Author: | Sydney Lynn | ISBN: | 9781386033349 |
Publisher: | Sydney Lynn | Publication: | July 6, 2018 |
Imprint: | Language: | English |
Author: | Sydney Lynn |
ISBN: | 9781386033349 |
Publisher: | Sydney Lynn |
Publication: | July 6, 2018 |
Imprint: | |
Language: | English |
A short suspensful summer must read that will keep you on the edge of your seat!
If anyone ever actually does find me I'm sure they will say it wasn't my fault, that I have nothing to apologize for. They would paint me as a god-loving, innocent, good girl. Prey, pounced upon by a heavily disturbed and intrusive predator, but let me be the first to tell you, they will all be wrong.
People always look into the eyes of a caged lion with an earnest sympathy. They imagine the lion, once proud and free, tracked and stolen from their homeland, unfairly locked in a cold and unforgiving cage for the rest of their days.
Rarely, if ever, do they picture the lion choosing a life of containment, following persistently away from its homeland, begging and taunting to be captured and locked away. If they knew it had been the lion's choice to leave, would their faces still be plastered with sympathetic glances as they passed by? Would they still look into the eyes of the lion and see a burning desire to be freed, or would they simply pass by without a second thought, because the lion had made the choice to leave?
A short suspensful summer must read that will keep you on the edge of your seat!
If anyone ever actually does find me I'm sure they will say it wasn't my fault, that I have nothing to apologize for. They would paint me as a god-loving, innocent, good girl. Prey, pounced upon by a heavily disturbed and intrusive predator, but let me be the first to tell you, they will all be wrong.
People always look into the eyes of a caged lion with an earnest sympathy. They imagine the lion, once proud and free, tracked and stolen from their homeland, unfairly locked in a cold and unforgiving cage for the rest of their days.
Rarely, if ever, do they picture the lion choosing a life of containment, following persistently away from its homeland, begging and taunting to be captured and locked away. If they knew it had been the lion's choice to leave, would their faces still be plastered with sympathetic glances as they passed by? Would they still look into the eyes of the lion and see a burning desire to be freed, or would they simply pass by without a second thought, because the lion had made the choice to leave?