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    Tobias observes the bustling activ­i­ty out­side the dor­mi­to­ry as GDs pre­pare air­planes for take­off. He engages in light­heart­ed ban­ter with Cara about her failed truth serum exper­i­ment on Tris, jok­ing about Tris’s stub­born­ness. Their con­ver­sa­tion shifts to Tris’s unex­pect­ed arrival, vis­i­bly dis­tressed after a coun­cil meet­ing. The play­ful tone gives way to ten­sion as Tris reveals the coun­cil’s plan to reset the exper­i­ments using a mem­o­ry-eras­ing serum, leav­ing Tobias and Cara alarmed by the eth­i­cal impli­ca­tions.

    Tris explains the coun­cil’s inten­tion to deploy the mem­o­ry serum virus across the exper­i­ments, effec­tive­ly eras­ing their mem­o­ries. As she process­es this rev­e­la­tion, Tobias notices her inter­nal conflict—unlike Cara, who reacts with cer­tain­ty, Tris grap­ples with moral ambi­gu­i­ty. The group debates the coun­cil’s over­reach, with Tobias argu­ing against the vio­la­tion of auton­o­my. Cara sar­cas­ti­cal­ly sug­gests replac­ing the sci­en­tists, but Tris, struck by inspi­ra­tion, pro­pos­es an alter­na­tive: using the same serum to repro­gram the Bureau’s lead­ers instead.

    Tris’s idea gains momen­tum as she out­lines how reset­ting the Bureau could elim­i­nate their prej­u­dice against GDs and pre­vent future threats to the exper­i­ments. Cara rais­es prac­ti­cal con­cerns about eras­ing essen­tial knowl­edge, but Tris believes tar­get­ed mem­o­ry alter­ation is pos­si­ble, cit­ing Matthew’s exper­tise. Tobias, how­ev­er, inter­jects with a moral objec­tion, point­ing out the hypocrisy of forcibly alter­ing memories—a mir­ror of the coun­cil’s own plan. His inter­ven­tion forces Tris to pause and recon­sid­er the eth­i­cal weight of her pro­pos­al.

    The chap­ter ends on a cliffhang­er as Tobias phys­i­cal­ly blocks Tris’s path, shield­ing his eyes from the glare of air­plane wings. His chal­lenge under­scores the cen­tral dilem­ma: whether the ends jus­ti­fy the means. The scene cap­tures the group’s ide­o­log­i­cal divide—Cara’s prag­ma­tism, Tris’s des­per­ate inge­nu­ity, and Tobi­as’s prin­ci­pled resistance—setting the stage for a piv­otal deci­sion about pow­er, mem­o­ry, and con­sent.

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