Given all this, you can imagine my surprise when I heard it speak or, to be more precise, when I heard what it said. Its declaration was the last thing I was expecting to hear. Its words went through me like a spear of ice and forced me to reconsider the whole situation, beginning with the sympathy I felt for the cart, then the sympathy I felt for myself, and more generally my sympathy for miracles. I wasn’t surprised by the fact of it speaking; I had been expecting that. Perhaps I felt that our re­lationship had matured to the point where linguistic signs were appropriate. I knew that the moment had come for it to say something to me (for example that it admired me and loved me and was on my side). I bent down next to it, pretending to tie my shoelaces, so that I could put my ear to the wire mesh on its side, and then I was able to hear its voice, a whisper from the underside of the world, and yet the words were perfectly clear and distinct: “I am Evil.” Question Use the passage to answer the question. Which answer choices explain what is left uncertain in this passage? Select the two correct answers. (1 point) Responses what the narrator wanted the cart to say what the narrator wanted the cart to say why the cart is evil why the cart is evil whether the cart really talked or the narrator imagined it whether the cart really talked or the narrator imagined it how the narrator reacts to the cart saying it is evil how the narrator reacts to the cart saying it is evil how the cart sounded to the narrator

The correct answer choices are:

- Whether the cart really talked or the narrator imagined it
- How the narrator reacts to the cart saying it is evil