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Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What was Allan writing on at his desk ? || In an old book
0False
[ "Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank .", "Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What was Allan writing on at his desk ? || Pages
1True
[ "Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank .", "Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What was Allan writing on at his desk ? || Paper
1True
[ "Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank .", "Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What was Allan writing on at his desk ? || Parchment
0False
[ "Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank .", "Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What was Allan writing on at his desk ? || A will
0False
[ "Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank .", "Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
Did Allan write his story in a single session ? || No
0False
[ "He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago .", "Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
Did Allan write his story in a single session ? || Yes
1True
[ "He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago .", "Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
Did Allan write his story in a single session ? || It took a week
0False
[ "He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago .", "Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
Did Allan write his story in a single session ? || He wrote it in one night
1True
[ "He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago .", "Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
Did Arthur grab Allan 's paper ? || Maybe
0False
[ "he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand .", "He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
Did Arthur grab Allan 's paper ? || Yes
1True
[ "he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand .", "He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
Did Arthur grab Allan 's paper ? || He also tore them
0False
[ "he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand .", "He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What did Allan contemplate over his desk ? || A story he had constructed long ago
1True
[ "Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank .", "He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What did Allan contemplate over his desk ? || Arthur
0False
[ "Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank .", "He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What did Allan contemplate over his desk ? || An outline he'd written previously
1True
[ "Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank .", "He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What did Allan contemplate over his desk ? || Grimm
0False
[ "Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank .", "He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What did Allan contemplate over his desk ? || What to write about
0False
[ "Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank .", "He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What did Allan contemplate over his desk ? || An old story of his
1True
[ "Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank .", "He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
When Allan fills pages without stricture , how does Arthur react ? || With congratulations
0False
[ "\" What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , \" cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice .", "Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper .", "Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
When Allan fills pages without stricture , how does Arthur react ? || He is angry
1True
[ "\" What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , \" cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice .", "Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper .", "Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
When Allan fills pages without stricture , how does Arthur react ? || Anger and disgust
1True
[ "\" What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , \" cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice .", "Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper .", "Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
When Allan fills pages without stricture , how does Arthur react ? || He raises his voice and yells at Allan
1True
[ "\" What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , \" cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice .", "Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper .", "Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
When Allan fills pages without stricture , how does Arthur react ? || Joy
0False
[ "\" What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , \" cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice .", "Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper .", "Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
When Allan fills pages without stricture , how does Arthur react ? || He is proud
0False
[ "\" What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , \" cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice .", "Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper .", "Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture ." ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What does Arthur think of Allan 's non - traditional stories ? || They are glorified Grimm's tales
1True
[ "\" I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , \" Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night .", "\" This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! \"", "Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? \"" ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What does Arthur think of Allan 's non - traditional stories ? || He does not like them
1True
[ "\" I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , \" Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night .", "\" This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! \"", "Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? \"" ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What does Arthur think of Allan 's non - traditional stories ? || They are drivel
1True
[ "\" I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , \" Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night .", "\" This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! \"", "Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? \"" ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What does Arthur think of Allan 's non - traditional stories ? || He adores them
0False
[ "\" I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , \" Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night .", "\" This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! \"", "Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? \"" ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What does Arthur think of Allan 's non - traditional stories ? || They are exciting
0False
[ "\" I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , \" Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night .", "\" This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! \"", "Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? \"" ]
Allan crouched over his desk once more , pen in hand and mind blank . He contemplated a story , an outline he had laboriously constructed some time ago . He had filled his pen and raised it , the nib descending towards the paper , before the sound came : the gentle , persistent tapping of the gnarled , primeval willow touching the window with long , insistent fingers . His eyes awoke with a passionate , determined flame , though the only light came from the glutted moon . Allan filled page after page , the words escaping from his mind onto the paper . Where before they had marched in regiments , practiced in ranks and followed their leaders ' commands , the words now escaped in their true forms , unhindered by any stricture . He continued long into the night , until the eldritch orb had sunk into the waiting hands of the willow , raised perpetually skyward . Arthur looked up from the results of a night 's frenzied labors and looked Allan in the eye . " What is this ? " he queried , indicating the pages he held in his left hand . " I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , " Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night . " What in G - d 's name could have possessed you to do such a thing , " cried Arthur , nearly raising his voice . " After all I said the day before , why have you abandoned centuries of literary progress for some self - indulgent fantasy ? " He shook the papers at Allan , raising them like a belt above the head of a disobedient son . " This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! " He spoke the last word with such heavy intonation that Allan shrank back before the physical wave of sound emanating from Arthur 's throat . " Do you hate the modern system of literature ? Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? " For a moment , Allan could hardly do more than shake his head . " No , of course not … I– " " Then why , " Arthur barreled on , " do you disregard them all and return to this superstitious babble , this morbid , paganistic drivel ?
