Reading Comprehension
Stonehenge
Stonehenge
is a Neolithic and Bronze Age megalithic monument located near Amesbury in the
English county of Wiltshire, about
It is composed of earthworks surrounding a circular setting of large standing
stones and is one of the most famous prehistoric sites in the world.
Archaeologists think that the standing stones were erected between 2500 BC and
2000 BC although the surrounding circular earth bank and ditch, which
constitute the earliest phase of the monument, have been dated to about 3100
BC.
The site and its surroundings were added to the UNESCO's list of World Heritage
Sites in
Questions
Now, answer the questions about the text.
As
Andrea turned off the motorway onto the road to Brockbourne, the small village
in which she lived, it was four o'clock in the afternoon, but already the sun
was falling behind the hills. At this time in December, it would be completely
dark by five o'clock. Andrea shivered. The interior of the car was not cold,
but the trees bending in the harsh wind and the patches of yesterday's snow
still heaped in the fields made her feel chilly inside. It was another ten
miles to the cottage where she lived with her husband Michael, and the dim
light and wintry weather made her feel a little lonely. She would have liked to
listen to the radio, but it had been stolen from her car when it was parked
outside her office in London about two weeks ago, and she had not got around to
replacing it yet.
She
was just coming out of the little village of Mickley when she saw the old lady,
standing by the road, with a crude hand-written sign saying
"Brockbourne" in her hand. Andrea was surprised. She had never seen
an old lady hitchhiking before. However, the weather and the coming darkness
made her feel sorry for the lady, waiting hopefully on a country road like this
with little traffic. Normally, Andrea would never pick up a hitchhiker when she
was alone, thinking it was too dangerous, but what was the harm in doing a
favor for a little old lady like this? Andrea pulled up a little way down the
road, and the lady, holding a big shopping bag, hurried over to climb in the
door which Andrea had opened for her.
When
she did get in, Andrea could see that she was not, in fact, so little. Broad
and fat, the old lady had some difficulty climbing in through the car door,
with her big bag, and when she had got in, she more than filled the seat next to
Andrea. She wore a long, shabby old dress, and she had a yellow hat pulled down
low over her eyes. Panting noisily from her effort, she pushed her big brown
canvas shopping bag down onto the floor under her feet, and said in a voice
which was almost a whisper, "Thank you dearie -- I'm just going to
Brockbourne."
"Do
you live there?" asked Andrea, thinking that she had never seen the old
lady in the village in the four years she had lived there herself.
"No,
dearie," answered the passenger, in her soft voice, "I'm just going
to visit a friend. He was supposed to meet me back there at Mickley, but his
car won't start, so I decided to hitchhike -- there isn't a bus until seven,
and I didn't want to wait. I knew some kind soul would give me a lift."
Something
in the way the lady spoke, and the way she never turned her head, but stared
continuously into the darkness ahead from under her old yellow hat, made Andrea
uneasy about this strange hitchhiker. She didn't know why, but she felt
instinctively that there was something wrong, something odd,
something....dangerous. But how could an old lady be dangerous? it was absurd.
Careful
not to turn her head, Andrea looked sideways at her passenger. She studied the
hat, the dirty collar of the dress, the shapeless body, the arms with their
thick black hairs....
Thick black hairs?
Hairy arms? Andrea's blood froze.
This wasn't a woman. It was a man.
At first, she didn't know what to do. Then suddenly, an idea came into her racing,
terrified brain. Swinging the wheel suddenly, she threw the car into a skid,
and brought it to a halt.
"My
God!" she shouted, "A child! Did you see the child? I think I hit
her!"
The
"old lady" was clearly shaken by the sudden skid. "I didn't see
anything dearie," she said. "I don't think you hit anything."
"I'm
sure it was a child!" insisted Andrea. "Could you just get out and
have a look? Just see if there's anything on the road?" She held her
breath. Would her plan work?
It
did. The passenger slowly opened the car door, leaving her bag inside, and
climbed out to investigate. As soon as she was out of the vehicle, Andrea
gunned the engine and accelerated madly away. The car door swung shut as she
rounded a bend, and soon she had put a good three miles between herself and the
awful hitchhiker.
It
was only then that she thought about the bag lying on the floor in front of
her. Maybe the bag would provide some information about the real identity about
the old woman who was not an old woman. Pulling into the side of the road,
Andrea lifted the heavy bag onto her lap and opened it curiously.
It
contained only one item -- a small hand axe, with a razor-sharp blade. The
axe, and the inside of the bag, were
covered with the dark red stains of dried blood.
Andrea
began to scream.
(MDH
1994 -- From a common urban legend)
Choose on the answer you think is correct.