Saturday, August 4, 2012

June 29th

June 29th, 2012
MY IMPRESSION OF SHANGHAI (Mosquitoes)
      Summer in Shanghai is actually great. It’s warm ---- technically hot ---- but great. However, what really sucks about Shanghai ---- I mean really sucks, is that you get approximately five mosquito-bites every day. Can you even imagine how much they would bother you!? Five itchy, awful, turgid, bumpy mosquito-bites every day! They are crazily annoying.
      On the first day, I got three mosquito-bites. It was okay. I found them itchy but also a little proud of getting them. On the second day, I got only one. I was pretty happy with it, because it didn’t drive me crazy when I am playing piano or reading a book ---- it didn’t distract me or annoy me. On the third day: today, I got two bites in the morning. I started scratching them a lot, because it’s such a relief to release the terrible itch. However, I started getting pissed of seeing red huge spots on my calf. They are ugly, and of course they annoyed me. I knew I shouldn’t scratch the mosquito-bites because they would getter bigger and redder. And uglier. Thus I finally stopped by applying a bunch of medicine time by time. Well, this afternoon, while I was playing and enjoying piano, I got three mosquito-bites. I didn’t care. I endured the itch and went outside with my family. When I was outside, I got two more mosquito-bites. Yeah, I know. It’s crazy. Is it my bad luck day? Because they’re really annoying. I was so mad and I wasn’t able to kill any of them. So I came inside again to read. Just wished the mosquitoes would leave me alone, because they drove me insane with the bumpiness and itch. Both made me uncomfortable. I was reading on the couch. I half laid, half sat. It was peaceful but it didn’t last long. I guess I was too focused that I didn’t realize that I got three more mosquito-bites on my forearm. Suddenly, I saw a big black and white mosquito went right in front of my face. It was probably full of blood. My blood. I tried to swing my hand together to hit it to death but it just suddenly disappeared. I was angry but I had nothing to express my anger on. I couldn’t control myself from yelling at the ‘invisible’ insect. After I just sprayed myself with half a bottle of bug spray and applied more medicine that went over the mosquito-bites layers and layers.
      Well, that afternoon was uneasy and uncomfortable. But I had no other choices than endure. The good thing is that I got more experiences. I learned that I have to spray myself some bug spray and apply medicine after getting bitten by mosquitoes. J

