This story, otherwise called "The Boyfriend's Death" has numerous diverse varieties and has been deciphered as a more summed up cautioning not to stray excessively a long way from the security of home. Our adaptation takes us to Paris in the 1960s. A young lady and her boyfriend—both of them school scholars are making out in his car. They have stopped close to the Forest of Rambouillet with the goal that they won't be seen by anybody. When they're completed, the boy gets out to take some outside air and smoke a cigarette, and the young lady sits tight for him in the car.
After waiting for five minutes, the girl gets out of the car to look for her boyfriend. Suddenly, she sees a man in the shadows. Frightened, she gets back into the car to drive away—but as she does this, she hears a very faint squeak, followed by more squeaks.
This returns for a few seconds, until the girls picks that she has no choice however to drive off. She hits the gas as hard as might be reasonable, yet can't go anywhere; someone has tied a rope from the bumper of the car to a nearby tree.
At last, the girl pummels on the gas again and after that hears an uproarious shout. She escapes the car and understands that her boyfriend is swinging from the tree. It would appear the squeaky commotions were made by his shoes, scratching over the highest point of the car.
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