoke to the police.
Suddenly the place was overrun with uniforms.
Eventually, we were all shepherded to waiting police cars
and moved downtown to the station house.
I was ushered into an interview room.
They showed me the close circuit TV coverage
of the incident in the bank
and I made a statement corroborating what had happened.
"You are being charged with murder,"
said the detective whose name I could not remember,
"but this evidence should show that it was self?defense".
Well,anyway, I was fighting against almost certain death,
and they were the same thing. I didn't argue.
"You served in the military?"
He asked. He was looking at me carefully.
I got the impression that the boys in the room
had seen the tape and were guessing
how I could have overpowered the big guy so completely.
"No", I replied, not knowing what to say next.
I was good at killing. Could I say that?
"Chickens," I said.
"What did you say?"
"Chickens. I've killed lots of chickens on my farm.
When they're dying. You get to know
where their weak points are.
And I've strong hands."
These hands have ripped open rib cages
and pulled out beating hearts, I wanted to say.
I made bail of 10 000 and my husband came and collected me.
"Next time you go to town, I'm going with you",
he said,"it's too dangerous for you to travel alone."
Yes, it is really too dangerous.

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重点单词
  • evidencen. 根据,证据 v. 证实,证明
  • militaryadj. 军事的 n. 军队
  • stroken. 笔画,击打,一笔(画)连续的动作,中风, v. 奉
  • detectiveadj. 侦探的 n. 侦探
  • touchedadj. 受感动的 adj. 精神失常的
  • bailn. 杓,保释,保证金,担保人,把手 vt. 往外舀水,
  • threatenv. 威胁,恐吓
  • unfortunateadj. 不幸的,令人遗憾的,不成功的 n. 不幸的人
  • defensen. 防卫,防卫物,辩护 vt. 防守
  • unlikelyadj. 不太可能的