June 25th

I haven’t been posting blogs for a long time. I’d say --- as my excuse --- I was quite busy studying for final exams. Yeah, by the way, I got pretty well on my final exams. French wasn’t as good as I expected. Math, I did great comparing to the others, but not perfect for my dear mother’s request. I did pretty good in Science, and English. What really surprised me was my Social Studies’ mark. I got a crazy 94%! Woah yeah! My Social teacher, Ms. Morris said I got one of the highest marks in the whole grade! Well, one of the highest. Haha, good enough actually. My score proves effort create miracles, because I studied so hard for Socials. I’m glad and proud. However, to God --- Jesus Christ --- be the glory! Praise the Lord.
Time passed really fast actually. My Grade 7 life is finished. Next year is Grade 8! Oh my Gosh, how did it all happen? It feels like a miracle right now. I’m terribly happy, and I can’t even describe what it feels like. Well, I just wish with my whole heart that summer wouldn’t pass as fast as the school year. Nah, don’t wanna bother putting my hope too high, because I knew it’s going to be like, shoo, in a heartbeat, and I’m back in school in Canada. Sad life… okay, I’m only joking. With the truth…
School ended on the 14th of June. I am now on the plane going to Tokyo, Japan from Vancouver, Canada. This wasn’t as bad as I thought it would be. Time surprisingly passed fast. Listening to music and reading books is always one of the best ways to make boring moments pass faster. Especially listening to music works the most, because a song is approximately four to five minutes, and listening to twelve to fifteen songs. It’s not so bad. Just always remember to download a bunch of new songs before going onto a plane. Old songs bored me and I would keep switching songs before they even finish. ;) I’m in business class, and thanks to my dad. It’s awesome: food is great, and the servers are super nice. J By the way, it’s Japanese Airline. Again, it’s great. J You think I’m making ads and doing a good job for Japanese Airline? Eh, yeah, totally, if you can even imagine that…
I’m super excited, like I was when I was in the Vancouver Airport waiting to get on board. I tried to sleep twice --- half lying half seating in the comfortable seat --- but I just couldn’t. To be honest, I don’t even know why I’m this excited. It’s strange right? Probably it’s that I’m looking forward to go shopping? Then I can get onto another cool plane? Then I get to Shanghai? Then I can get used to the time difference (which I actually do look forward to)? Then I can get my gorgeous TOMS shoes which we bought on TaoBao.com? Oh yeah. I believe that’s the reason. I remembered now --- thanks to the shoes we ordered, I kept on getting distracted and all excited when I almost fell asleep. Yup, good job, I found the reason to be all happy and excited. J
After arriving in Japan, we’re going to spend four hours shopping while waiting for the plane to Shanghai. Shopping! I wish I could have enough energy for the next four hours. It’s really weird how the four hours seemed so short when I was at home in Canada. I was confident and prepared. However, now, it sounds like eternity. Which kind of freaks me out actually.
I planned my daily activity one week ago, as my mother told me to, as well as my goals. Pretty much what I’m going to do in China are probably just: guitar lessons: yay, basketball practices: yay, blogs: cool, Bible studying: okay, Math tutorial: whatever, and shopping: yay! Right, one more, I’m getting my TOMS shoes! What I’m going to do is pray and hope that they’re my size.
Well, my goals for this month are:
1.     Finish the Bible: the New Testament
2.     Play basketball for more than four hours per week
3.     Write at least two blogs per week – that’s 8 for this whole month
4.     Weigh lesser than forty-three KG when I get back to Vancouver (I’m now about forty-four KG)
5.     Know how to play F on guitar
6.     Play piano every day – at least open it and touch one key
7.     Read more than three books
8.     Run on the running machine or on the trail at least once a week for at least thirty minutes
Okay, that’s it. I wish I had an awesome full of joy, of God’s word, of sweat, of music, of knowledge and of unhealthy but tasty food. J I wish you, who are reading my blog --- probably Mom and Dad, a great summer as well, full of screams and laughter of your children, of clothing you bought online, of air conditioner, of shades under the hot sun, of relatives asking about Canada, of never ending business and of the happiness summer brings. J Thanks for reading my blogs, for the clothes you got for me, for taking me back to China for the summer, for buying business class tickets (again), for allowing me to bring my guitar, for choosing a tutor for me, and for all the other things I didn’t mention. I really appreciate the decisions you made and thank you for everything. Anyway, have a great summer!

Saturday, January 7, 2012

School's here

School’s here
      Waited for so long for Christmas break and it was finally here. Happiness fulfilled my every day!
      Sometimes on the other days, hoped school could open soon, because it was so boring with nothing to do every day. I even hoped the teachers would have given us more homework to do. Looking at my old friends’ piles of paper work to do, I felt a little sympathetic for them also a tiny bit envious and jealous.
I went back to China, played with my cousins, and visited my old school and old friends. It was really fun. But now, school’s here again in 2 days. Missing all the happy days, I just felt like school took away all the happiness.
School’s here, just found out I haven’t done a project which is almost due. Hope I hadn’t waste my time on watching movies every day. Wish I had reviewed some Math, some French. So I won’t be left behind in the next two days – second term of school. J
Okay, second term is here. My goals are:
1.     Read at least 1 book per month
2.     Try to not be sick – stay healthy
3.     Learn to treasure time – do some Chinese Grade Six Math

Okay. Good luck Tracey~ you’ll be fine. Work hard!!

A School that I Dreamed to Be in

A School that I Dreamed to Be in
Two years ago, I was a student in Shanghai, China. I was a good student – always finish homework on time. I worked very hard to get pretty good grades. I was one of the leaders of Elementary School. However, it wasn’t a… it wasn’t a proud job. Well, it was to me. But some others say, “Why bother work so hard for a job that no one cared?” Those people who think that way because they’re such losers. They cared only about their own life. They can do anything just to get an easier life. No I think they’re wrong. People did care. Not like everyone cared to be a leader or what but the truth is, good students can fight and argue all day long just to be the best. Friendship is nothing at that time. Some students with bad grades just cared about nothing. They do nothing when others are taking piles of notes. They give up on studying, because they don’t think there’s no more meaning. So they tried out things they are good at. But teachers don’t admit. People think it’s useless. People work for themselves. People become a slave of useless knowledge. It is awful and if they keep going like that generations by generations, they’ll have no happiness. Kids are not going to have a nice childhood memory. I can’t imagine I was almost one of them.
But now, I’m standing on Canadian students’ side and looking strangely at the school, at the country with a little bit of Canadian student’s feelings, I believe.
In Canada, I was one of them, I can feel it. One classmate won a reward, everyone cheers. One friend got a prize, every friend acclaim. It’s great to be one of them. They are a group. We are a group. We aren’t jealous when others are better. We seem even happier than the one who was the best. We help each other when needed. We don’t discipline when someone screwed up. We work hard together. So no one is left behind the team. No one is ditched lonely. We inspire our people to be good together when they feel disappointed. At the end, we share our happiness and achievement together.
I’m so glad to be in Canada, because I don’t have to waste my time on doing mountains of homework. I smile because I don’t have to look for a better life every day, because I satisfied. I play because this is time for me to learn to enjoy life and have a better future.
Thank God for today. Thank God for what I have in front of me. Thank God for my life. Be satisfied and happy if you’re one like me because it’s the place that I used to be dreamed to be in and it’s a place where students in Asia, Africa, and Europe are dreamed to be. J

