Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In Chap­ter 6 of “The Girl Who Played with Fire,” Lis­beth Salan­der once again show­cas­es her tech­ni­cal prowess. Ear­ly Sun­day morn­ing, she uses a pirat­ed card key to sneak into Mil­ton Secu­ri­ty’s build­ing. She finds that her old office remains untouched, which pleas­es her; how­ev­er, she is sur­prised by the lax secu­ri­ty of the firm she once worked for. After a quick inspec­tion of her old cubi­cle, she pro­ceeds to Arman­sky’s office, which is iron­i­cal­ly orga­nized.

    Salan­der’s goal is to run a pro­gram she wrote, named Asphyx­ia 1.3, to upgrade Arman­sky’s Inter­net Explor­er. This upgrade appears seam­less, mim­ic­k­ing the orig­i­nal ver­sion enough to avoid detec­tion. With the pro­gram run­ning, Salan­der ini­ti­ates a copy of Armansky’s hard dri­ve to a serv­er in Hol­land, illus­trat­ing her intent to stay informed about activ­i­ties at Mil­ton. She inves­ti­gates the files in Armansky’s desk draw­er while wait­ing for the trans­fer, which takes about thir­ty-four min­utes. Once the oper­a­tion is com­plete, she metic­u­lous­ly restores every­thing to its orig­i­nal order before leav­ing the build­ing.

    Lat­er, the nar­ra­tive shifts to the annu­al board meet­ing of the mag­a­zine Mil­len­ni­um, where finan­cials indi­cate a sig­nif­i­cant prof­it, allow­ing for reserves and bonus­es. Dif­fer­ing opin­ions arise regard­ing hir­ing a part-time reporter ver­sus main­tain­ing free­lance bud­gets, show­cas­ing the inter­nal dis­agree­ments that often accom­pa­ny suc­cess­ful busi­ness dis­cus­sions. Har­ri­et Vanger’s stake in the com­pa­ny, ini­tial­ly a tem­po­rary arrange­ment, is debat­ed; despite her pre­vail­ing busi­ness inter­ests, she express­es her enjoy­ment in being part of Mil­len­ni­um, call­ing it a unique and enjoy­able endeav­or.

    The chap­ter con­cludes with Salan­der vis­it­ing Miri­am Wu, a con­nec­tion from her past. Their inter­ac­tion reveals a famil­iar, flir­ta­tious dynam­ic, indi­cat­ing both a rekin­dled inter­est and an explo­ration of Salan­der’s per­son­al life. The dia­logue flows flu­id­ly, expos­ing Salan­der’s pre­vi­ous absences and allow­ing for a light-heart­ed yet sig­nif­i­cant reunion. The com­plex­i­ty of rela­tion­ships is cap­tured in Mim­mi’s play­ful ban­ter and Salan­der’s can­did­ness about her recent trans­for­ma­tions, cre­at­ing a jux­ta­po­si­tion between the high-stakes world of crime and cor­po­rate strat­e­gy and the inti­mate, per­son­al exchanges of their rekin­dled con­nec­tion.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In “Their Eyes Were Watch­ing God,” the nar­ra­tive unfolds in Eatonville, where Janie embarks on her dai­ly rou­tine amidst the live­ly porch talks and com­mu­ni­ty gos­sip. The morn­ing sun brings anoth­er day, though Janie often finds her respon­si­bil­i­ties at the store bur­den­some. The local men, includ­ing Sam, Lige, and Wal­ter, fre­quent­ly engage in ban­ter about Matt Bonner’s noto­ri­ous­ly under­fed yel­low mule, using this jest as a social bond­ing oppor­tu­ni­ty and a chance to air griev­ances against Matt for his poor care of the ani­mal. Their jokes are cru­el, accen­tu­at­ing the mule’s skin-and-bones appear­ance, with towns­folk admit­ting they would mis­use him in var­i­ous ways. Janie, observ­ing this, grows increas­ing­ly frus­trat­ed; she sym­pa­thizes with the mule, wish­ing she could inter­cede on its behalf.

