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  • Welcome to Storyline Online

  • brought to you by the SAG-AFTRA Foundation.

  • I'm Dulé Hill and today I'm going to read

  • As Fast As Words Could Fly written by Pamela M. Tuck

  • and illustrated by Eric Velasquez.

  • You ready? Here we go.

  • Trouble was brewing in Greenville, North Carolina.

  • By five o’clock, fourteen-year-old Mason Steele

  • was rushing to finish his schoolwork.

  • Pa would be home from his meeting soon, bringing a new problem.

  • New problems meant more work for Mason.

  • He didn’t mind, though, because helping Pa’s civil rights group

  • made Mason feel real important.

  • The screen door banged shut.

  • Where’s Mason?” Pa asked as he scanned the kitchen.

  • Willis, the boy’s doing his lessons.” Ma sighed.

  • “I need him to write another letter for me. Ma-s-o-n-n-n!”

  • Yes, sir,” Mason called.

  • He hurried into the room with paper and a pencil.

  • Whittaker’s Restaurant refused to serve Matt Duncan’s boys,” Pa explained.

  • We got to form another sit-in.”

  • Mason took notes while Pa rambled on about what had happened.

  • Only Mason could make sense out of what Pa said.

  • Later, Mason turned his notes into a business letter.

  • This sounds good enough to send to President Lyndon B. Johnson himself,”

  • Pa boasted after he read Mason’s letter.

  • One evening, after the screen door banged shut,

  • Mason waited for Pa to call him.

  • Instead, he heard Ma and Pa talking quietly.

  • When Mason finally entered the kitchen, he could hardly believe his eyes.

  • “A typewriter!” he gasped.

  • Yep,” Pa said. “The group wanted to give it to you.

  • Said you been quite a little lawyer for us.

  • Figured a typewriter might help you someday.”

  • Mason slid his fingers over the keys.

  • Each row looked like little steps climbing up.

  • It’s beautiful,” Mason whispered.

  • “I’ll type the civil rights group a thank-you letter.”

  • Thatll be the right thing to do,” Ma agreed.

  • Soon school was out.

  • During the summer, Mason and his two older brothers, Willis Jr. and Henry,

  • picked tobacco with a few of the white boys who lived nearby.

  • Patrick and Daniel Jones were the only two who acted friendly.

  • They often raced against Mason and his brothers

  • to be the first to fill the mule cart.

  • In the evenings, Mason was weary from the day’s work,

  • but that didn’t stop him from practicing his typing.

  • Using his index fingers to pick out the keys,

  • he learned where every letter and symbol was located on the typewriter.

  • Summer flew by.

  • Before he knew it, Mason started his first year of high school.

  • After the third week, Pa called him and his brothers into the kitchen one evening.

  • Boys, I got some real important news for you,” he began.

  • We just won a case weve been fighting for a long time.

  • It ain’t right for y’all to be bused twelve miles to Bethel Union High School

  • when Belvoir High ain’t but three miles away.”

  • The boyseyes widened.

  • “P-P-Pa, you, you know them white folks ain’t gonna like us going to their school not one bit,”

  • Willis Jr. stammered.

  • Like it or not, y’all’s going,” Pa replied.

  • Somebody’s got to make a change.”

  • The boys stared at one another in disbelief.

  • The busll be here early Monday morning, so be ready,”

  • Pa said as he got up from the table and left the room.

  • Monday morning, Mason and his brothers were nervous.

  • They watched the school bus come roaring up the road.

  • The driver slowed down

  • just enough for the boys to see the white students on the bus laughing at them.

  • Then he sped up, blowing dust in the boysfaces.

  • They just don’t want us on their bus,” Willis Jr. said.

  • “I don’t want to ride their bus noways,” Mason added.

  • The boys trudged back to the house.

  • When they told Pa the driver hadn’t stopped for them, he was furious.

  • The next day, the same thing happened.

  • The third day, the bus stopped.

  • Slowly the boys climbed the steps.

  • Move it! I ain’t got all day,” the driver yelled.

  • And get to the back!”

  • The boys stumbled over one another as they hustled down the aisle.

  • Henry spotted a familiar face. “Hey, Patrick,” he said.

  • Patrick didn’t answer. He just looked straight ahead.

  • You Steele boys are asking for trouble,” Daniel whispered.

  • The driver took off.

  • The sudden motion threw the boys into their seats.

  • When the boys arrived at Belvoir High,

  • the principal, Mr. Bullock, barricaded the doorway.

  • He looked as if he had smelled a skunk.

  • Report to class after the bell rings,” he snapped,

  • and thrust their schedules toward them.

  • How will we know where to go?” Willis Jr. asked.

  • You found a way to get in here, so find your way around.”

  • Mr. Bullock turned and stormed into the building.

  • By the time Mason located the right room, the class had already started.

  • Cold stares and grimaces greeted him when he entered.

  • Mason knew which seat was his: the one in the back corner.

  • Against the odds, Mason did well in school.

  • He especially liked typing class.

  • The teacher, Mrs. Roberts, ignored him,

  • but he paid strict attention when she helped others.

  • At home, Mason practiced what he had learned.

  • It wasn’t long before he needed to earn some money to buy typing paper and other supplies.

  • Mason found out that the Neighborhood Youth Corps

  • sponsored an after-school program that offered jobs.

  • He applied and received a position in the school library

  • What can you do, boy?” Mrs. Turner, the librarian, asked.

  • “I can type, maam,” Mason answered.

  • Well, come over here so I can show you what to do.”

  • Mrs. Turner took a stack of index cards and sat down at a typewriter.

  • Pay attention, because I’m not going over this with you a second time.”