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Grade 7 Speech

Hello teacher and fellow students. My topic is:
Why is ‘family’ the most important people in our life?
Family…… I believe everyone here knows what family is and you must have a lot of experiences. In a dictionary, ‘family’s definition is: A group of people that were related by blood. To me, family is not only a relationship of blood. But more about emotions like love, happiness, influencing and supporting.
First, they are very important that they gave us love and we are able to receive love from them. Love, we can never live without it. It is very important to everyone! A person who doesn’t receive love or can’t feel love is very sorrowful and sympathetic. A person who doesn’t receive family’s love is even more sorrowful and sympathetic! There’s a very famous Chinese quotation. Basically, it is like this: “Mother’s love is the source of peace of the whole world.” It makes a lot of sense. Primarily, a person who doesn’t have family’s love is not peaceful. A person who doesn’t receive love from family would never give love to other people.
For example, if our parents forward love and happiness to us, I am very sure that we all would give love and happiness to other people too! Therefore, everyone receives love from others and passes the love to even more people! So the whole world would be so peaceful and faithful. Once everyone’s family is peaceful, the whole world would be very peaceful too! I believe you can see how strong family’s love is and how influencing to the world is.
Family is important because you get a lot of supports from them. Sometimes, friends might not be very reliable. They might betray you at any moment but you never knew. However, family would never ditch you or forsake you for any reason! Family relationship is like a truth that no one is able to change! NEVER! Family is always supporting you in the behind. Even though we all would grow up and move out someday, it doesn’t mean they don’t love us or we aren’t their kids anymore! They still loved you a lot, and will always love you, support you and care about you.
Family is also our mainly influence, people always say: Parents are children’s role model, children are parents’ mirror. It is very obvious to understand. It means: if parents do something and children would learn to do the same thing! Just the way parents did. When children learned to do something, it is probably because their parents had influenced them.
Sometimes, parents didn’t actually teach or tell their kids to do it, but their behaviors taught them and told them to do it already! Some parents may be addicted to smoking and drinking or they always get mad easily. Therefore, their kids always start smoking, drinking since young age, always fight physically for some reasonless daily things, always bully small kids and is always mean, sensitive and irritable. If parents want their kids to be perfect, they should start to be perfect first! Consequently, parents are always their examples; it is really hard to avoid the bad behaviors on kids unless the parents start to change and therefore set up a good model for their children.
Family loves you so much. Therefore, do you think you should love them more too? Family is family. You don’t want to lose your happy family relationship. No one does. So you should treasure it more! You should always be dutiful to them, because they always deserve it. Remember to always love them with your loving heart!
Thank you!

Sharing (Back from Junior School Retreat)

