Page 298 - 1984
P. 298

the way round the bench. The eyes of the chinless man kept
       flitting towards the skull-faced man, then turning guiltily
       away, then being dragged back by an irresistible attraction.
       Presently he began to fidget on his seat. At last he stood up,
       waddled clumsily across the cell, dug down into the pocket
       of his overalls, and, with an abashed air, held out a grimy
       piece of bread to the skull-faced man.
         There was a furious, deafening roar from the telescreen.
       The chinless man jumped in his tracks. The skull-faced man
       had quickly thrust his hands behind his back, as though
       demonstrating to all the world that he refused the gift.
         ‘Bumstead!’ roared the voice. ‘2713 Bumstead J.! Let fall
       that piece of bread!’
         The  chinless  man  dropped  the  piece  of  bread  on  the
       floor.
         ‘Remain standing where you are,’ said the voice. ‘Face the
       door. Make no movement.’
         The chinless man obeyed. His large pouchy cheeks were
       quivering uncontrollably. The door clanged open. As the
       young  officer  entered  and  stepped  aside,  there  emerged
       from  behind  him  a  short  stumpy  guard  with  enormous
       arms and shoulders. He took his stand opposite the chin-
       less man, and then, at a signal from the officer, let free a
       frightful blow, with all the weight of his body behind it, full
       in the chinless man’s mouth. The force of it seemed almost
       to knock him clear of the floor. His body was flung across
       the cell and fetched up against the base of the lavatory seat.
       For a moment he lay as though stunned, with dark blood
       oozing  from  his  mouth  and  nose.  A  very  faint  whimper-

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