Then he descended2, down into the giant white chalk horse of Westbury, into the whiteness of the horse, carvedinto the hill. Now he was a black figure, the background radicalizing the darkness of his skin and his khakiuniform. If the focus on the binoculars was exact, Lord Suffolk would see the thin line of crimson3 lanyard onSingh’s shoulder that signalled his sapper unit. To them it would look like he was striding down a paper map cutout in the shape of an animal. But Singh was conscious only of his boots scuffing5 the rough white chalk as hemoved down the slope.
Miss Morden, behind him, was also coming slowly down the hill, a satchel6 over her shoulder, aiding herself witha rolled umbrella. She stopped ten feet above the horse, un.furled the umbrella and sat within its shade. Then sheopened up her notebooks.
“Can you hear me?” he asked.
“Yes, it’s fine.” She rubbed the chalk off her hands onto her skirt and adjusted her glasses. She looked up intothe distance and, as Singh had done, waved to those she could not see.
Singh liked her. She was in effect the first Englishwoman he had really spoken with since he arrived in England.
Most of his time had been spent in a barracks at Woolwich. In his three months there he had met only otherIndians and English officers. A woman would reply to a question in the NAAFI canteen, but conversations withwomen lasted only two or three sentences.
He was the second son. The oldest son would go into the army, the next brother would be a doctor, a brotherafter that would become a businessman. An old tradition in his family. But all that had changed with the war. Hejoined a Sikh regiment7 and was shipped to England. After the first months in London he had volunteered himselfinto a unit of engineers that had been set up to deal with delayed-action and unex-ploded bombs. The word fromon high in 1939 was naive8: “Unexploded bombs are considered the responsibility of the Home Office, who areagreed that they should be collected by A.R.P. wardens9 and police and delivered to convenient dumps, wheremem.bers of the armed forces will in due course detonate them.”
It was not until 1940 that the War Office took over respon.sibility for bomb disposal, and then, in turn, handed itover to the Royal Engineers. Twenty-five bomb disposal units were set up. They lacked technical equipment andhad in their possession only hammers, chisels10 and road-mending tools. There were no specialists.
A bomb is a combination of the following parts:
1. A container or bomb case.
2. Afuze.
3. An initiating11 charge, or gaine.
4. A main charge of high explosive.
5. Superstructionalfittings—fins, lifting lugs12, kopfrings, etc.
Eighty percent of bombs dropped by airplanes over Britain were thin-walled, general-purpose bombs. Theyusually ranged from a hundred pounds to a thousand. A 2,ooo-pound bomb was called a “Hermann” or an“Esau.” A 4,ooo-pound bomb was called a “Satan.”
Singh, after long days of training, would fall asleep with diagrams and charts still in his hands. Half dreaming, heentered the maze14 of a cylinder15 alongside the picric acid and the gaine and the condensers16 until he reached thefuze deep within the main body. Then he was suddenly awake.
When a bomb hit a target, the resistance caused a trembler to activate18 and ignite the flash pellet in the fuze. Theminute explosion would leap into the gaine, causing the penthrite wax to detonate. This set off the picric acid,which in turn caused the main filling of TNT, amatol and aluminized powder, to explode. The journey fromtrembler to explosion lasted a microsecond.
The most dangerous bombs were those dropped from low altitudes, which were not activated19 until they hadlanded. These unexploded bombs buried themselves in cities and fields and remained dormant20 until theirtrembler contacts were disturbed—by a farmer’s stick, a car wheel’s nudge, the bounce of a tennis ball againstthe casing—and then they would explode.
Singh was moved by lorry with the other volunteers to the research department in Woolwich. This was a timewhen the casualty rate in bomb disposal units was appallingly21 high, con4.sidering how few unexploded bombsthere were. In 1940, after France had fallen and Britain was in a state of siege, it got worse.
By August the blitz had begun, and in one month there were suddenly 2,500 unexploded bombs to be dealt with.
Roads were closed, factories deserted22. By September the num.ber of live bombs had reached 3,700. Onehundred new bomb squads24 were set up, but there was still no understanding of how the bombs worked. Lifeexpectancy in these units was ten weeks.
“This was a Heroic Age of bomb disposal, a period of individual prowess, when urgency and a lack ofknowledge and equipment led to the taking of fantastic risks.... It was, however, a Heroic Age whoseprotagonists remained obscure, since their actions were kept from the public for reasons of security. It wasobviously undesirable26 to publish reports that might help the enemy to estimate the ability to deal with weapons.”
In the car, driving down to Westbury, Singh had sat in front with Mr. Harts while Miss Morden rode in the backwith Lord Suffolk. The khaki-painted Humber was famous. The mudguards were painted bright signal red—asall bomb disposal travel units were—and at night there was a blue filter over the left sidelight. Two days earlier aman walking near the famous chalk horse on the Downs had been blown up. When engineers arrived at the sitethey discovered that an.other bomb had landed in the middle of the historic location— in the stomach of thegiant white horse of Westbury carved into the rolling chalk hills in 1778. Shortly after this event, all the chalkhorses on the Downs—there were seven—had cam.ouflage nets pegged27 down over them, not to protect them somuch as stop them being obvious landmarks29 for bombing raids over England.
From the backseat Lord Suffolk chatted about the migration30 of robins31 from the war zones of Europe, the historyof bomb disposal, Devon cream. He was introducing the customs of England to the young Sikh as if it was arecently discovered culture. In spite of being Lord Suffolk he lived in Devon, and until war broke out his passionwas the study of Lorna Doone and how authentic32 the novel was historically and geographi.cally. Most wintershe spent puttering around the villages of Brandon and Porlock, and he had convinced authorities that Exmoorwas an ideal location for bomb-disposal training. There were twelve men under his command—made up oftalents from various units, sappers and engineers, and Singh was one of them. They were based for most of theweek at Richmond Park in London, being briefed on new methods or working on unexploded bombs whilefallow deer drifted around them. But on weekends they would go down to Ex-moor, where they would continuetraining during the day and afterwards be driven by Lord Suffolk to the church where Lorna Doone was shotduring her wedding ceremony. “Either from this window or from that back door... shot right down the aisle—intoher shoulder. Splendid shot, actually, though of course reprehensible34. The villain35 was chased onto the moors36 andhad his muscles ripped from his body.” To Singh it sounded like a familiar Indian fable37.