Good morning fellow sisters and brothers, ­
      Our topic for this year’s Junior School Retreat is: THE PURE IN HEART
      Man was specially created for God’s use. All the things God created are for man. But only man is for God. We need to contain him, or there’s no meaning being a man. We want him to dwell in our spirit first. Eventually, spread through all of our soul and body – our whole being.
Heart is the only gateway that connects our spirit and our soul. A pure heart means a heart without mixture. Our heart is the loving organ. God wants to make His home our heart. There should be nothing more important than the Lord. So He can come in us and fulfill Himself within us. He purifies us through our heart. Jehovah God is the light, and in him there’s no darkness at all. When we open our heart, the Lord is shining in us as the light. We started to love him and experience him after we open our heart. He expends Himself in us. Therefore, the veil is taken away.
We need to confess to Him in order to let Him in. Once we confess, He forgives us and cleanses us from all unrighteousness, because He is the light, he is the life giving spirit, he is faithful! He is the only one who can save us from Satan, because He is God, because He forsakes himself and died for us on the cross. His blood cleansed us from all the sins forever and ever as long as we have a pure heart. At the same time, we loved God even more, and we forget all the other things in the world.
We need to take care of our conscience. Our conscience is what God is trying to tell us to do or not do. Consequently, our conscience is God Himself. God is always standing with our conscience. God never tells us to ignore our conscience, only Satan the devil does. We don’t want to listen to Satan. We need Him to help us take care of our conscience by talking/praying to Him more.
During cabin reading, I also learned we need to love our brothers and sisters. If we hate one of our brothers, that means we don’t love our God, because saints build up God’s body. If a brother can only judge and condemn but has no sadness, it proves that he doesn’t know anything about brotherly love. Hating brothers proves that there is no love in him. I also learned to pray to God to give me more love to the brother. Sometimes, man’s love isn’t always enough for everyone. So we need love from God, because God’s love is always abounding. God is the loving God.
I learned a lot from the Junior School Retreat. I really enjoyed learning the Lord. God is so amazing and so precious. I feel like being filled. I encourage more Junior School sisters and brothers to go next time! So you can love the Lord with your pure heart!
Thank you!

Saturday, October 8, 2011

The Elevator (by William Sleator)'s Continuing Ending (by me!)