  • Mason had to transfer the information on the spines of books onto the cards.

  • Mrs. Turner typed one card and left him without further instructions.

  • Two hours later, Mrs. Turner approached Mason.

  • How’s it coming, boy?” she demanded.

  • Mason handed her his stack of index cards.

  • Mrs. Turner’s eyes bulged.

  • My goodness! How many cards did you type?”

  • “I think about one hundred, maam,” Mason replied.

  • Mrs. Turner checked the cards.

  • She couldn’t find a single mistake.

  • Gracious, boy,” she said.

  • You type faster than Mrs. Roberts.”

  • Mrs. Roberts was pleased to be relieved from the library work.

  • She became friendlier to Mason in typing class.

  • She even allowed him to use the new electric typewriter.

  • The first time Mason used the electric typewriter,

  • the letters jumped onto the paper with the slightest touch.

  • He had to get used to pressing a button to return to the left margin of his paper.

  • He could type faster and more quietly on the electric typewriter,

  • but he missed the tinkling bell on the manual typewriter

  • that signaled a new line.

  • Mason continued to improve his typing skills.

  • Before long he could type forty words per minute.

  • His job was going well too,

  • and he was earning the money he needed for typing supplies.

  • Then Mason was fired without explanation.

  • They done messed with the wrong fella,”

  • Pa fumed when he found out what had happened.

  • “I’m gonna call Golden Frinks on this one.

  • He’s a field secretary for the SCLC.”

  • Mason had heard plenty of Pa’s stories about the Southern Christian Leadership Conference,

  • the organization that coordinated nonviolent action to end segregation.

  • Pa had said that field secretaries interviewed people who complained about unequal treatment.

  • Then they organized a march, a sit-in, or a protest.

  • Golden Frinks was personally selected by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,” Pa added.

  • And believe me, son, Mr. Frinks shakes ground.”

  • The next morning, Golden Frinks, Pa,

  • and other civil rights workers went to the Board of Education.

  • An investigation began.

  • The Board of Education discovered that Mrs. Turner’s husband

  • didn’t want her to stay after school with a Negro boy.

  • The federal government was funding the Youth Corps

  • and now threatened to stop giving the school money for the program because Mason was treated unfairly.

  • Mason was rehired.

  • One day in typing class,

  • Mrs. Roberts announced that there was going to be a typing tournament

  • among some of the high schools in the county.

  • The fastest typist in the class would represent Belvoir High.

  • The students fiercely competed against one another.

  • Mr. Bullock reviewed the scores.

  • Then he announced the winner.

  • Mason Steele will represent our school in the typing tournament.”

  • How can a Negro represent our school?” a student blurted out.

  • We can’t afford any more trouble with the Board of Education,”

  • Mr. Bullock responded, stealing a glance at Mason.

  • Do I really want to do this? Mason thought.

  • But then he recalled Pa’s words.

  • Somebody’s got to make a change.

  • On the day of the tournament,

  • Mr. Bullock and Mrs. Roberts drove Mason to Farmville High School.

  • Upon entering the auditorium, Mason scanned the room.

  • He tried to ignore the stares of the white students

  • as he considered the selection of electric and manual typewriters.

  • Mason knew if he chose a manual typewriter,

  • he would lose time.

  • He would have to take his left hand off the keys

  • so he could hit the lever to start each new line.

  • All the other students sat down at electric typewriters.

  • Mason had to make a decision.

  • He closed his eyes to think.

  • His typewriter at home flashed before him.

  • Mason sat down at a manual typewriter.

  • The judge went over the rules,

  • then shouted, “Begin!”

  • Tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-DING.

  • Mason finished his first line.

  • He couldn’t hear how fast the other students were typing.

  • He focused only on his paper.

  • Tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-DING.

  • Tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-tap-DING.

  • Mason’s fingers flew over the keys.

  • His typing echoed throughout the auditorium.

  • BZZZZZZZZ!

  • Time’s up!” the judge yelled.

  • All eyes were on Mason as the judge collected the papers.

  • After a long wait, the results were announced.

  • “I can’t believe this. I really can’t believe this,”

  • the judge said into the microphone.

  • Mason Steele, from Belvoir High,

  • has broken all previous records with a typing speed of sixty-five words per minute.”

  • No one cheered.

  • Mason just stared straight ahead.

  • Mr. Bullock accepted the typing championship plaque for Belvoir High.

  • Not a single person in the audience applauded.

  • Mason received nothing.

  • That’s some skill you have, boy,”

  • Mrs. Roberts complimented Mason on the drive back to school.

  • Thank you, maam,” Mason responded.

  • “I just have one question,” Mr. Bullock said.

  • Why in the world did you choose a manual typewriter?”

  • Mason cleared his throat.

  • “’Cause it reminds me of where I come from, sir.”

  • Neither of the adults said anything more to Mason the rest of the way.

  • But Mason knew his words typed on paper

  • had already spoken for him

  • loud and clear.

  • The end.

  • This is a great book.

  • What I love about this book

  • is yes, words do matter.

  • But actions matter that much more.

  • Mason's father and civil rights group

  • gave him a little gift of a typewriter

  • but Mason receive that gift,

  • work that gift and in the end, used that gift

  • to change the minds of others.

  • He didn't need to talk about it. He just had to do it.

  • So no matter what people think about you,

  • what they say about you, you don't always need to respond.

  • Just do you.

  • Live your life just like Mason.

  • Thank you for watching Storyline Online.

  • Make sure to check out all of our stories.

  • Keep watching and keep on reading.

  • See you soon!

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杜蕾-希爾朗讀的《語速如飛》。 (As Fast As Words Could Fly read by Dulé Hill)

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