What does Arthur think of Allan 's non - traditional stories ? || They are inventive
0False
[ "\" I decided that … since I was n't having much success with more – traditional – stories , I might see what sort of work I produced if I let my imagination go freely , \" Allan replied , somewhat less self - assured than he had been the previous night .", "\" This is nothing but a glorified Grimm 's tale , a miscarried child of Stoker , a creation less fit to be published than to be told around an open fire at the hovel of some peasant ! \"", "Do you personally despise the works the Enlightenment or the progress made since Shakespeare ? \"" ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did the author 's papa store in the stopbox received on his birthday ? || Baby tomatoes, cucumbers, and strawberries
1True
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did the author 's papa store in the stopbox received on his birthday ? || Mink jacket
0False
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did Papa use his birthday present for ? ||
0False
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did Papa use his birthday present for ? || Begged them for its release
0False
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did Papa use his birthday present for ? || Mink jacket
0False
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did Papa use his birthday present for ? || For spring-time meals in the middle of winter
0False
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did Papa use his birthday present for ? || To preserve baby tomatoes, cucumbers, and strawberries in translucent cubes
1True
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did Papa use his birthday present for ? || To spend so many pesos on a toy
0False
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
Who would not let her return the toys ? ||
0False
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
Who would not let her return the toys ? || President
0False
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
Who would not let her return the toys ? || Uncle
0False
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
Who would not let her return the toys ? || The author
0False
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
Who would not let her return the toys ? || Papa
1True
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did they find it stopboxes while cleaning their Papa 's apartment ? || Stamp collection
0False
[ "When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment .", "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did they find it stopboxes while cleaning their Papa 's apartment ? || Baby shoes
1True
[ "When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment .", "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did papa preserve ? || Tomatoes, cucumbers, and strawberries
1True
[ "It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it .", "He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did papa preserve ? || Baby tomatoes, cucumbers, and strawberries
1True
[ "It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it .", "He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did papa preserve ? || Baby shoes
0False
[ "It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it .", "He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did papa preserve ? || Spring-time meals in the middle of winter
0False
[ "It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it .", "He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
The item found by the author and their siblings in their Papa 's stopbox after his death were stored where in the author 's home ? || Above her computer while she worked
1True
[ "When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment .", "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes .", "I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
The item found by the author and their siblings in their Papa 's stopbox after his death were stored where in the author 's home ? || On top of their computer
1True
[ "When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment .", "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes .", "I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
The item found by the author and their siblings in their Papa 's stopbox after his death were stored where in the author 's home ? || Stopboxes
0False
[ "When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment .", "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes .", "I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
The item found by the author and their siblings in their Papa 's stopbox after his death were stored where in the author 's home ? || Our baby shoes
0False
[ "When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment .", "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes .", "I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
Father died how many years after mother ? || Immediately
0False
[ "Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it .", "When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
Father died how many years after mother ? || A year
1True
[ "Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it .", "When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
Father died how many years after mother ? || 1year
1True
[ "Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it .", "When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did they find when they cleaned their parents ' apartment ? || The stopbox
0False
[ "When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment .", "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did they find when they cleaned their parents ' apartment ? || Mink jacket
0False
[ "When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment .", "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did they find when they cleaned their parents ' apartment ? || Capturador, a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora
0False
[ "When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment .", "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did they find when they cleaned their parents ' apartment ? || A treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake
0False
[ "When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment .", "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did they find when they cleaned their parents ' apartment ? || My computer
0False
[ "When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment .", "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What did they find when they cleaned their parents ' apartment ? || Their baby shoes protected in stopboxes
