After all, one of the selling points of the room was that the children would be able to use the room as an outlet for their emotions, and the places that the room visited would provide information for the adults who were curious about the young minds. He wants to believe that the children are psychologically healthy, not that they are fixated on blood and violence. Outside of the nursery, Lydia comments that she heard screams coming from the room earlier in the day, but George tries to ease her worries. The images are so startlingly lifelike that when the holographic lions begin to charge, George and Lydia run for the door to escape. In the distance, lions are licking the bones of their prey clean. During this particular visit, George and Lydia are surrounded by the African countryside. The glass walls have the ability to project the landscape and environment of any place that the mind of the visitor wishes. The story begins when Lydia asks George if he's noticed anything wrong with the nursery, the most expensive and exciting room of the house. In "The Veldt," George and Lydia Hadley are the parents of Wendy and Peter Hadley, and they live in a technologically driven house that will do everything for its inhabitants - transport you upstairs, brush your teeth, cook the food, and clean the house.
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