The Elevator (Original)
By William Sleator
It was an old building with an old elevator—a very small elevator, with a maximum capacity of three people. Martin, a thin twelve-year-old, felt nervous in it the since the first day he and his father moved into the apartment. Of course, he was always uncomfortable in elevators, afraid they would fall, but there was something especially unpleasant about this one. Perhaps it was its baleful atmosphere due to the light from the single fluorescent ceiling strip, bleak and dim on the dirty walls. Perhaps the problem was the door, which never stayed open quite long enough, and slammed shut with such ominous, clanging finality. Perhaps it was the way the mechanism shuddered in a kind of exhaustion each time it left a floor, as though it might never reach the next one. Maybe it was simply the dimensions of the contraption that bothered him, so small that it felt uncomfortably crowded, even when there was only one other person in it.
Coming home from school the day after they moved in, Martin tried the stairs. But they were almost as bad, windowless, shadowy, with several dark landings where the light bulbs had burned out. His footsteps echoed behind him like slaps on the cement, as though there was another person climbing, getting closer. By the time he reached the seventeenth floor, which seemed to take forever, he was winded and gasping.
His father, who worked at home, wanted to know why he was so out of breath. “But why didn’t you take the elevator?” he asked, frowning at Martin when he explained the stairs. Not only are you skinny and weak, his expression seemed to say, but you’re also a coward. After that, Martin forced himself to take the elevator. He would have to get used to it, he told himself, just the way he got used to be being bullied at school, and always picked last when they chose teams. The elevator was an undeniable fact of life.
He didn’t get used to it. He remained tense in the trembling little box, his eyes fixed on the numbers over the door that blinked on and off so haltingly, as if any moment they might simply give up. Sometimes, he forced himself to look away from them, to the Emergency Stop button or the red Alarm button. What would happen if he pushed one of them? Would a bell ring? Would the elevator stop between floors? And if it did, how would they get him out?
That was what he hated about being alone in the thing—the fear of being trapped in there for hours by himself. But it wasn’t much better when there were other passengers. He felt too close to any rider, too intimate. And he was always very conscious of the effort people make not to look at one another, staring fixatedly at nothing. Being short, in this situation, was an advantage, since his face was below eye level of adults, and after a brief glance, they ignored him.
Until the morning, the elevator stopped at the fourteenth floor, and the fat lady got on. She wore a threadbare green coat that ballooned around her, her ankles bulged above dirty sneakers. As she waddled in the elevator, Martin was sure he felt it sink under her weight. She was so big that she filled the cubicle; her coat brushed against him, and he had to squeeze into the corner to make room for her—there certainly wouldn’t have been room for another passenger. The door slammed quickly behind her. And then, unlike everyone else, she did not stand facing the door. She stood with her back to the door, wheezing, staring directly at Martin.
For a moment, he met her gaze. Her features seemed very small, squashed together by the loose fleshy mounds of her cheeks. She had no chin, only a great swollen mass of neck, barely contained by the collar of her coat. Her sparse red hair was pinned in the back by a plastic barrette. And her blue eyes, though tiny, were sharp and penetrating, boring into Martin’s face.
Abruptly, he looked away to the numbers over the door. She didn’t turn around. Was she still looking at him? His eyes slipped back to hers, then quickly away. She was still watching him. He wanted to close his eyes; he wanted to turn around and stare into the corner, but how could he? The elevator creaked down to twelve, down to eleven. Martin looked at his watched; he looked at the numbers again. They weren’t even down to nine yet. And then, against his will, his eyes slipped back to her face. She was still watching him. Her nose tilted up; there was a large space between her nostrils and her upper lip, giving her a piggish look. He looked away again, clenching his teeth, fighting the impulse to squeeze his eyes shut against her.
She had to be crazy. Why else would she stare at him this way? What was she going to do next?
She did nothing. She only watched him, breathing audibly, until the elevator reached the first floor at last. Martin would have rushed past to her get out, but there was no room. He could only wait as she turned—reluctantly it seemed to him—and moved slowly out into the lobby. And they he ran. He didn’t care what she thought. He ran past her, outside into the fresh air, and then he ran almost all the way to school. He had never felt such relief in his life.
He thought about her all day. Did she live in the building? He had never seen her before, and the building wasn’t very big—only four apartments on each floor. It seemed likely that she didn’t live there and had only been visiting somebody.
But if she were only visiting somebody, why was she leaving the building at seven thirty in the morning? People didn’t make visits at that time of day. Did that mean she did live in the building? If so, it was likely—it was a certainty—that sometime he would be riding on the elevator with her again.
He apprehensive as he approached the building after school. In the lobby, he considered the stairs. But that was ridiculous. Why should he be afraid of an old lady? If he was afraid of her, if he let it control him, then he was worse than all the names they called him at school. He pressed the button; he stepped into the empty elevator. He stared at the lights, urging the elevator in. It stopped on three.
At least it’s not fourteen, he told himself; the person she was visiting lives on fourteen. He watched the door slide open—revealing a green coat, a piggish face, blue eyes already fixed on him as though she knew he’d be there.
It wasn’t possible. It was like a nightmare. But there she was, massively real. “Going up!” he said, his voice a humiliating squeak.
She nodded, her flesh quivering, and stepped on. The door slammed. He watched her pudgy hand move toward the buttons. She pressed not fourteen, but eighteen, the top floor, one floor above his own. The elevator trembled and began its ascent. The fat lady watched him.
He knew she had gotten on at fourteen this morning. So why was she on three, going up to eighteen now? The only floors he ever went on were seventeen and one. What was she doing? Had she been waiting for him? Was she riding with him on purpose?
But that was crazy. Maybe she had lots of friends in the building. Or else she was a cleaning lady who worked in different apartments. That had to be it. He felt her eyes on him as he stared at the numbers slowly blinking on and off—slower than usual it seemed to him. Maybe the elevator was having trouble because of how heavy she was. It was supposed to carry three adults, but it was old. What if got stuck between floors? What if it fell?
They were on five now. It occurred to him to press seven, get off there, and walk the rest of the way. And he would have done it, if he could reach the buttons. But there was no room to past her without squeezing against her, and he could not bear the thought of any physical contact with her. He concentrated on being in his room. He would be home soon, only another minute or so. He could stand anything for a minute, even this crazy lady watching him.
Unless the elevator got stuck between floors. Then what would he do? He tried to push the thought away, but it kept coming back. He looked at her. She was still staring at him, no expression at all on her squashed little features.
When the elevator stopped on his floor, she barely moved out of the way. He had to inch past her, rubbing against her horrible scratchy coat, terrified the door would close before he made it through. She quickly turned and watched him as the door slammed shut. And he thought, Now she knows I live on seventeen.
“Did you ever notice a strange fat lady on the elevator?” he asked his father that evening.
“Can’t say as I have,” he said, not looking away from the television.
He knew he was probably making a mistake, but he had to tell somebody. “Well, she was on the elevator with me twice today. And the funny thing is, she just kept staring at me, she never stopped looking at me for a minute. You think…you know anybody that has a weird cleaning lady or anything?”
“What are you so worked up about now?” his father said turning impatiently away from the television.
“I’m not worked up, It was just funny the she kept staring at me. You know how people never look at each other in the elevator. Well, she just kept looking at me.”
“What am I going to do with you, Martin?” his father said. He sighed and shook his head. “Now, you’re afraid of some poor old lady.”
“I’m not afraid.”
“You’re afraid,” his father said, with total assurance. “When are you going to grow up and act like a man? Are you going to be timid all your life?”
He managed not cry until he got to his room—but his father probably knew he way crying anyway. He slept very little.
And in the morning, when the elevator door opened, the fat lday was waiting for him.
She was expecting him. She knew he lived on seventeen. He stood there, unable to move, and then backed away. And as he did so, her expression changed. She smiled as the door slammed.
He ran for the stairs. Luckily, the unlit flight on which he fell was between sixteen and fifteen. He only had to drag himself up one and a half flights with the terrible pain in his leg, His father was silent on the way to hospital, disappointed and annoyed at him for being such a coward and a fool.
It was a simple fracture. He didn’t need a wheelchair, only a cast and crutches. But he was condemned to the elevator now. Was that why the fat lady had smiled? Had she known it would happen this way?
At least his father was with him on the elevator on the way back from the hospital. There was no room for the fat lady to get on. And even if she did, his father would see her, he would realize how peculiar she was, and then maybe he would understand. And once they got home, he could stay in the apartment for a few days—the doctor said he should use the leg as little as possible. A week maybe — a whole week without getting in the elevator. Riding up with his father, leaning on his crutches, he looked around the little cubicle and felt a kind of triumph. He had beaten the elevator, and the fat lady, for the time being. And the rest of the week was very far away.
“Oh, I almost forgot,” his father reached out his hand and pressed nine.
“What are you doing? You’re not getting off, are you?” he asked him, trying not to sound panicky.
“I promised Terry Ullman I’d drop in on her,” his father said, looking at his watch as he stepped off.
“Let me go with you. I want to visit her, too,” Martin pleaded, struggling forward on his crutches.
But the door was already closing. “Afraid to be on the elevator alone?” his father said, with a look of total scorn. “Grow up, Martin.” The door slammed shut.
Martin hobbled to the buttons and pressed nine, but it didn’t do any good. The elevator stopped at ten, where the fat lady was waiting for him. She moved in quickly; he was too slow, too unsteady on his crutches to work his way past her in time. The door sealed them in; the elevator started up.
“Hello Martin,” she said, and laughed, and pushed the Stop button.