1True
[ "When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment .", "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What sat above my computer while I worked ? || Stopboxes
1True
[ "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes .", "I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What sat above my computer while I worked ? || My compute
0False
[ "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes .", "I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What sat above my computer while I worked ? || Baby shoes
1True
[ "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes .", "I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What sat on the computer ? || A treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake
0False
[ "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes .", "I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What sat on the computer ? || My computer
0False
[ "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes .", "I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What sat on the computer ? || Will Shetterly
0False
[ "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes .", "I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What sat on the computer ? || Stopboxes
0False
[ "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes .", "I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What sat on the computer ? || The baby shoes
1True
[ "We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes .", "I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What color was the item Papa would not Mama return ? || Teal blue
1True
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What color was the item Papa would not Mama return ? || Translucent
0False
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What color was the item Papa would not Mama return ? || Papa's stopbox
0False
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What reason did the author give for coughing after breathing in the air from the stopbox the baby shoes were stored in ? || Symbol of their love for her
0False
[ "Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me .", "The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased .", "But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What reason did the author give for coughing after breathing in the air from the stopbox the baby shoes were stored in ? || Baby shoes had not been cleaned before they were encased
1True
[ "Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me .", "The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased .", "But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What reason did the author give for coughing after breathing in the air from the stopbox the baby shoes were stored in ? || The baby shoes were not cleaned
1True
[ "Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me .", "The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased .", "But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What reason did the author give for coughing after breathing in the air from the stopbox the baby shoes were stored in ? || Warhead
0False
[ "Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me .", "The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased .", "But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What was mamas mink jacket ? || A friend hand-me-down
0False
[ "He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter .", "Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What was mamas mink jacket ? || A family hand me down
1True
[ "He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter .", "Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What was mamas mink jacket ? || Stamp collection
0False
[ "He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter .", "Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What item would Papa not let Mama return ? || A Tiempo Capturado
1True
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What item would Papa not let Mama return ? || Stopbox, a teal blue Tiempo Capturado
1True
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What item would Papa not let Mama return ? || Mink jacket
0False
[ "Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday .", "It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What made the speaker cough ? || Because I laughed
0False
[ "Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me .", "The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased .", "But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What made the speaker cough ? || Symbol of their love for me
0False
[ "Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me .", "The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased .", "But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What made the speaker cough ? || The scent
0False
[ "Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me .", "The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased .", "But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What made the speaker cough ? || Baby shoes had not been cleaned
1True
[ "Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me .", "The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased .", "But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night ." ]
Captured Moments by Will Shetterly I remember Papa 's stopbox , a teal blue Tiempo Capturado that Mama brought home for his birthday . It was huge and inefficient , and she should never have spent so many pesos on a toy , but Papa would not let her return it . He used it to preserve baby tomatoes , cucumbers , and strawberries in translucent cubes that he stored in the pantry for spring - time meals in the middle of winter . Mama kept her mink jacket , a family hand - me - down , safe from time in a stopbox , and lent the capturador to my uncle for his stamp collection . Sometimes they would let us little ones to seal a treasured toy or a last piece of birthday cake until we begged them for its release , usually a few hours after enclosing it . When my father died , a year after my mother , my sisters and I cleaned out their apartment . We found our baby shoes protected in stopboxes . I took mine home , where they sat above my computer while I worked on my first play . One night when I did not believe love had ever existed for anyone , I used my own capturador , a sleek titanium Sanyo Tardar Ahora , to undo the stopbox . Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me . The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased . But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night .
