The Wake-up Call
“What’s that?” my ten-year-old daughter, Genie, asked. She’d caught me laughing at a piece of mail I’d just opened. “Wake-up service; $2.50 per call.” At the bottom was a phone number and a drawing of a rotary phone, like the one my great-aunt Sara had owned 40 years ago.
“Is that mail funny?” Genie asked.
“Not really,” I admitted. “It’s just outdated.”
“What’s a wake-up call?” She frowned. I explained how, before smart-phones, people sometimes paid someone to wake them with a call.
“Who sent this flyer?” she pressed.
“Probably someone older,” I said, “and could use some money.”
Her eyes lit up. “Can we order a wake-up?” she asked.
“We don’t need it.” I picked it up and headed for the recycling bin.
“Wait!” she shrieked.
“I feel sorry for the wake-up man, if he needs some money,” she said, tearing up. “Can’t we order?”
I looked at the flyer with its drawing of a rotary phone. I remembered, again, my great-aunt Sara and her rotary phone. As a kid, I’d visited her over Labor Day, when Jerry Lewis would host his charity event for the disabled kids. Aunt Sara would squeeze my hand, then reach for the rotary phone, dialing the number on the screen. Holding the receiver between us, we’d announce to the operator, “We’d like to help those kids.”
Now here was my own child, showing the same big heart I’d once been encouraged to have, and how could I ignore her? I Googled the flyer’s return address. The address belonged to a man called Raymond. He was in his mid-60s. We called him and, holding the receiver between us, the way Aunt Sara and I used to, told him we needed his services. “Great!” Raymond said in a shaky but friendly voice, clearly amazed at receiving an order from a child. When I asked how to pay the $2.50, he answered, “Mail a check.”
Genie was happy all week. Friday night, I put the phone by her pillow so she could answer Raymond’s call. She bounded to my bedroom to tell me all about how he’d wished her a good morning and told her to have a great day, which she did.
Technology has made some things outdated. But there are still other things the world will always require. In the rush and hustle of my daily life, I’d temporarily forgotten that. I guess I just needed a wake-up call.
1.The author laughed at the mail because ________.
A. it was printed roughly
B. the drawing in it was poor
C. the wake-up call cost too much
D. the service it offered was outdated
2.What did the author want to do with the flyer at first?
A. Throw it away.
B. Let Genie read it.
C. Find out who sent it.
D. Keep it away from Genie.
3.What made the author finally decide to order a wake-up call?
A. Her own childhood experience.
B. The less fortunate wake-up man.
C. Genie’s curiosity about the service.
D. The information she found on Google.
4.What might “other things” in the last paragraph refer to?
A. Bravery and curiosity.
B. Confidence and patience.
C. Honesty and humor.
D. Generosity and kindness.
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
1.What is important to wear when riding?
A. Warm clothes. B. Loose jeans.
C. Hiking boots. D. Cowboy boots.
2.You’d better bring your own equipment for ________.
A. horseback riding B. fly fishing
C. cattle work D. mountain biking
3.Where can you possibly read this article?
A. In a novel . B. In a science magazine.
C. In a travelling guide. D. In a history textbook.
阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
My tenth Christmas was one I was not looking forward to. Money was tight. Mom said we were old enough not to count on . Just being together would be enough.
We weren’t the only family in our small community who would have a Christmas. But the knowledge that others were going through the same thing didn’t much.
One night we had a small pity party for each other.
“How can I even wear that same old dress one more time?” I .
“I know,” said my sister. “I think I might as well give up asking for a .”
The next day, Mom told us that she had been saving up and shopping around so that we could give the Walters family a Christmas basket.
“If anyone needs some , it’s the Walters.” Mom reminded us.
The Walters! They were the strangest people we knew. How could Mom be so with them when our own family didn’t have enough?
Mom was determined. She packed flour and sugar, a small turkey, some fruits in a basket and asked us to it to the Walters.
I really didn’t like to have anything to do with them. Not wanting to be , we left the basket on the doorstep and hid behind a nearby bush.
Seeing the Walters gather up their basket, I asked in whisper, “Did they look happy?”
“Well, yeah, happy, but mostly they looked like they were thinking, Maybe we do belong.”
Christmas morning arrived. To my great , I received a fabulous-looking dress. I couldn’t believe it’s for me. I was about to speak we noticed Dad ride up atop a new horse. My sister screamed and ran out. She couldn’t to meet her “gift”.
“Mom, how did you do all this?” I asked. “We were for a no-present Christmas.”
“Oh, not necessarily but just helping each other. Mrs. Olsen at the dress shop let me bring your gift home. Dad offered to hang up Mrs. Marshall’s tree lights. Mr. Jones had a horse and he was to know we had someone to love it.”
“I thought since you were giving away food to the Walters, we would never have enough. They really don’t have anything to give in .”
“We are like a big family. Never who can or who can’t give. The most important is that we should listen to our hearts. Perhaps the right gifts will end up with the right families.”
Mom always knew . Thinking about the expression on the Walters’s faces when they discovered the Christmas basket, I realized their “ ” feeling was more precious than any of the gifts.
That was the Christmas that I learned about the magic of .
1.A. games B. parties C. gifts D. trips
2.A. simple B. regular C. grand D. peaceful
3.A. judge B. help C. cover D. pay
4.A. begged B. insisted C. laughed D. complained
5.A. tree B. light C. dress D. horse
6.A. trust B. cheer C. praise D. courage
7.A. patient B. strict C. generous D. popular
8.A. deliver B. award C. show D. lend
9.A. excused B. caught C. realized D. recognized
10.A. relief B. alarm C. fear D. surprise
11.A. since B. when C. after D. before
12.A. expect B. intend C. wait D. decide
13.A. ready B. eager C. known D. responsible
14.A. checking B. trading C. hesitating D. quarreling
15.A. proud B. afraid C. happy D. worried
16.A. return B. store C. vain D. effect
17.A. tease B. forget C. mind D. ignore
18.A. truth B. duty C. dreams D. choices
19.A. inspiring B. relaxing C. satisfying D. belonging
20.A. believing B. giving C. forgiving D. communicating
About 10 million dolphins are said ________ in the past 15 years.
A. to have killed B. to kill
C. to have been killed D. to be killed
--- I wonder ________ Mary has changed so much.
--- She has been suffering a serious disease.
A. why B. what C. when D. where
The masterpiece “Guernica”, ________ by Picasso, is permanently exhibited in Madrid.
A. paint B. painted C. painting D. to paint