Lord Suffolk’s closest friend in the area was a female aviator38 who hated society but loved Lord Suffolk. Theywent shooting together. She lived in a small cottage in Countisbury on a cliff that overlooked the BristolChannel. Each village they passed in the Humber had its exotica described by Lord Suffolk. “This is the verybest place to buy blackthorn walking sticks.” As if Singh were thinking of stepping into the Tudor corner store inhis uniform and turban to chat casually39 with the owners about canes40. Lord Suffolk was the best of the English, helater told Hana. If there had been no war he would never have roused himself from Countisbury and his retreat,called Home Farm, where he mulled along with the wine, with the flies in the old back laundry, fifty years old,married but essentially41 bachelor in character, walking thp cliffs each day to visit his aviator friend. He liked tofix things—old laundry tubs and plumbing42 generators43 and cooking spits run by a waterwheel. He had beenhelping Miss Swift, the aviator, collect information on the habits of badgers44.
The drive to the chalk horse at Westbury was therefore busy with anecdote45 and information. Even in wartime heknew the best place to stop for tea. He swept into Pamela’s Tea Room, his arm in a sling46 from an accident withguncotton, and shepherded in his clan—secretary, chauffeur47 and sapper —as if they were his children. How LordSuffolk had per.suaded the LJXB Committee to allow him to set up his experi.mental bomb disposal outfit48 noone was sure, but with his background in inventions he probably had more qualifications than most. He was anautodidact, and he believed his mind could read the motives49 and spirit behind any invention. He had immediatelyinvented the pocket shirt, which allowed fuzes and gadgets51 to be stored easily by a working sapper.
They drank tea and waited for scones52, discussing the in situ defusing of bombs.
“I trust you, Mr. Singh, you know that, don’t you?”
“Yes, sir.” Singh adored him. As far as he was concerned, Lord Suffolk was the first real gentleman he had metin England.
“You know I trust you to do as well as I. Miss Morden will be with you to take notes. Mr. Harts will be fartherback. If you need more equipment or more strength, blow on the police whistle and he will join you. He doesn’tadvise but he under.stands perfectly53. If he won’t do something it means he dis.agrees with you, and I’d take hisadvice. But you have total authority on the site. Here is my pistol. The fuzes are probably more sophisticatednow, but you never know, you might be in luck.”
Lord Suffolk was alluding54 to an incident that had made him famous. He had discovered a method for inhibiting55 adelayed-action fuze by pulling out his army revolver and firing a bullet through the fuze head, so arresting themovement of the clock body. The method was abandoned when the Germans intro.duced a new fuze in whichthe percussion56 cap and not the clock was uppermost.
Kirpal Singh had been befriended, and he would never for.get it. So far, half of his time during the war hadtaken place in the slipstream of this lord who had never stepped out of England and planned never to step out ofCountisbury once the war ended. Singh had arrived in England knowing no one, distanced from his family in thePunjab. He was twenty-one years old. He had met no one but soldiers. So that when he read the notice asking forvolunteers with an experimental bomb squad23, even though he heard other sappers speak of Lord Suffolk as amadman, he had already decided57 that in a war you have to take control, and there was a greater chance of choiceand life alongside a personality or an individual.
He was the only Indian among the applicants58, and Lord Suffolk was late. Fifteen of them were led into a libraryand asked by the secretary to wait. She remained at the desk, copying out names, while the soldiers joked aboutthe inter33.view and the test. He knew no one. He walked over to a wall and stared at a barometer59, was about totouch it but pulled back, just putting his face close to it. Very Dry to Fair to Stormy. He muttered the words tohimself with his new Eng.lish pronunciation. “Wery dry. Very dry.” He looked back at the others, peered aroundthe room and caught the gaze of the middle-aged60 secretary. She watched him sternly. An Indian boy. He smiledand walked towards the bookshelves. Again he touched nothing. At one point he put his nose close to a volumecalled Raymond, or Life and Death by Sir Oliver Hodge.
He found another, similar title. Pierre, or the Ambiguities61. He turned and caught the woman’s eyes on him again.
He felt as guilty as if he had put the book in his pocket. She had prob.ably never seen a turban before. TheEnglish! They expect you to fight for them but won’t talk to you. Singh. And the ambiguities.
They met a very hearty62 Lord Suffolk during lunch, who poured wine for anyone who wanted it, and laughedloudly at every attempt at a joke by the recruits. In the afternoon they were all given a strange exam in which apiece of machinery63 had to be put back together without any prior information of what it was used for. They wereallowed two hours but could leave as soon as the problem was solved. Singh finished the exam quickly and spentthe rest of the time inventing other objects that could be made from the various components64. He sensed he wouldbe admitted easily if it were not for his race. He had come from a country where mathematics and mechan.icswere natural traits. Cars were never destroyed. Parts of them were carried across a village and readapted into asewing machine or water pump. The backseat of a Ford65 was reuphol-stered and became a sofa. Most people inhis village were more likely to carry a spanner or screwdriver66 than a pencil. A car’s irrelevant67 parts thus entereda grandfather clock or irrigation pulley or the spinning mechanism68 of an office chair. Antidotes69 to mechanizeddisaster were easily found. One cooled an over.heating car engine not with new rubber hoses but by scooping70 upcow shit and patting it around the condenser17. What he saw in England was a surfeit71 of parts that would keep theconti.nent of India going for two hundred years.