    Her hus­band, Joe Starks, mean­while, main­tains his author­i­ty by demand­ing Janie adhere to a more respectable demeanor, for­bid­ding her to indulge in the towns­folk’s triv­ial chats, as they reflect poor­ly on her sta­tus as the mayor’s wife. Despite his laugh­ter at the mule ban­ter, he harsh­ly insists Janie stay with­in the con­fines of the store. Inside, Janie feels her indi­vid­u­al­i­ty sti­fled by Joe’s expec­ta­tions, man­i­fest­ing in her inter­nal strug­gle against his con­trol, par­tic­u­lar­ly around the issue of her hair, which he insists she keeps hid­den.

    As events take their course, Matt’s search for his mule and the community’s rev­el­ry cul­mi­nate in an absurd spec­ta­cle sur­round­ing the mule’s even­tu­al demise, lead­ing Joe to buy the ani­mal and declare it free. This act, while seem­ing­ly noble, reflects Joe’s need for admi­ra­tion from Janie and the towns­folk. The episode relieves some ten­sion in the town, but Janie con­tin­ues to wres­tle with her own sim­mer­ing dis­sat­is­fac­tion regard­ing her mar­i­tal life with Joe, who resorts to pro­vid­ing for the com­mu­ni­ty but simul­ta­ne­ous­ly belit­tles and con­trols her.

    Through these inter­ac­tions, the nov­el deft­ly high­lights the themes of pow­er, gen­der roles, and social dynam­ics in a small all-Black com­mu­ni­ty, encap­su­lat­ing Janie’s grad­u­al­ly bold char­ac­ter amidst the con­de­scend­ing treat­ment she receives from Joe and neigh­bor­ing men .

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In Chap­ter 6 of “1984,” Win­ston finds him­self at the Chest­nut Tree Cafe, a place char­ac­ter­ized by empti­ness and the per­va­sive pres­ence of Big Broth­er, sym­bol­ized through a loom­ing por­trait on the wall. As he sits alone, gaz­ing into a glass of Vic­to­ry Gin, he reflects on the dis­qui­et­ing sit­u­a­tion of Ocea­ni­a’s war with Eura­sia, par­tic­u­lar­ly the threat to Cen­tral Africa, which stirs a mix of excite­ment and dread with­in him.

    Win­ston is aware of the impor­tance of the announce­ment antic­i­pat­ed from the Min­istry of Plen­ty, which may sig­nal sig­nif­i­cant news regard­ing the war. While mulling over a chess prob­lem, he mus­es about the per­pet­u­al con­flict between good and evil rep­re­sent­ed in his chess game: “White always mates,” sug­gest­ing that luck or fate will favor their side. Mean­while, his phys­i­cal appear­ance has dete­ri­o­rat­ed since his release from the Min­istry of Love, but he has grown accus­tomed to his cur­rent lifestyle. The inces­sant flow of gin pro­vides him with a form of escape, and life at the cafe has become a monot­o­nous rou­tine, devoid of mean­ing­ful engage­ment.

    The nar­ra­tive shifts when Win­ston has a brief encounter with Julia in the park. Despite the cold weath­er and her evi­dent phys­i­cal changes, their inter­ac­tion reveals a shared betrayal—each con­fess­ing they had suc­cumbed to the Par­ty’s pres­sures. Their dia­logue reflects a pro­found sense of loss as they grap­ple with the psy­cho­log­i­cal toll of their expe­ri­ences under the regime. Ulti­mate­ly, their con­ver­sa­tion is charged with an unset­tling sense of res­ig­na­tion, acknowl­edg­ing that self-preser­va­tion took prece­dence over their bonds.

