阅读理解

Not long ago, a mysterious Christmas card dropped through our mail slot. The envelope was addressed to a man named Raoul, who, I was relatively certain, did not live with us. The envelope wasn’t sealed, so I opened it. The inside of the card was blank. Ed, my husband, explained that the card was both from and to the newspaper deliveryman. His name was apparently Raoul, and Raoul wanted a holiday tip. We were meant to put a check inside the card and then drop the envelope in the mail. When your services are rendered at 4 a.m., you can’t simply hang around, like a hotel bellboy expecting a tip. You have to be direct.

So I wrote a nice holiday greeting to this man who, in my imagination, fires The New York Times from his bike aimed at our front door, causing more noise with mere newsprint than most people manage with sophisticated black market fireworks.

With a start, I realized that perhaps the reason for the 4 a.m. —wake-up noise was not ordinary rudeness but carefully executed spite: I had not tipped Raoul in Christmases past. I honestly hadn’t realized I was supposed to. This was the first time he9d used the card tactic. So I got out my checkbook. Somewhere along the line, holiday tipping went from an optional thank-you for a year of services a Mafia-style protection racket (收取保护费的黑社会 组织).

Several days later, I was bringing our garbage bins back from the curb when I noticed an envelope taped to one of the lids. The outside of the envelope said MICKEY. It had to be another tip request, this time form our garbage collector. Unlike Raoul, Mickey hadn’t enclosed his own Christmas card from me. In a way, I appreciated the directness. “I know you don’t care how merry my Christmas is, and that’s fine,” the gesture said. “I want $30, or I’ll ‘forget’ to empty your garbage bin some hot summer day.”

I put a check in the envelope and taped it back to the bin. The next morning, Ed noticed that envelope was gone, though the trash hadn’t yet been picked up: “someone stole Mickey’s tip!” Ed was quite certain. He made me call the bank and cancel the check.

But Ed had been wrong. Two weeks later, Mickey left a letter from the bank on our steps. The letter informed Mickey that the check, which he had tried to cash, had been cancelled. The following Tuesday morning, when Ed saw a truck outside, he ran out with his wallet “Are you Mickey?”

The man looked at him with scorn. “Mickey is the garbage man. I am the recycling.” Not only had Ed insulted this man by hinting he was a garbage man, but he had obviously neglected to tip him. Ed ran back inside for more funds. Then he noticed that the driver of the truck had been watching the whole transaction. He peeled off another twenty and looked around, waving bills in the air. “Anyone else?”

Had we consulted the website of the Emily Post Institute, this embarrassing breach of etiquette could have been avoided. Under “trash / recycling collectors” in the institute’s Holiday Tipping Guidelines, it says, “$ 10 to $ 30 each.” You may or may not wish to know that your pet groomer, hairdresser, mailman and UPS guys all expect a holiday tip.

单选题 The newspaper deliveryman put a bank card inside the envelope because _____.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】根据第一段中“His name was apparently Raoul, and Raoul wanted a holiday tip.”可知送报员在信封里放银行卡的目的是索要圣诞小费。
单选题 From the passage, we learn that the author _____.
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】根据第二段“this man who, in my imagination, fires The New York Times from his bike aimed at our front door, causing more noise with mere newsprint than most people manage with sophisticated black market fireworks.”可知作者对于送报员送报的方式很有不满意。
单选题 Which of the following is CORRECT about Mickey, the garbage collector?
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】根据倒数第三段“The letter informed Mickey that the check, which he had tried to cash, had been cancelled.”可以看出由于作者取消了支票, 米奇并没有在银行取到现金。
单选题 Ed’s encounter with the recycling team shows that _____.
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】在倒数第二段, 由艾德急匆匆地从家里取出了钱给回收员, 并急忙分发小费的场面可以看出他迫切地想要补上之前没有给出的小费。