He was one of three applicants selected by Lord Suffolk. This man who had not even spoken to him (and had notlaughed with him, simply because he had not joked) walked across the room and put his arm around his shoulder.
The severe secretary turned out to be Miss Morden, and she bus.tled in with a tray that held two large glasses ofsherry, handed one to Lord Suffolk and, saying, “I know you don’t drink,” took the other one for herself andraised her glass to him. “Congratulations, your exam was splendid. Though I was sure you would be chosen,even before you took it.”
“Miss Morden is a splendid judge of character. She has a nose for brilliance72 and character.”
“Character, sir?”
“Yes. It is not really necessary, of course, but we are going to be working together. We are very much a familyhere. Even before lunch Miss Morden had selected you.”
“I found it quite a strain being unable to wink73 at you, Mr. Singh.”
Lord Suffolk had his arm around Singh again and was walk.ing him to the window.
“I thought, as we do not have to begin till the middle of next week, I’d have some of the unit come down toHome Farm. We can pool our knowledge in Devon and get to know each other. You can drive down with us inthe Humber.”
So he had won passage, free of the chaotic74 machinery of the war. He stepped into a family, after a year abroad, asif he were the prodigal75 returned, offered a chair at the table, em.braced76 with conversations.
It was almost dark when they crossed the border from Som.erset into Devon on the coastal77 road overlooking theBristol Channel. Mr. Harts turned down the narrow path bordered with heather and rhododendrons, a dark bloodcolour in this last light. The driveway was three miles long.
Apart from the trinity of Suffolk, Morden and Harts, there were six sappers who made up the unit. They walkedthe moors around the stone cottage over the weekend. Miss Morden and Lord Suffolk and his wife were joinedby the aviatrix for the Saturday-night dinner. Miss Swift told Singh she had always wished to fly overland toIndia. Removed from his bar.racks, Singh had no idea of his location. There was a map on a roller high up onthe ceiling. Alone one morning he pulled the roller down until it touched the floor. Countisbury and Area.
Mapped by R. Fones. Drawn78 by desire of Mr. James Halliday.
“Drawn by desire ...” He was beginning to love the English.
He is with Hana in the night tent when he tells her about the explosion in Erith. A 250-kilogram bomb eruptingas Lord Suffolk attempted to dismantle79 it. It also killed Mr. Fred Harts and Miss Morden and four sappers LordSuffolk was training. May 1941. Singh had been with Suffolk’s unit for a year. He was working in London thatday with Lieutenant80 Blackler, clearing the Elephant and Castle area of a Satan bomb. They had worked togetherat defusing the 4,ooo-pound bomb and were exhausted81. He remembered halfway82 through he looked up and saw acouple of bomb disposal officers pointing in his direction and wondered what that was about. It probably meantthey had found another bomb. It was after ten at night and he was dangerously tired. There was another onewaiting for him. He turned back to work.
When they had finished with the Satan he decided to save time and walked over to one of the officers, who hadat first half turned away as if wanting to leave.
“Yes. Where is it?”
The man took his right hand, and he knew something was wrong. Lieutenant Blackler was behind him and theofficer told them what had happened, and Lieutenant Blackler put his hands on Singh’s shoulders and grippedhim.
He drove to Erith. He had guessed what the officer was hesitating about asking him. He knew the man would nothave come there just to tell him of the deaths. They were in a war, after all. It meant there was a second bombsomewhere in the vicinity, probably the same design, and this was the only chance to find out what had gonewrong.
He wanted to do this alone. Lieutenant Blackler would stay in London. They were the last two left of the unit,and it would have been foolish to risk both. If Lord Suffolk had failed, it meant there was something new. Hewanted to do this alone, in any case. When two men worked together there had to be a base of logic83. You had toshare and compromise decisions.
He kept everything back from the surface of his emotions during the night drive. To keep his mind clear, theystill had to be alive. Miss Morden drinking one large and stiff whisky before she got to the sherry. In this wayshe would be able to drink more slowly, appear more ladylike for the rest of the evening. “You don’t drink, Mr.
Singh, but if you did, you’d do what I do. One full whisky and then you can sip84 away like a good courtier.” Thiswas followed by her lazy, gravelly laugh. She was the only woman he was to meet in his life who carried twosilver flasks85 with her. So she was still drinking, and Lord Suffolk was still nibbling86 at his Kipling cakes.
The other bomb had fallen half a mile away. Another SC-25okg. It looked like the familiar kind. They haddefused hundreds of them, most by rote28. This was the way the war progressed. Every six months or so the enemyaltered some.thing. You learned the trick, the whim87, the little descant88, and taught it to the rest of the units. Theywere at a new stage now.
He took no one with him. He would just have to remember each step. The sergeant89 who drove him was a mannamedHardy, and he was to remain by the jeep. It was suggested he wait till the next morning, but he knew they wouldprefer him to do it now. The 250-kilogram SC was too common. If there was an alteration90 they had to knowquickly. He made them telephone ahead for lights. He didn’t mind working tired, but he wanted proper lights,not just the beams of two jeeps.
When he arrived in Erith the bomb zone was already lit. In daylight, on an innocent day, it would have been afield. Hedges, perhaps a pond. Now it was an arena91. Cold, he bor.rowed Hardy’s sweater and put it on top of his.
The lights would keep him warm, anyway. When he walked over to the bomb they were still alive in his mind.
Exam.
With the bright light, the porousness92 of the metal jumped into precise focus. Now he forgot everything exceptdistrust. Lord Suffolk had said you can have a brilliant chess player at seventeen, even thirteen, who might beat agrand master. But you can never have a brilliant bridge player at that age. Bridge depends on character. Yourcharacter and the character of your opponents. You must consider the character of your enemy. This is true ofbomb disposal. It is two-handed bridge. You have one enemy. You have no partner. Sometimes for my exam Imake them play bridge. People think a bomb is a me.chanical object, a mechanical enemy. But you have toconsider that somebody made it.