    As Win­ston drifts back into the cafe, he is abrupt­ly jolt­ed by the announce­ment of a vic­to­ry against Eura­sia. The news caus­es a nation­al euphor­ic response, height­en­ing the atmos­phere with­in the cafe. How­ev­er, Win­ston’s emo­tions are complex—while he rec­og­nizes the pow­er­ful pro­pa­gan­da at play, his per­son­al lib­er­a­tion from self-doubt man­i­fests in a chill­ing accep­tance of the Par­ty’s total­i­tar­i­an con­trol. The chap­ter con­cludes with Win­ston suc­cumb­ing to his feel­ings of love for Big Broth­er, embody­ing a ter­ri­fy­ing accep­tance of his real­i­ty and the Par­ty’s ide­ol­o­gy, mark­ing his psy­cho­log­i­cal defeat and the stark trans­for­ma­tion of his char­ac­ter.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In Chap­ter 6 of *1984*, Win­ston Smith expe­ri­ences a piv­otal moment that he has been antic­i­pat­ing through­out his life. While walk­ing through the Min­istry, he sud­den­ly becomes aware of some­one fol­low­ing him and dis­cov­ers it is O’Brien. This encounter fills him with an over­whelm­ing impulse to flee, a stark con­trast to O’Brien’s friend­ly demeanor as he approach­es Win­ston.

    O’Brien ini­ti­ates con­ver­sa­tion about Win­ston’s work with Newspeak, spark­ing an imme­di­ate con­nec­tion between them. Despite Winston’s mod­esty about his knowl­edge of the lan­guage, O’Brien elo­quent­ly prais­es his arti­cles. This dis­cus­sion serves as a cod­ed mes­sage, hint­ing that they are both engaged in a shared dis­sent against the Par­ty, espe­cial­ly as O’Brien casu­al­ly ref­er­ences Syme, an unper­son who has been vapor­ized.

    As their con­ver­sa­tion con­tin­ues, O’Brien men­tions the forth­com­ing tenth edi­tion of the Newspeak Dic­tio­nary, sug­gest­ing they dis­cuss it fur­ther at his home. He writes down his address, a seem­ing­ly inno­cent act that car­ries sig­nif­i­cant weight, espe­cial­ly in a soci­ety where such infor­ma­tion is metic­u­lous­ly con­cealed. O’Brien hands the paper to Win­ston, who mem­o­rizes it before dis­card­ing it into the mem­o­ry hole, an act laden with fore­bod­ing.

    The exchange lasts only min­utes, yet the impli­ca­tions are pro­found. It sig­nals to Win­ston that the con­spir­a­cy he yearned for actu­al­ly exists, mark­ing his entry into a realm of resis­tance against the total­i­tar­i­an regime. He antic­i­pates a sum­mons from O’Brien, rec­og­niz­ing it as the cul­mi­na­tion of a grad­ual jour­ney from clan­des­tine thoughts to covert actions. This unveil­ing of pos­si­bil­i­ty offers both exhil­a­rat­ing hope and ter­ri­fy­ing dread; it brings Win­ston clos­er to a final reck­on­ing and the suf­fo­cat­ing aware­ness of his inevitable fate in the Min­istry of Love. Yet, there remains an unset­tling thrill in the knowl­edge that he is not alone in his rebel­lion against author­i­tar­i­an­ism.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In Chap­ter 6 of “1984,” Win­ston reflects on his tur­bu­lent mem­o­ries while writ­ing in his diary. He recalls a sig­nif­i­cant encounter from three years pri­or: a woman in heavy make­up stood beneath a dim street lamp, a strik­ing con­trast to the drab­ness of Par­ty norms, which dis­cour­aged women from wear­ing cos­met­ics. The mem­o­ry stirs a mix of desire and frus­tra­tion with­in him, lead­ing Win­ston to con­front intense feel­ings of guilt and shame about his rem­i­nis­cence.

