Page 146 - 1984
P. 146

men in shabby greenish uniforms were squatting, jammed
       close together. Their sad, Mongolian faces gazed out over
       the sides of the trucks utterly incurious. Occasionally when
       a truck jolted there was a clank-clank of metal: all the pris-
       oners were wearing leg-irons. Truck-load after truck-load of
       the sad faces passed. Winston knew they were there but he
       saw them only intermittently. The girl’s shoulder, and her
       arm right down to the elbow, were pressed against his. Her
       cheek was almost near enough for him to feel its warmth.
       She had immediately taken charge of the situation, just as
       she  had  done  in  the  canteen.  She  began  speaking  in  the
       same expressionless voice as before, with lips barely mov-
       ing, a mere murmur easily drowned by the din of voices and
       the rumbling of the trucks.
         ‘Can you hear me?’
         ‘Yes.’
         ‘Can you get Sunday afternoon off?’
         ‘Yes.’
         ‘Then listen carefully. You’ll have to remember this. Go
       to Paddington Station——’
          With a sort of military precision that astonished him, she
       outlined the route that he was to follow. A half-hour railway
       journey; turn left outside the station; two kilometres along
       the road; a gate with the top bar missing; a path across a
       field; a grass-grown lane; a track between bushes; a dead
       tree with moss on it. It was as though she had a map inside
       her head. ‘Can you remember all that?’ she murmured fi-
       nally.
         ‘Yes.’

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