The wall of the bomb had been torn open in its fall to earth, and Singh could see the explosive material inside.
He felt he was being watched, and refused to decide whether it was by Suffolk or the inventor of this contraption.
The freshness of the artificial light had revived him. He walked around the bomb, peering at it from every angle.
To remove the fuze, he would have to open the main chamber93 and get past the explo.sive. He unbuttoned hissatchel and, with a universal key, carefully twisted off the plate at the back of the bomb case. Looking inside hesaw that the fuze pocket had been knocked free of the case. This was good luck—or bad luck; he couldn’t tellyet. The problem was that he didn’t know if the mecha.nism was already at work, if it had already beentriggered. He was on his knees, leaning over it, glad he was alone, back in the world of straightforward95 choice.
Turn left or turn right. Cut this or cut that. But he was tired, and there was still anger in him.
He didn’t know how long he had. There was more danger in waiting too long. Holding the nose of the cylinderfirm with his boots, he reached in and ripped out the fuze pocket, and lifted it away from the bomb. As soon ashe did this he began to shake. He had got it out. The bomb was essentially harmless now. He put the fuze with itstangled fringe of wires down on the grass; they were clear and brilliant in this light.
He started to drag the main case towards the truck, fifty yards away, where the men could empty it of the rawexplo.sive. As he pulled it along, a third bomb exploded a quarter of a mile away and the sky lit up, makingeven the arc lights seem subtle and human.
An officer gave him a mug of Horlicks, which had some kind of alcohol in it, and he returned alone to the fuzepocket. He inhaled96 the fumes97 from the drink.
There was no longer serious danger. If he were wrong, the small explosion would take off his hand. But unless itwas clutched to his heart at the moment of impact he wouldn’t die. The problem was now simply the problem.
The fuze. The new “joke” in the bomb.
He would have to reestablish the maze of wires into its original pattern. He walked back to the officer and askedhim for the rest of the Thermos98 of the hot drink. Then he returned and sat down again with the fuze. It was aboutone-thirty in the morning. He guessed, he wasn’t wearing a watch. For half an hour he just looked at it with amagnified circle of glass, a sort of monocle that hung off his buttonhole. He bent99 over and peered at the brass100 forany hint of other scratches that a clamp might have made. Nothing.
Later he would need distractions101. Later, when there was a whole personal history of events and moments in hismind, he would need something equivalent to white sound to burn or bury everything while he thought of theproblems in front of him. The radio or crystal set and its loud band music would come later, a tarpaulin102 to holdthe rain of real life away from him.
But now he was aware of something in the far distance, like some reflection of lightning on a cloud. Harts andMorden and Suffolk were dead, suddenly just names. His eyes focused back onto the fuze box.
He began to turn the fuze upside down in his mind, con.sidering the logical possibilities. Then turned ithorizontal again. He unscrewed the gaine, bending over, his ear next to it so the scrape of brass was against him.
No little clicks. It came apart in silence. Tenderly he separated the clockwork sections from the fuze and set themdown. He picked up the fuze-pocket tube and peered down into it again. He saw noth.ing. He was about to lay iton the grass when he hesitated and brought it back up to the light. He wouldn’t have noticed anything wrongexcept for the weight. And he would never have thought about the weight if he wasn’t looking for the joke. Allthey did, usually, was listen or look. He tilted103 the tube carefully, and the weight slipped down toward theopen.ing. It was a second gaine—a whole separate device—to foil any attempt at defusing.
He eased the device out towards him and unscrewed the gaine. There was a white-green flash and the sound of awhip from the device. The second detonator had gone off. He pulled it out and set it beside the other parts on thegrass. He went back to the jeep.
“There was a second gaine,” he muttered. “I was very lucky, being able to pull out those wires. Put a call in toheadquarters and find out if there are other bombs.”
He cleared the soldiers away from the jeep, set up a loose bench there and asked for the arc lights to be trained onit. He bent down and picked up the three components and placed them each a foot apart along the makeshiftbench. He was cold now, and he breathed out a feather of his warmer body air. He looked up. In the distancesome soldiers were still empty.ing out the main explosive. Quickly he wrote down a few notes and handed thesolution for the new bomb to an officer. He didn’t fully94 understand it, of course, but they would have thisinformation.
When sunlight enters a room where there is a fire, the fire will go out. He had loved Lord Suffolk and his strangebits of information. But his absence here, in the sense that every.thing now depended on Singh, meant Singh’sawareness swelled104 to all bombs of this variety across the city of London. He had suddenly a map ofresponsibility, something, he real.ized, that Lord Suffolk carried within his character at all times. It was thisawareness that later created the need in him to block so much out when he was working on a bomb. He was oneof those never interested in the choreography of power. He felt uncomfortable in the ferrying back and forth105 ofplans and solutions. He felt capable only of reconnaissance, of locat.ing a solution. When the reality of the deathof Lord Suffolk came to him, he concluded the work he was assigned to and reenlisted into the anonymousmachine of the army. He was on the troopship Macdonald, which carried a hundred other sappers towards theItalian campaign. Here they were used not just for bombs but for building bridges, clearing debris107, setting uptracks for armoured rail vehicles. He hid there for the rest of the war. Few remembered the Sikh who had beenwith Suffolk’s unit. In a year the whole unit was disbanded and forgotten, Lieutenant Blackler being the only oneto rise in the ranks with his talent.
But that night as Singh drove past Lewisham and Black-heath towards Erith, he knew he contained, more thanany other sapper, the knowledge of Lord Suffolk. He was expected to be the replacing vision.
