2 hours
A young lady, gloved and hatted, with a coat on, is sitting in the window-seat.
A clock strikes six. The young lady turns and looks at her watch. She rises with an air of one who
waits, and is almost at the end of her patience.
With a sigh of weary resignation she sits down; and begins to read. Presently the book sinks to her
lap; her eyes close; and she dozes into a slumber.
An elderly womanservant comes in from the hall and disappears in the pantry without noticing the
young lady. As she returns the young lady lets her book drop, awakening herself, and startling the
womanservant.
                                           The young lady picks up the book and places it on the
table
                          looking in from the hall suddenly: an ancient but still hardy man
                 advancing to the drawing-table
                                  To the young lady
       she goes to the door leading to the hall
                 as she passes him
                                              Quite unconcerned, she goes out into the hall on her
way to the kitchen
                                                              He sits down in the big wicker chair
                                         Adapted from George Bernard Shaw, Heartbreak House,
                                         http://www.gutenberg.org/files/3543/3543-h/3543-h.htm .
George gets up and goes across to the desk. He sits, picks up the phone and dials just one number.
Lois enters George’s office.
                                              Hands her bank cards.
                                          Hiss
                     He picks up the phone.
                                                                          Pause
                               He hangs up after another pause.
                                          He touches her.
                                                                       She cries.
Crying
         He walks away from her and sits on the sofa.
            Adapted from Trevor Rhone, Old Story Time. Pearson, 2010, pp. 64–68.
                                                               He picks up the
                                           phone”, “Pause”
                                           “He hangs up after another pause”
Cecil Gray, “Beach”. In Careenage pp. 15–16, Lilibel
Publications, Toronto, 2003.
–
             Edna St. Vincent Millay “An Ancient Gesture”.
Retrieved from http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/an-ancient-gesture .
Adapted from Edwidge Danticat, “Nineteen Thirty-Seven”. In The Oxford Book of
           Caribbean Short Stories, Oxford University Press, 1999, pp. 447–455.
Adapted from Su Tong, Raise the Red Lantern, Perennial Edition, 2004, pp. 11 14.