| Let me ask you a question... |
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"Have You Ever Wanted
To Do Something So Much
You Can't Stop Thinking
About It?"
Now ask yourself this...
Have you ever wanted to do something for someone else
so much, you can't stop thinking about it?
...and finally...
Would you do something for someone that
you've never even met and never actually spoken to?
Sounds a little bit crazy doesn't it?
Read this...
'The train now at Platform One is the 16:43 fast service to London Liverpool Street. This train is about to depart,' announced the tannoy in clipped tones.
Over the bridge two red-headed women raced, baking in the summer heat, the first in panic and the second in confusion.
'Stop, darling!' yelled Angie's mother again. 'I have to talk to you about this.'
'No way,' Angie replied. 'We never agree!'
The whistle blew. Angie was now on the right platform and legging it towards the train, her mother only ten paces behind.
With a super-human effort, Angie hauled open the nearest door and flung herself and her hold-all onto the carriage's dirty floor. She slammed the door behind her just as her mother collided against the outside of the window. The train began to move off.
'Open this door at once!' Angie's mother yelled, beginning to scamper alongside the train to keep level with her fleeing daughter, who was now holding the door shut against her mother's frantic attempts to get in.
'Sta-a-and clear of the train!' shouted the platform official.
'Let go, mother!' screamed Angie. 'Please! You'll hurt yourself. And I'm not staying at home. Or taking that job with the ruddy butcher. I'm sorry, I can't!'
At the last moment, her mother let go of the window and stood at the very end of the platform, either gesticulating or waving at her departing daughter. Angie couldn't tell which it might be, but thank goodness she was okay. She couldn't have borne it if her mother had been hurt. She had a small enough family as it was.
As the train gathered speed for its hour's journey into the distant heart of the city, Angie turned and gave a bright smile to the curious carriage occupants, all of whom avoided her direct gaze.
Deciding there was nothing she could say to explain her extraordinary arrival into their midst, she gathered her belongings and sank into the nearest empty seat.
'There, I've done it,' she said to herself. 'I've finally left home.'
It was only then she realised she'd forgotten to pack any knickers.
...it's just the first page. Would you like to read the next page? And the next?
And find out what the questions mean?
Well, you can. If you're thinking about how much you want to read more then...

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