He was still standing25 at the truck when he heard the whistle that meant they were turning off the arc lights.
Within thirty seconds metallic108 light had been replaced with sulphur flares109 in the back of the truck. Another bombraid. These lesser110 lights could be doused111 when they heard the planes. He sat down on the empty petrol can facingthe three components he had removed from the SC-25okg, the hisses112 from the flares around him loud after thesilence of the arc lights.
He sat watching and listening, waiting for them to click. The other men silent, fifty yards away. He knew he wasfor now a king, a puppet master, could order anything, a bucket of sand, a fruit pie for his needs, and those menwho would not cross an uncrowded bar to speak with him when they were off duty would do what he desired. Itwas strange to him. As if he had been handed a large suit of clothes that he could roll around in and whosesleeves would drag behind him. But he knew he did not like it. He was accustomed to his invisibility. In Englandhe was ignored in the various barracks, and he came to prefer that. The self-sufficiency and privacy Hana saw inhim later were caused not just by his being a sapper in the Italian campaign. It was as much a result of being theanonymous member of another race, a part of the invisible world. He had built up defences of character againstall that, trusting only those who befriended him. But that night in Erith he knew he was capable of having wiresattached to him that influenced all around him who did not have his specific talent.
A few months later he had escaped to Italy, had packed the shadow of his teacher into a knapsack, the way hehad seen the green-clothed boy at the Hippodrome do it on his first leave during Christmas. Lord Suffolk andMiss Morden had offered to take him to an English play. He had selected Peter Pan, and they, wordless,acquiesced and went with him to a screaming child-full show. There were such shadows of memory with himwhen he lay in his tent with Hana in the small hill town in Italy.
Revealing his past or qualities of his character would have been too loud a gesture. Just as he could never turnand in.quire of her what deepest motive50 caused this relationship. He held her with the same strength of love hefelt for those three strange English people, eating at the same table with them, who had watched his delight andlaughter and wonder when the green boy raised his arms and flew into the darkness high above the stage,returning to teach the young girl in the earth-bound family such wonders too.
In the flare-lit darkness of Erith he would stop whenever planes were heard, and one by one the sulphur torcheswere sunk into buckets of sand. He would sit in the droning dark.ness, moving the seat so he could lean forwardand place his ear close to the ticking mechanisms113, still timing114 the clicks, trying to hear them under the throb115 ofthe German bombers116 above him.
Then what he had been waiting for happened. After exactly one hour, the timer tripped and the percussion capexploded. Removing the main gaine had released an unseen striker that activated the second, hidden gaine. It hadbeen set to explode sixty minutes later—long after a sapper would normally have assumed the bomb was safelydefused.
This new device would change the whole direction of Allied117 bomb disposal. From now on, every delayed-actionbomb would carry the threat of a second gaine. It would no longer be possible for sappers to deactivate118 a bombby simply removing the fuze. Bombs would have to be neutralized119 with the fuze intact. Somehow, earlier on,surrounded by arc lights, and in his fury, he had withdrawn120 the sheared121 second fuze out of the booby trap. In thesulphureous darkness under the bombing raid he witnessed the white-green flash the size of his hand. One hourlate. He had survived only with luck. He walked back to the officer and said, “I need another fuze to make sure.”
They lit the flares around him again. Once more light poured into his circle of darkness. He kept testing the newfuzes for two more hours that night. The sixty-minute delay proved to be consistent.
He was in Erith most of that night. In the morning he woke up to find himself back in London. He could notremember being driven back. He woke up, went to a table and began to sketch122 the profile of the bomb, thegaines, the detonators, the whole ZUS-40 problem, from the fuze up to the locking rings. Then he covered thebasic drawing with all the possible lines of attack to defuse it. Every arrow drawn exactly, the text written outclear the way he had been taught.
What he had discovered the night before held true. He had survived only through luck. There was no possibleway to defuse such a bomb in situ without just blowing it up. He drew and wrote out everything he knew on thelarge blueprint123 sheet. At the bottom he wrote: Drawn by desire of Lord Suffolk, by his student Lieutenant KirpalSingh, 10 May 1941.
He worked flat-out, crazily, after Suffolk’s death. Bombs were altering fast, with new techniques and devices. Hewas barracked in Regent’s Park with Lieutenant Blackler and three other specialists, working on solutions,blueprinting each new bomb as it came in.
In twelve days, working at the Directorate of Scientific Re.search, they came up with the answer. Ignore thefuze en.tirely. Ignore the first principle, which until then was “de.fuse the bomb.” It was brilliant. They were alllaughing and applauding and hugging each other in the officers’ mess. They didn’t have a clue what thealternative was, but they knew in the abstract they were right. The problem would not be solved by embracing it.
That was Lieutenant Blackler’s line. “If you are in a room with a problem don’t talk to it.” An offhand124 remark.
Singh came towards him and held the statement from another angle. “Then we don’t touch the fuze at all.”
Once they came up with that, someone worked out the solution in a week. A steam sterilizer125. One could cut ahole into the main case of a bomb, and then the main explosive could be emulsified126 by an injection of steam anddrained away. That solved that for the time being. But by then he was on a ship to Italy.
“There is always yellow chalk scribbled127 on the side of bombs. Have you noticed that? Just as there was yellowchalk scrib.bled onto our bodies when we lined up in the Lahore court.yard.
“There was a line of us shuffling128 forward slowly from the street into the medical building and out into thecourtyard as we enlisted106. We were signing up. A doctor cleared or rejected our bodies with his instruments,explored our necks with his hands. The tongs129 slid out of Dettol and picked up parts of our skin.
“Those accepted filled up the courtyard. The coded results written onto our skin with yellow chalk. Later, in thelineup, after a brief interview, an Indian officer chalked more yellow onto the slates130 tied around our necks. Ourweight, age, dis.trict, standard of education, dental condition and what unit we were best suited for.
