声音简介

The Escape


By JB Stamper –edited version


 


Boris looked down the long, dark hallway of the prison. It looked endless. He was being taken to a place that few people had seen. But everyone feared it. Solitary. Behind him, the guard laughed. “Well, this will teach you a lesson,” he said. “Once you’ve been in solitary, there will be no more bad behaviour from you.” Boris forced his feet to move down the hall. He knew there was no hope for him.

Seven years ago, he had committed a crime. It was a crime so terrible that even he could not believe that he had done it. Now he was in prison for the rest of his life. He was trapped like an animal in a cage. He could not face it any longer! That’s why he had tried to escape. It had been just after sunset. He was all alone in the courtyard. The guard who was supposed to be there had made a mistake. He had left Boris alone. Boris had run for the wall like an animal. He had climbed up and was almost over. Then he had heard the words, “Freeze, prisoner!” And he had frozen. That was just yesterday. Now he was headedto an even worse cage.

Boris felt hopeless. They were coming to the end of the hallway. Boris saw the door at the end. He saw the bars across the small window in the door. He knew that this was it. The others had told him what it would be like inside. They were right. The guard unlocked three locks. Then he swung open the door. He pushed Boris inside. The room was like a pen. It was long and narrow with one bed. High up there was a small window with bars across it. The walls were of old, rough stone. To Boris, it felt as if they were closing in on him. His breath started to come in short gasps. His heart pounded. Boris turned to the guard. “No,” he begged. “I can’t take it here. Let me go back to where I was. I’ll never do anything wrong again.”  “You should have thought of that earlier,” the guard said. Then he slammed the heavy door in Boris’s face.

Boris reached for the door. He grabbed the bars in his hands and tried to shake them. “You’ll be sorry!” he yelled after the guard. The guard just looked back and laughed. Boris sat down on the bed. He shut his eyes. He didn’t want to look around the cell. He was afraid that he would lose his mind. Thunder woke Boris from a terrible nightmare. He had dreamed that rats were running at him, screeching. He opened his eyes. He was afraid the rats were really there. He hated rats more than anything. It was his biggest worry . . . that there might be rats in solitary. Boris looked around the cell. It was almost dark. Then a flash of lightning lit up the cell. The light fell on the wall at the head of his bed. In those few seconds of light, Boris saw something that made his heart leap. One of the stones in the wall looked different. There was a thin crack in the cement around it. Boris tried to fight off a new feeling of hope. But he couldn’t help himself.

His hands were shaking. He reached down and grabbed the large stone. He moved it back and forth. Then, suddenly, it came loose! Boris pulled, and the rock fell forward into his hands. As Boris stared into the hole left by the rock, a flash of lightning lit it up. A tunnel stretched before him . . . with a rat hurrying down into it. Boris jumped back in horror when he saw the rat. He thought about putting the large stone back in place. Then another flash of lightning cut through the darkness of the cell. The tunnel lit up in front of him. It seemed to welcome him to freedom. Boris measured the size of the tunnel with his eyes. It was narrow at the beginning. But then it became wider. It looked wide enough for him to crawl though. Another flash of lightning lit up the tunnel. He searched for any sign of the rat. “Maybe I didn’t see it at all,” Boris whispered to himself. “Maybe it was just a shadow of my nightmare.”

He sat in the darkness, shaking with fear and hope. Just then, Boris heard the guard’s footsteps outside his cell. He threw himself over the stone and hole. He pressed his body against the wall. He waited as the footsteps came to a stop outside his cell. He thought he would scream from the horrible tension. Then the footsteps moved away. They slowly drifted down the hallway. Finally, the noise faded into the night.

Suddenly, Boris knew he could not wait any longer. He stuck his head into the tunnel and pushed the rest of his body through. He tried to look back, but the tunnel was too narrow. There was no turning back now. Boris squirmed deeper and deeper into the tunnel. Crawling on his stomach, he felt like a snake slithering into its hole. He felt the tunnel grow damper and colder.

Just as the tunnel began to grow slimy, it opened up and became wider. Boris stood up on his trembling legs. He tried to see into the darkness ahead. He put his hands out in front of him and walked slowly through the black tunnel. The rocky walls were sharp and tore at his hands. He wiped the sweat from his forehead with one hand and felt warm blood oozing from it.

Suddenly, the tunnel sloped down at a sharp angle. Boris’s feet slipped forward. He landed on his back. He slid deeper and deeper into the tunnel. He came to a stop where the floor of the tunnel suddenly became flat. His breath was coming in short gasps that tore at his lungs. He picked himself up. He reached for the slimy walls of the tunnel. Then the truth hit him like a blow. He could never go back. The walls of the tunnel behind him were too steep and slippery. He had only one chance. He had to push on. He had to push on . . . and hope that there was an end to the tunnel.

Boris moved himself forward. He clawed at the walls with his hands, trying to hurry. The tunnel was beginning to feel more and more narrow. His breath was coming in shorter and shorter gasps. Then the tunnel made a sharp turn to the left. Suddenly Boris saw something that made him cry out in relief. Through an opening in the distance, he could see the pale rays of the moon. He was almost there.

He could smell the night air. Boris struggled toward the patch of moonlight ahead of him. The tunnel was turning upward. Boris had to grab both sides of the wall and dig his feet into the cracks in the wall. Slowly, he pulled himself up. Boris felt the blood from his cuts run down into his sleeves. But the pain didn’t matter. All that mattered was the patch of light ahead. Boris felt the night air against his face. He was close now. Close to freedom. Then a sound behind him terrified him. It was the sound of clawed feet. They were following him. Boris scrambled up to the top of the tunnel even faster. The moonlight was so bright now that he could see his hands in front of him. He felt a rat brush against his leg. But he had only a few yards to go.

With his last bit of strength, Boris lunged toward the light. He felt his head crash into something hard and cold. For a moment he was stunned. Then he opened his eyes. In front of him, the moon shone through the bars of a heavy gate. Still pressed up against it were the cold, white bones . . . of a skeleton.  There was no escape. There was no going back. This was it. Just Boris . . . and the rats.


听友41723748

Is it true? Are they intentional?

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1869254homv

看的我自己都紧张了起来

晓萱_t5

很棒的讲解!!!

探路者007

好好好,棒棒棒

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