What made the speaker cough ? || Because I did not try to kill myself that night
0False
[ "Bringing my face close to the shoes , I breathed deeply of air that my parents had trapped while closing up that symbol of their love for me .", "The instant would have been improved had my baby shoes been cleaned before they were encased .", "But as soon as I coughed , I laughed , and I did not try to kill myself that night ." ]
Let me begin again . I like life on the resort worlds -- always have and , after the upcoming mindwipe , always will . Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova . There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals . The N'apulcans are mostly emigrants from Polaris II ; the only difference between them and their Carribbean ancestors is that the ancestors fleeced NorAm tourists . Now the N'apulcans profit from their Hispanic siblings . I do n't mean to sound cynical . I suppose I wish to show that I 'm still capable of a certain authorial distance , a semblance of dispassionate observation . The following events may indicate otherwise . In fine tourist tradition , most homes on Vega IV are named . Mine was The Sleeping Flamingo , and its outer walls were coral pink . Were they mood - sensitive , they would have changed as I first viewed them . The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either . She said , " It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? " My instinct was to gesture curtly with a cupped hand that she lift the wind boat and take me elsewhere . But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism . And then , because a playwright can not resist a promising line , I said , " Your Sleeping Flamingo should be put to sleep . "
What is the full name of the city Tasha Cortez came from ? || Vega IV
0False
[ "The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either .", "There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals ." ]
Let me begin again . I like life on the resort worlds -- always have and , after the upcoming mindwipe , always will . Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova . There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals . The N'apulcans are mostly emigrants from Polaris II ; the only difference between them and their Carribbean ancestors is that the ancestors fleeced NorAm tourists . Now the N'apulcans profit from their Hispanic siblings . I do n't mean to sound cynical . I suppose I wish to show that I 'm still capable of a certain authorial distance , a semblance of dispassionate observation . The following events may indicate otherwise . In fine tourist tradition , most homes on Vega IV are named . Mine was The Sleeping Flamingo , and its outer walls were coral pink . Were they mood - sensitive , they would have changed as I first viewed them . The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either . She said , " It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? " My instinct was to gesture curtly with a cupped hand that she lift the wind boat and take me elsewhere . But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism . And then , because a playwright can not resist a promising line , I said , " Your Sleeping Flamingo should be put to sleep . "
What is the full name of the city Tasha Cortez came from ? || Polaris II
0False
[ "The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either .", "There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals ." ]
Let me begin again . I like life on the resort worlds -- always have and , after the upcoming mindwipe , always will . Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova . There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals . The N'apulcans are mostly emigrants from Polaris II ; the only difference between them and their Carribbean ancestors is that the ancestors fleeced NorAm tourists . Now the N'apulcans profit from their Hispanic siblings . I do n't mean to sound cynical . I suppose I wish to show that I 'm still capable of a certain authorial distance , a semblance of dispassionate observation . The following events may indicate otherwise . In fine tourist tradition , most homes on Vega IV are named . Mine was The Sleeping Flamingo , and its outer walls were coral pink . Were they mood - sensitive , they would have changed as I first viewed them . The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either . She said , " It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? " My instinct was to gesture curtly with a cupped hand that she lift the wind boat and take me elsewhere . But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism . And then , because a playwright can not resist a promising line , I said , " Your Sleeping Flamingo should be put to sleep . "
What is the full name of the city Tasha Cortez came from ? || Nuevo Acapulco
1True
[ "The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either .", "There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals ." ]
Let me begin again . I like life on the resort worlds -- always have and , after the upcoming mindwipe , always will . Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova . There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals . The N'apulcans are mostly emigrants from Polaris II ; the only difference between them and their Carribbean ancestors is that the ancestors fleeced NorAm tourists . Now the N'apulcans profit from their Hispanic siblings . I do n't mean to sound cynical . I suppose I wish to show that I 'm still capable of a certain authorial distance , a semblance of dispassionate observation . The following events may indicate otherwise . In fine tourist tradition , most homes on Vega IV are named . Mine was The Sleeping Flamingo , and its outer walls were coral pink . Were they mood - sensitive , they would have changed as I first viewed them . The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either . She said , " It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? " My instinct was to gesture curtly with a cupped hand that she lift the wind boat and take me elsewhere . But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism . And then , because a playwright can not resist a promising line , I said , " Your Sleeping Flamingo should be put to sleep . "
What is the full name of the city Tasha Cortez came from ? || N'apulco
0False
[ "The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either .", "There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals ." ]