“I did not feel insulted by this. I am sure my brother would have been, would have walked in fury over to thewell, hauled up the bucket, and washed the chalk markings away. I was not like him. Though I loved him.
Admired him. I had this side to my nature which saw reason in all things. I was the one who had an earnest andserious air at school, which he would imitate and mock. You understand, of course, I was far less serious than hewas, it was just that I hated confrontation131. It didn’t stop me doing whatever I wished or doing things the way Iwanted to. Quite early on I had discovered the over.looked space open to those of us with a silent life. I didn’targue with the policeman who said I couldn’t cycle over a certain bridge or through a specific gate in the fort—Ijust stood there, still, until I was invisible, and then I went through. Like a cricket. Like a hidden cup of water.
You understand? That is what my brother’s public battles taught me.
“But to me my brother was always the hero in the family. I was in the slipstream of his status as firebrand. Iwitnessed his exhaustion132 that came after each protest, his body gearing up to respond to this insult or that law.
He broke the tradition of our family and refused, in spite of being the oldest brother, to join the army. He refusedto agree to any situation where the English had power. So they dragged him into their jails.
In the Lahore Central Prison. Later the Jatnagar jail. Lying back on his cot at night, his arm raised within plaster,broken by his friends to protect him, to stop him trying to escape. In jail he became serene133 and devious134. Morelike me. He was not insulted when he heard I had signed up to replace him in the enlistment135, no longer to be adoctor, he just laughed and sent a message through our father for me to be careful. He would never go to waragainst me or what I did. He was confident that I had the trick of survival, of being able to hide in silent places.”
He is sitting on the counter in the kitchen talking with Hana. Caravaggio breezes through it on his way out,heavy ropes swathed over his shoulders, which are his own personal business, as he says when anyone asks him.
He drags them behind him and as he goes out the door says, “The English patient wants to see you, boyo.”
“Okay, boyo.” The sapper hops136 off the counter, his Indian accent slipping over into the false Welsh ofCaravaggio.
“My father had a bird, a small swift I think, that he kept beside him, as essential to his comfort as a pair ofspectacles or a glass of water during a meal. In the house, even if he just was entering his bedroom he carried itwith him. When he went to work the small cage hung off the bicycle’s handlebars.”
“Is your father still alive?”
“Oh, yes. I think. I’ve not had letters for some time. And it is likely that my brother is still in jail.”
He keeps remembering one thing. He is in the white horse. He feels hot on the chalk hill, the white dust of itswirling up all around him. He works on the contraption, which is quite straightforward, but for the first time heis working alone. Miss Morden sits twenty yards above him, higher up the slope, taking notes on what he isdoing. He knows that down and across the valley Lord Suffolk is watching through the glasses.
He works slowly. The chalk dust lifts, then settles on every.thing, his hands, the contraption, so he has to blow itoff the fuze caps and wires continually to see the details. It is hot in the tunic137. He keeps putting his sweatingwrists behind himself to wipe them on the back of his shirt. All the loose and re.moved parts fill the variouspockets across his chest. He is tired, checking things repetitively. He hears Miss Morden’s voice. “Kip?” “Yes.”
“Stop what you’re doing for a while, I’m coming down.” “You’d better not, Miss Morden.” “Of course I can.”
He does up the buttons on his various vest pockets and lays a cloth over the bomb; she clambers down into thewhite horse awkwardly and then sits next to him and opens up her satchel. She douses138 a lace handkerchief withthe contents of a small bottle of eau de cologne and passes it to him. “Wipe your face with this. Lord Suffolkuses it to refresh himself.” He takes it tentatively and at her suggestion dabs139 his forehead and neck and wrists.
She unscrews the Thermos and pours each of them some tea. She unwraps oil paper and brings out strips ofKipling cake.
She seems to be in no hurry to go back up the slope, back to safety. And it would seem rude to remind her thatshe should return. She simply talks about the wretched heat and the fact that at least they have booked rooms intown with baths at.tached, which they can all look forward to. She begins a ram13.bling story about how she metLord Suffolk. Not a word about the bomb beside them. He had been slowing down, the way one, half asleep,continually rereads the same paragraph, trying to find a connection between sentences. She has pulled him out ofthe vortex of the problem. She packs up her satchel carefully, lays a hand on his right shoulder and returns to herposition on the blanket above the Westbury horse. She leaves him some sunglasses, but he cannot see clearlyenough through them so he lays them aside. Then he goes back to work. The scent140 of eau de cologne. Heremembers he had smelled it once as a child. He had a fever and someone had brushed it onto his body.