    He grap­ples with the oppres­sive con­trol of his emo­tions by the Par­ty, acknowl­edg­ing that the true dan­ger lies with­in him­self and his ner­vous sys­tem, which can betray him at any moment. He reflects on a pre­vi­ous dichoto­my of emo­tions expe­ri­enced when wit­ness­ing a fel­low Par­ty mem­ber suf­fer­ing from an invol­un­tary facial spasm, real­iz­ing that such reac­tions sig­ni­fy the over­whelm­ing stress imposed by the Par­ty’s suf­fo­cat­ing regime.

    As he writes about the woman he met, his thoughts drift to Katharine, his wife. Win­ston reflects on their mar­riage, which was devoid of love or inti­ma­cy. The Par­ty’s ide­ol­o­gy not only pro­hibits adul­tery but also seeks to strip away the joy from sex­u­al rela­tion­ships alto­geth­er. Mar­riages must be sanc­tioned by a com­mit­tee, and sex­u­al rela­tions are treat­ed as a chore dic­tat­ed by duty to the Par­ty, pri­mar­i­ly aimed at pro­cre­ation rather than plea­sure. Katharine, whom he remem­bers as emo­tion­al­ly vacant and almost robot­ic, sym­bol­izes the Par­ty’s suc­cess in erad­i­cat­ing nat­ur­al desire.

    Win­ston’s mem­o­ries of his fleet­ing encounter with the woman evolve into a rep­re­sen­ta­tion of his long­ing for gen­uine con­nec­tion and rebel­lion against the Par­ty’s stric­tures. Yet, when he even­tu­al­ly encoun­ters the woman again in the light, he is struck by her age and appear­ance, which con­trast stark­ly with his ear­li­er fan­tasies. Despite her the reveal and her phys­i­cal decline, he goes through with the act regard­less, empha­siz­ing his despair and des­per­a­tion. He con­cludes the chap­ter feel­ing over­whelmed and still haunt­ed by the com­pul­sions that the Par­ty has instilled in him, sig­ni­fy­ing his pro­found inner con­flict and the indomitable desire for free­dom.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In Chap­ter 6, titled “The Art Thief,” the nar­ra­tive unfolds with Breitwieser’s impul­sive act of theft at a muse­um, where he steals a pis­tol that ignites a mix of ter­ror and exhil­a­ra­tion. Despite their reck­less behav­ior, he and his accom­plice, Anne-Cather­ine, escape with­out a hitch, dri­ving past pic­turesque Alsace land­scapes, grap­pling with a blend of pan­ic and pride when they real­ize that no police have come to inves­ti­gate. Over the fol­low­ing weeks, Breitwieser’s ini­tial fear melts into a sense of relief, and even­tu­al­ly a grow­ing sat­is­fac­tion with their auda­cious crime. The stolen pis­tol becomes a cher­ished object, almost an obses­sion for him, as he expe­ri­ences an intense joy.

    Bre­itwieser recalls a child­hood vis­it to a medieval muse­um and hatch­es a plan to steal a cross­bow he had long cov­et­ed. Return­ing with Anne-Cather­ine to the loca­tion, they exploit the numer­ous hid­den cor­ners of the chilly cas­tle, which har­bors min­i­mal vis­i­tors dur­ing win­ter. Aware of their pre­car­i­ous sit­u­a­tion, Bre­itwieser clev­er­ly finds a way to reach the cross­bow, despite it being sus­pend­ed too high. Using a chair to assist him, he and Anne-Cather­ine keep an eye out for guards while he secures the prize, but real­izes it’s too large to sim­ply con­ceal in their bags.

    Instead, he devis­es an alter­na­tive escape: he opens a win­dow to low­er the cross­bow to the ground, tim­ing their exit to avoid detec­tion. After the theft, they are met with the thrill of dan­ger and suc­cess when a local news­pa­per reports on the crime, yet fails to con­nect it to them. The arti­cle fuels their pride, prompt­ing them to com­mem­o­rate their sec­ond suc­cess­ful heist in a scrap­book.