      My continuing ending...
              The Elevator Ending
 By Tracey Chen
“Hello, Martin,” she said, and laughed, and pushed the Stop button.
The elevator suddenly stopped at the tenth floor. Martin felt a pain. The fat lady walked toward him, that he couldn’t breathe. The lady laughed even harder and talked loudly, “Hey Martin, why are you so afraid?”
Martin was stuck in a corner of an elevator. He wanted to tell her that he wasn’t afraid. However, he didn’t, because he was too scared to answer. He didn’t even have any idea that he was actually going to answer her. He tried to kick her in the stomach, but her threadbare coat was too large that he didn’t even have any room to let his skinny leg come up.
“Tell me, why are you even afraid?” The lady asked him again, and said, “Act like a man, Martin. Are you going to be timid your whole life!? Come on and fight with me!”
That reminded Martin of what his father had said. His anger was in all the places in his vessels. He took a deep breath and yelled loudly, “You know what!? I am not afraid! You are a freak!” He felt like he was going to explode in 5 seconds, even he was counting seconds in his own mind.
The lady didn’t reply, she grinned and she showed her the two sharp teeth in each side of her mouth.
Martin was so shocked. He had only heard of vampires in the fiction books. He was so regretful that he said he wasn’t afraid, because he was afraid.
The lady walked even closer and said, “It won’t hurt much. Don’t worry. You won’t die either. Just relax.” She suddenly leaned toward him.
As she tried to bite him on the neck, he slipped toward the buttons and pressed the Bell button immediately. Suddenly, the ring bell rang so loudly and the old lady screamed. A bright light appeared, and Martin covered his eyes. When the lights went down, the vampire lady was gone. Suddenly, the elevator stop ringing and it worked again. Martin opened his mouth wide and still didn’t realize what had just happened. The elevator stopped on the seventeenth floor and the door opened slowly. It seemed like nothing had happened. He walked out of the elevator as usual. However, as he walked out of the elevator, the sticker on the Bell button fell off and it showed another word: ‘In case of Vampires’……