点击收听单词发音
1 binoculars | |
n.双筒望远镜 | |
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2 descended | |
a.为...后裔的,出身于...的 | |
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3 crimson | |
n./adj.深(绯)红色(的);vi.脸变绯红色 | |
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4 con | |
n.反对的观点,反对者,反对票,肺病;vt.精读,学习,默记;adv.反对地,从反面;adj.欺诈的 | |
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5 scuffing | |
n.刮[磨,擦,划]伤v.使磨损( scuff的现在分词 );拖着脚走 | |
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6 satchel | |
n.(皮或帆布的)书包 | |
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7 regiment | |
n.团,多数,管理;v.组织,编成团,统制 | |
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8 naive | |
adj.幼稚的,轻信的;天真的 | |
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9 wardens | |
n.看守人( warden的名词复数 );管理员;监察员;监察官 | |
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10 chisels | |
n.凿子,錾子( chisel的名词复数 );口凿 | |
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11 initiating | |
v.开始( initiate的现在分词 );传授;发起;接纳新成员 | |
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12 lugs | |
钎柄 | |
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13 ram | |
(random access memory)随机存取存储器 | |
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14 maze | |
n.迷宫,八阵图,混乱,迷惑 | |
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15 cylinder | |
n.圆筒,柱(面),汽缸 | |
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16 condensers | |
n.冷凝器( condenser的名词复数 );(尤指汽车发动机内的)电容器 | |
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17 condenser | |
n.冷凝器;电容器 | |
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18 activate | |
vt.使活动起来,使开始起作用 | |
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19 activated | |
adj. 激活的 动词activate的过去式和过去分词 | |
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20 dormant | |
adj.暂停活动的;休眠的;潜伏的 | |
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21 appallingly | |
毛骨悚然地 | |
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22 deserted | |
adj.荒芜的,荒废的,无人的,被遗弃的 | |
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23 squad | |
n.班,小队,小团体;vt.把…编成班或小组 | |
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24 squads | |
n.(军队中的)班( squad的名词复数 );(暗杀)小组;体育运动的运动(代表)队;(对付某类犯罪活动的)警察队伍 | |
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25 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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26 undesirable | |
adj.不受欢迎的,不良的,不合意的,讨厌的;n.不受欢迎的人,不良分子 | |
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27 pegged | |
v.用夹子或钉子固定( peg的过去式和过去分词 );使固定在某水平 | |
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28 rote | |
n.死记硬背,生搬硬套 | |
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29 landmarks | |
n.陆标( landmark的名词复数 );目标;(标志重要阶段的)里程碑 ~ (in sth);有历史意义的建筑物(或遗址) | |
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30 migration | |
n.迁移,移居,(鸟类等的)迁徙 | |
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31 robins | |
n.知更鸟,鸫( robin的名词复数 );(签名者不分先后,以避免受责的)圆形签名抗议书(或请愿书) | |
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32 authentic | |
a.真的,真正的;可靠的,可信的,有根据的 | |
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33 inter | |
v.埋葬 | |
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34 reprehensible | |
adj.该受责备的 | |
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35 villain | |
n.反派演员,反面人物;恶棍;问题的起因 | |
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36 moors | |
v.停泊,系泊(船只)( moor的第三人称单数 ) | |
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37 fable | |
n.寓言;童话;神话 | |
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38 aviator | |
n.飞行家,飞行员 | |
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39 casually | |
adv.漠不关心地,无动于衷地,不负责任地 | |
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40 canes | |
n.(某些植物,如竹或甘蔗的)茎( cane的名词复数 );(用于制作家具等的)竹竿;竹杖 | |
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41 essentially | |
adv.本质上,实质上,基本上 | |
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42 plumbing | |
n.水管装置;水暖工的工作;管道工程v.用铅锤测量(plumb的现在分词);探究 | |
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43 generators | |
n.发电机,发生器( generator的名词复数 );电力公司 | |
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44 badgers | |
n.獾( badger的名词复数 );獾皮;(大写)獾州人(美国威斯康星州人的别称);毛鼻袋熊 | |
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45 anecdote | |
n.轶事,趣闻,短故事 | |
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46 sling | |
vt.扔;悬挂;n.挂带;吊索,吊兜;弹弓 | |
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47 chauffeur | |
n.(受雇于私人或公司的)司机;v.为…开车 | |
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48 outfit | |
n.(为特殊用途的)全套装备,全套服装 | |
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49 motives | |
n.动机,目的( motive的名词复数 ) | |
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50 motive | |
n.动机,目的;adv.发动的,运动的 | |
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51 gadgets | |
n.小机械,小器具( gadget的名词复数 ) | |
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52 scones | |
n.烤饼,烤小圆面包( scone的名词复数 ) | |
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53 perfectly | |
adv.完美地,无可非议地,彻底地 | |
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54 alluding | |
提及,暗指( allude的现在分词 ) | |
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55 inhibiting | |
抑制作用的,约束的 | |
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56 percussion | |
n.打击乐器;冲突,撞击;震动,音响 | |
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57 decided | |
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的 | |
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58 applicants | |
申请人,求职人( applicant的名词复数 ) | |
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59 barometer | |
n.气压表,睛雨表,反应指标 | |
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60 middle-aged | |
adj.中年的 | |
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61 ambiguities | |
n.歧义( ambiguity的名词复数 );意义不明确;模棱两可的意思;模棱两可的话 | |
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62 hearty | |
adj.热情友好的;衷心的;尽情的,纵情的 | |
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63 machinery | |
n.(总称)机械,机器;机构 | |
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64 components | |
(机器、设备等的)构成要素,零件,成分; 成分( component的名词复数 ); [物理化学]组分; [数学]分量; (混合物的)组成部分 | |
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65 Ford | |
n.浅滩,水浅可涉处;v.涉水,涉过 | |
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66 screwdriver | |
n.螺丝起子;伏特加橙汁鸡尾酒 | |
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67 irrelevant | |
adj.不恰当的,无关系的,不相干的 | |
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68 mechanism | |
n.机械装置;机构,结构 | |
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69 antidotes | |
解药( antidote的名词复数 ); 解毒剂; 对抗手段; 除害物 | |
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70 scooping | |
n.捞球v.抢先报道( scoop的现在分词 );(敏捷地)抱起;抢先获得;用铲[勺]等挖(洞等) | |