    Amid the back­drop of his par­ents’ divorce, Bre­itwieser and Anne-Cather­ine find refuge and free­dom in an attic pro­vid­ed by his moth­er, who is some­what obliv­i­ous to their illic­it activ­i­ties. The cou­ple allows their new lifestyle to flour­ish, eschew­ing mun­dane fur­ni­ture for a lav­ish four-poster bed and start­ing a col­lec­tion of stolen arti­facts that echo their ambi­tions of cre­at­ing an aris­to­crat­ic aes­thet­ic rem­i­nis­cent of the Lou­vre. Over­all, the chap­ter cap­tures the thrill of crime inter­wo­ven with per­son­al mile­stones, show­cas­ing a com­plex rela­tion­ship dri­ven by both love and theft.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In this chap­ter of “The Last One at the Wed­ding,” Frank Sza­tows­ki arrives at Bea­con Tow­er to vis­it his daugh­ter, Mag­gie. Pack­ing only an overnight bag in hopes of a warm reunion, his expec­ta­tions feel mis­guid­ed. As he enters the lob­by, he is greet­ed pleas­ant­ly by Olivia, the recep­tion­ist, and he moves to the pent­house where Mag­gie awaits, daz­zling in a new gown. How­ev­er, he imme­di­ate­ly sens­es a change in the atmos­phere, per­ceiv­ing that friends like Errol Gard­ner and Ger­ry Levin­son have gath­ered for a more pres­sur­ized con­ver­sa­tion than he antic­i­pat­ed.

    Mag­gie intro­duces Frank to her guests, pre­sent­ing a facade of nor­mal­cy, despite evi­dent ten­sions run­ning beneath the sur­face. The group hints at com­pli­cat­ed, unset­tling mat­ters regard­ing a map Frank had found and brought with him; it seems the map holds secrets that could impact their lives. Con­ver­sa­tion turns and con­firms sus­pi­cions that Frank’s fam­i­ly ties bind them all in a shared dilem­ma cen­tered on a young girl named Abi­gail Grimm—who was inci­den­tal­ly the one to dis­cov­er the map. The adults express con­cern about her safe­ty, reveal­ing that the dis­cov­ery of this infor­ma­tion could have seri­ous con­se­quences.

    As ten­sions rise among the group, Frank attempts to pro­tect Abi­gail, assert­ing the need for her safe­ty, but grap­pling with his inad­e­qua­cy as a father to Mag­gie. Amidst the increas­ing pres­sure, Frank real­izes he has inad­ver­tent­ly become entan­gled in dan­ger­ous dynam­ics, as Mag­gie seems resigned to the neces­si­ty of a harsh deci­sion regard­ing Abi­gail’s fate.

    In a des­per­ate move, Frank com­mu­ni­cates with his sis­ter Tam­my to warn her, urg­ing her to evac­u­ate Abi­gail from their home. While the sit­u­a­tion spi­rals, Frank’s emo­tions surge, con­front­ed by regret and the rapid unfold­ing dan­ger around him. He recalls Mag­gie’s child­hood inno­cence, ampli­fy­ing the painful recog­ni­tion of their strained rela­tion­ship. Ulti­mate­ly, when con­flict erupts dur­ing a high-stakes moment, Frank seizes an oppor­tu­ni­ty to escape, tear­ing through the build­ing’s stair­well amidst chaos.

    As Frank push­es out­side, he expe­ri­ences an array of over­whelm­ing feelings—the sirens and con­fu­sion envel­op him. The chap­ter cul­mi­nates with Frank evad­ing cap­ture, leav­ing him both phys­i­cal­ly sep­a­rat­ed from his daugh­ter and emo­tion­al­ly dis­tanced from the fam­i­ly struc­ture he des­per­ate­ly wish­es to pro­tect.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In the after­math of a trag­ic wed­ding, the cater­ing staff hur­ried­ly cleared the venue, encour­ag­ing guests to take home cen­ter­pieces as they sought to end the event and allow the fam­i­ly to grieve pri­vate­ly. Guests whis­pered about the cir­cum­stances sur­round­ing Aidan’s death, often refer­ring to it as “a ter­ri­ble acci­dent.” While pre­tend­ing to express con­do­lences, they exchanged thoughts on Aidan’s trou­bled life, includ­ing his his­to­ry of ther­a­py and loss, reveal­ing their judg­ments rather than gen­uine empa­thy.

