READING PASSAGE 3 - Questions 11-15
You should spend about 10 minutes on Questions 11–15, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
As the plane gained speed, approaching take-off, the man in the seat next to John turned to him and said, 'I hope you're satisfied.' Even over the roar of jet engines, rattling plastic and chattering voices, the bitterness in the man's voice came through loud and clear.
Staring at the little, bald-headed, bespectacled man, John frowned and said, 'Excuse me?' 'Oh, nothing - nothing at all.' The man extracted the airline magazine from the seat pocket and began to flip through it frantically. His hands seemed to be shaking more than the vibrations of the plane could justify.
Pressed back into his seat as the runway dropped away below them, John watched the man smack the magazine shut and shove it back into the seat pocket. Seeing the pinched, slightly mole-like face in a sudden flash of sunlight, a similar beam illuminated John's memory. More time than he liked to think about had passed since, in his last year of university, he had prevailed over twenty others in his bid for the funding to do a further two years of study in England. In his state of exultation he had failed to notice the reactions of the other, worsted, candidates - in fact he had neglected even to acknowledge their existence. Now, dimly, the image came back of a shy, studious, insignificant person called Jim Morton who, according to others in the department, had been a definite walkover. But surely, if this little man sitting next to him now was Jim Morton, such resentment could not have been carried around for so long.
As the plane leveled out and the seatbelt sign blinked off, John turned to his frowning, tight-lipped neighbor and said, 'May I introduce myself?'