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71 surfeit | |
v.使饮食过度;n.(食物)过量,过度 | |
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72 brilliance | |
n.光辉,辉煌,壮丽,(卓越的)才华,才智 | |
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73 wink | |
n.眨眼,使眼色,瞬间;v.眨眼,使眼色,闪烁 | |
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74 chaotic | |
adj.混沌的,一片混乱的,一团糟的 | |
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75 prodigal | |
adj.浪费的,挥霍的,放荡的 | |
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76 braced | |
adj.拉牢的v.支住( brace的过去式和过去分词 );撑牢;使自己站稳;振作起来 | |
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77 coastal | |
adj.海岸的,沿海的,沿岸的 | |
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78 drawn | |
v.拖,拉,拔出;adj.憔悴的,紧张的 | |
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79 dismantle | |
vt.拆开,拆卸;废除,取消 | |
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80 lieutenant | |
n.陆军中尉,海军上尉;代理官员,副职官员 | |
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81 exhausted | |
adj.极其疲惫的,精疲力尽的 | |
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82 halfway | |
adj.中途的,不彻底的,部分的;adv.半路地,在中途,在半途 | |
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83 logic | |
n.逻辑(学);逻辑性 | |
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84 sip | |
v.小口地喝,抿,呷;n.一小口的量 | |
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85 flasks | |
n.瓶,长颈瓶, 烧瓶( flask的名词复数 ) | |
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86 nibbling | |
v.啃,一点一点地咬(吃)( nibble的现在分词 );啃出(洞),一点一点咬出(洞);慢慢减少;小口咬 | |
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87 whim | |
n.一时的兴致,突然的念头;奇想,幻想 | |
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88 descant | |
v.详论,絮说;n.高音部 | |
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89 sergeant | |
n.警官,中士 | |
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90 alteration | |
n.变更,改变;蚀变 | |
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91 arena | |
n.竞技场,运动场所;竞争场所,舞台 | |
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92 porousness | |
多孔性 | |
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93 chamber | |
n.房间,寝室;会议厅;议院;会所 | |
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94 fully | |
adv.完全地,全部地,彻底地;充分地 | |
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95 straightforward | |
adj.正直的,坦率的;易懂的,简单的 | |
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96 inhaled | |
v.吸入( inhale的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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97 fumes | |
n.(强烈而刺激的)气味,气体 | |
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98 thermos | |
n.保湿瓶,热水瓶 | |
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99 bent | |
n.爱好,癖好;adj.弯的;决心的,一心的 | |
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100 brass | |
n.黄铜;黄铜器,铜管乐器 | |
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101 distractions | |
n.使人分心的事[人]( distraction的名词复数 );娱乐,消遣;心烦意乱;精神错乱 | |
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102 tarpaulin | |
n.涂油防水布,防水衣,防水帽 | |
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103 tilted | |
v. 倾斜的 | |
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104 swelled | |
增强( swell的过去式和过去分词 ); 肿胀; (使)凸出; 充满(激情) | |
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105 forth | |
adv.向前;向外,往外 | |
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106 enlisted | |
adj.应募入伍的v.(使)入伍, (使)参军( enlist的过去式和过去分词 );获得(帮助或支持) | |
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107 debris | |
n.瓦砾堆,废墟,碎片 | |
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108 metallic | |
adj.金属的;金属制的;含金属的;产金属的;像金属的 | |
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109 flares | |
n.喇叭裤v.(使)闪耀( flare的第三人称单数 );(使)(船舷)外倾;(使)鼻孔张大;(使)(衣裙、酒杯等)呈喇叭形展开 | |
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110 lesser | |
adj.次要的,较小的;adv.较小地,较少地 | |
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111 doused | |
v.浇水在…上( douse的过去式和过去分词 );熄灯[火] | |
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112 hisses | |
嘶嘶声( hiss的名词复数 ) | |
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113 mechanisms | |
n.机械( mechanism的名词复数 );机械装置;[生物学] 机制;机械作用 | |
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114 timing | |
n.时间安排,时间选择 | |
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115 throb | |
v.震颤,颤动;(急速强烈地)跳动,搏动 | |
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116 bombers | |
n.轰炸机( bomber的名词复数 );投弹手;安非他明胶囊;大麻叶香烟 | |
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117 allied | |
adj.协约国的;同盟国的 | |
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118 deactivate | |
v.使无效;复员 | |
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119 neutralized | |
v.使失效( neutralize的过去式和过去分词 );抵消;中和;使(一个国家)中立化 | |
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120 withdrawn | |
vt.收回;使退出;vi.撤退,退出 | |
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121 sheared | |
v.剪羊毛( shear的过去式和过去分词 );切断;剪切 | |
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122 sketch | |
n.草图;梗概;素描;v.素描;概述 | |
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123 blueprint | |
n.蓝图,设计图,计划;vt.制成蓝图,计划 | |
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124 offhand | |
adj.临时,无准备的;随便,马虎的 | |
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125 sterilizer | |
n.消毒者,消毒器 | |
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126 emulsified | |
adj.[医]乳化的v.使乳化( emulsify的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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127 scribbled | |
v.潦草的书写( scribble的过去式和过去分词 );乱画;草草地写;匆匆记下 | |
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128 shuffling | |
adj. 慢慢移动的, 滑移的 动词shuffle的现在分词形式 | |
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129 tongs | |
n.钳;夹子 | |
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130 slates | |
(旧时学生用以写字的)石板( slate的名词复数 ); 板岩; 石板瓦; 石板色 | |
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131 confrontation | |
n.对抗,对峙,冲突 | |
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132 exhaustion | |
n.耗尽枯竭,疲惫,筋疲力尽,竭尽,详尽无遗的论述 | |
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133 serene | |
adj. 安详的,宁静的,平静的 | |
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134 devious | |
adj.不坦率的,狡猾的;迂回的,曲折的 | |
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135 enlistment | |
n.应征入伍,获得,取得 | |
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136 hops | |
跳上[下]( hop的第三人称单数 ); 单足蹦跳; 齐足(或双足)跳行; 摘葎草花 | |
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137 tunic | |
n.束腰外衣 | |
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138 douses | |
v.浇水在…上( douse的第三人称单数 );熄灯[火] | |
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139 dabs | |
少许( dab的名词复数 ); 是…能手; 做某事很在行; 在某方面技术熟练 | |
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140 scent | |
n.气味,香味,香水,线索,嗅觉;v.嗅,发觉 | |
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