Let me begin again . I like life on the resort worlds -- always have and , after the upcoming mindwipe , always will . Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova . There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals . The N'apulcans are mostly emigrants from Polaris II ; the only difference between them and their Carribbean ancestors is that the ancestors fleeced NorAm tourists . Now the N'apulcans profit from their Hispanic siblings . I do n't mean to sound cynical . I suppose I wish to show that I 'm still capable of a certain authorial distance , a semblance of dispassionate observation . The following events may indicate otherwise . In fine tourist tradition , most homes on Vega IV are named . Mine was The Sleeping Flamingo , and its outer walls were coral pink . Were they mood - sensitive , they would have changed as I first viewed them . The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either . She said , " It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? " My instinct was to gesture curtly with a cupped hand that she lift the wind boat and take me elsewhere . But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism . And then , because a playwright can not resist a promising line , I said , " Your Sleeping Flamingo should be put to sleep . "
What is the full name of the city Tasha Cortez came from ? || The Sleeping Flamingo
0False
[ "The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either .", "There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals ." ]
Let me begin again . I like life on the resort worlds -- always have and , after the upcoming mindwipe , always will . Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova . There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals . The N'apulcans are mostly emigrants from Polaris II ; the only difference between them and their Carribbean ancestors is that the ancestors fleeced NorAm tourists . Now the N'apulcans profit from their Hispanic siblings . I do n't mean to sound cynical . I suppose I wish to show that I 'm still capable of a certain authorial distance , a semblance of dispassionate observation . The following events may indicate otherwise . In fine tourist tradition , most homes on Vega IV are named . Mine was The Sleeping Flamingo , and its outer walls were coral pink . Were they mood - sensitive , they would have changed as I first viewed them . The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either . She said , " It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? " My instinct was to gesture curtly with a cupped hand that she lift the wind boat and take me elsewhere . But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism . And then , because a playwright can not resist a promising line , I said , " Your Sleeping Flamingo should be put to sleep . "
What is the full name of the city Tasha Cortez came from ? || Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad
1True
[ "The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either .", "There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals ." ]
Let me begin again . I like life on the resort worlds -- always have and , after the upcoming mindwipe , always will . Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova . There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals . The N'apulcans are mostly emigrants from Polaris II ; the only difference between them and their Carribbean ancestors is that the ancestors fleeced NorAm tourists . Now the N'apulcans profit from their Hispanic siblings . I do n't mean to sound cynical . I suppose I wish to show that I 'm still capable of a certain authorial distance , a semblance of dispassionate observation . The following events may indicate otherwise . In fine tourist tradition , most homes on Vega IV are named . Mine was The Sleeping Flamingo , and its outer walls were coral pink . Were they mood - sensitive , they would have changed as I first viewed them . The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either . She said , " It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? " My instinct was to gesture curtly with a cupped hand that she lift the wind boat and take me elsewhere . But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism . And then , because a playwright can not resist a promising line , I said , " Your Sleeping Flamingo should be put to sleep . "
Who rented a small house on Vega IV ? || Tasha Cortez
0False
[ "The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either .", "She said , \" It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? \"", "But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism .", "Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova ." ]
Let me begin again . I like life on the resort worlds -- always have and , after the upcoming mindwipe , always will . Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova . There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals . The N'apulcans are mostly emigrants from Polaris II ; the only difference between them and their Carribbean ancestors is that the ancestors fleeced NorAm tourists . Now the N'apulcans profit from their Hispanic siblings . I do n't mean to sound cynical . I suppose I wish to show that I 'm still capable of a certain authorial distance , a semblance of dispassionate observation . The following events may indicate otherwise . In fine tourist tradition , most homes on Vega IV are named . Mine was The Sleeping Flamingo , and its outer walls were coral pink . Were they mood - sensitive , they would have changed as I first viewed them . The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either . She said , " It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? " My instinct was to gesture curtly with a cupped hand that she lift the wind boat and take me elsewhere . But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism . And then , because a playwright can not resist a promising line , I said , " Your Sleeping Flamingo should be put to sleep . "
Who rented a small house on Vega IV ? || Flynn
1True
[ "The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either .", "She said , \" It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? \"", "But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism .", "Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova ." ]
