In the book there is an Aha Moment. I know this because it says "It was a thousand little things that told Cheyenne something was wrong. Even the way the door closed hasn't sounded right. Too fast and too hard for Danielle. The breathing was all wrong too, speeded up and harsh. Cheyenne sniffled. The smell of cigarettes. But Danielle didn't smoke and, as a nurse, couldn't stand anyone who did. There was no war the person driving the car was her stepmom." This is important because Cheyenne is now in danger. She will need a way to escape without getting caught. She's also blind, so it will make it harder.
Friday, November 14, 2014
Girl Stolen
The book I am reading is Girl Stolen. It is about this girl, Cheyenne who tells her stepmother if she can stay in the car while she goes shopping. Then someone comes into the car real fast and drives off. The person stealing the car didn't even know Cheyenne was in the back seat. She scares him and he explains that he only wanted the car. But if he only wanted the car, why doesn't he let her go? He can, but he can't, because he can let her go, and she can call police. Also, Cheyenne couldn't, because she's blind.
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Interesting comments and thoughts! Usually an Ah-ha moment comes much later in the book, but I guess this could still work. The part you are describing sounds very suspenseful!
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