Paragraph: (Fiction/gutenberg_withoutQuotes/gutenberg-1168-0.txt)
Sent 1: Miss Anderson dined out, and preferred to suppose that she had no time to think until she was on her way home along the empty road round Jakko at eleven o'clock that night.
Sent 2: Then it pleased her to get out of her rickshaw and walk.
Sent 3: There was an opulent moon, the vast hills curving down to the plains were all grey and silvery, and the deodars overhead fretted the road with dramatic shadows.
Sent 4: About her hung the great stillness in a mighty loneliness in which little Simla is set, and it freed her from what had happened, so that she could look at it and cry out.
Sent 5: She actually did speak, pausing in the little pavilion on the road where the nursemaids gather in the daytime, but very low, so that her words fell round her even in that silence, and hardly a deodar was aware.
Sent 6: 'I will not go now,' she said.
Sent 7: 'I will stay and realize that he is another woman's husband.
Sent 8: That should cure me if anything will--to see him surrounded by the commonplaces of married life, that kind of married life.
Sent 9: I will stay till she comes and a fortnight after.
Sent 10: Besides, I want to see her--I want to see how far she comes short.'
Sent 11: She was silent for a moment, and the moonlight played upon her smile of quiet triumph.
Sent 12: 'He cares too,' she said; 'he cares too, but he doesn't know it, and I promise you one thing, Madeline Anderson, you won't help him to find out.
Sent 13: And in five weeks I will go away and leave my love where I found it--on a mountaintop in the middle of Asia!'
Question: How long does Miss Anderson plan to stay in the pavilion? (false/0)
Question: What type of moon was visible at eleven o'clock? (true/1)
Question: Why does Miss Anderson not want to go now? (false/2)
Last updated: Mon Apr 16 04:55:33 EDT 2018
Generated from a file named: /Users/daniel/ideaProjects/hard-qa/split/train_456.json