Let me begin again . I like life on the resort worlds -- always have and , after the upcoming mindwipe , always will . Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova . There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals . The N'apulcans are mostly emigrants from Polaris II ; the only difference between them and their Carribbean ancestors is that the ancestors fleeced NorAm tourists . Now the N'apulcans profit from their Hispanic siblings . I do n't mean to sound cynical . I suppose I wish to show that I 'm still capable of a certain authorial distance , a semblance of dispassionate observation . The following events may indicate otherwise . In fine tourist tradition , most homes on Vega IV are named . Mine was The Sleeping Flamingo , and its outer walls were coral pink . Were they mood - sensitive , they would have changed as I first viewed them . The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either . She said , " It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? " My instinct was to gesture curtly with a cupped hand that she lift the wind boat and take me elsewhere . But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism . And then , because a playwright can not resist a promising line , I said , " Your Sleeping Flamingo should be put to sleep . "
Who rented a small house on Vega IV ? || Sleeping Flamingo
0False
[ "The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either .", "She said , \" It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? \"", "But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism .", "Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova ." ]
Let me begin again . I like life on the resort worlds -- always have and , after the upcoming mindwipe , always will . Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova . There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals . The N'apulcans are mostly emigrants from Polaris II ; the only difference between them and their Carribbean ancestors is that the ancestors fleeced NorAm tourists . Now the N'apulcans profit from their Hispanic siblings . I do n't mean to sound cynical . I suppose I wish to show that I 'm still capable of a certain authorial distance , a semblance of dispassionate observation . The following events may indicate otherwise . In fine tourist tradition , most homes on Vega IV are named . Mine was The Sleeping Flamingo , and its outer walls were coral pink . Were they mood - sensitive , they would have changed as I first viewed them . The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either . She said , " It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? " My instinct was to gesture curtly with a cupped hand that she lift the wind boat and take me elsewhere . But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism . And then , because a playwright can not resist a promising line , I said , " Your Sleeping Flamingo should be put to sleep . "
Who rented a small house on Vega IV ? || Polaris II
0False
[ "The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either .", "She said , \" It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? \"", "But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism .", "Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova ." ]
Let me begin again . I like life on the resort worlds -- always have and , after the upcoming mindwipe , always will . Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova . There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals . The N'apulcans are mostly emigrants from Polaris II ; the only difference between them and their Carribbean ancestors is that the ancestors fleeced NorAm tourists . Now the N'apulcans profit from their Hispanic siblings . I do n't mean to sound cynical . I suppose I wish to show that I 'm still capable of a certain authorial distance , a semblance of dispassionate observation . The following events may indicate otherwise . In fine tourist tradition , most homes on Vega IV are named . Mine was The Sleeping Flamingo , and its outer walls were coral pink . Were they mood - sensitive , they would have changed as I first viewed them . The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either . She said , " It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? " My instinct was to gesture curtly with a cupped hand that she lift the wind boat and take me elsewhere . But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism . And then , because a playwright can not resist a promising line , I said , " Your Sleeping Flamingo should be put to sleep . "
Who rented a small house on Vega IV ? || Nuevo Acapulco
0False
[ "The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either .", "She said , \" It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? \"", "But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism .", "Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova ." ]
Let me begin again . I like life on the resort worlds -- always have and , after the upcoming mindwipe , always will . Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova . There 's only one city : called Nuevo Acapulco in La Enciclopedia del Empirio de la Humanidad , it 's N'apulco to the locals . The N'apulcans are mostly emigrants from Polaris II ; the only difference between them and their Carribbean ancestors is that the ancestors fleeced NorAm tourists . Now the N'apulcans profit from their Hispanic siblings . I do n't mean to sound cynical . I suppose I wish to show that I 'm still capable of a certain authorial distance , a semblance of dispassionate observation . The following events may indicate otherwise . In fine tourist tradition , most homes on Vega IV are named . Mine was The Sleeping Flamingo , and its outer walls were coral pink . Were they mood - sensitive , they would have changed as I first viewed them . The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either . She said , " It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? " My instinct was to gesture curtly with a cupped hand that she lift the wind boat and take me elsewhere . But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism . And then , because a playwright can not resist a promising line , I said , " Your Sleeping Flamingo should be put to sleep . "
Who rented a small house on Vega IV ? || Senor Flynn
1True
[ "The rental agent , an attractive N'apulcan named Tasha Cortez , was not mood - sensitive either .", "She said , \" It 's beautiful , is n't it , Señor Flynn ? \"", "But she was young and attractive ( as I have said and may say again ) and eager and so happy to be assisting the infamous Bernardo Flynn that I merely raised an eyebrow in mild scepticism .", "Last year , I rented a small house on Vega IV , a sea world , all islands and reefs and archipelagos , turquoise waters and aquamarine skies , sunrises like symphonies and sunsets like stars gone supernova ." ]