    Frank, still in his tuxe­do, observed the depart­ing guests who avoid­ed eye con­tact, real­iz­ing that words failed to cap­ture the grav­i­ty of the sit­u­a­tion. One man, Arman­do Cas­ta­do, approached Frank with a busi­ness card and an offer to lis­ten any­time, to which Frank felt grate­ful yet resis­tant. He wor­ried about his daugh­ter, Mar­garet, who griev­ed away from him.

    Recall­ing the hor­ri­fy­ing moment after the gun­shot, Frank vivid­ly described the base­ment where Aidan lay life­less, a scene burned into his mem­o­ry. He attempt­ed to call for help, but Hugo, a com­pan­ion, aggres­sive­ly pre­vent­ed him, ensur­ing silence in light of the sit­u­a­tion. When Hugo deemed it safe for oth­ers to enter, Errol and Ger­ry, both unsym­pa­thet­ic, con­front­ed the after­math with a chill­ing detach­ment, brain­storm­ing how to han­dle the fall­out while Frank clam­ored for answers regard­ing his own safe­ty in light of their actions.

    Ger­ry out­lined a cov­er sto­ry: Aidan missed the wed­ding, and they found him deceased, ensur­ing no blame fell on any of them. Ten­sion rose as Frank ques­tioned the moral­i­ty behind their planned deceit. He could see how they avoid­ed account­abil­i­ty for their actions, lead­ing to Aidan’s trag­ic end.

    Amid the chill­ing exchange, Errol casu­al­ly men­tioned his estrange­ment from Aidan, reveal­ing he had tak­en a DNA test years prior—confirming that Aidan wasn’t his bio­log­i­cal son. Errol showed lit­tle remorse, argu­ing he had finan­cial­ly sup­port­ed Aidan but neglect­ed emo­tion­al ties, fail­ing to explain his rejec­tion. As their con­ver­sa­tion con­clud­ed, Frank felt a pro­found real­iza­tion that Mag­gie was free of her ties to the fam­i­ly, reflect­ing his own intent to leave Osprey Cove behind, mir­ror­ing Aidan’s sev­ered con­nec­tions as he processed the haunt­ing and com­plex after­math of the wed­ding.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In this chap­ter of “The Last One at the Wed­ding,” Frank Sza­tows­ki returns to Black­bird cot­tage to find his sis­ter Tam­my and niece Abi­gail gear­ing up for a hike amid the chaot­ic after­math of a recent tragedy involv­ing Gwen­dolyn, a girl who was dis­cov­ered dead. While Tam­my insists that they must move for­ward and par­tic­i­pate in the event, Frank feels over­whelmed and opts to stay behind for some much-need­ed rest. Watch­ing them leave, he pre­pares a quick snack, hop­ing to avoid fur­ther encoun­ters with the hik­ing group.

    Frank decides to take a qui­eter route back to the beach, where he dis­cov­ers Gwen­dolyn’s body had been dragged ashore. The atmos­phere is tense, the pre­vi­ous chaos sub­sided, leav­ing only vague reminders of the tragedy. Reach­ing the entrance of the camp, he encoun­ters Hugo, who is cheer­ful and offers help in get­ting Frank’s car. Despite Frank’s insis­tence that he can man­age, Hugo promis­es to arrange for the Jeep­’s deliv­ery, main­tain­ing a bright demeanor about the sit­u­a­tion.

    As they chat, Hugo divulges that he runs the camp year-round, deal­ing with var­i­ous main­te­nance issues. The two briefly dis­cuss Aidan Gardner’s reluc­tance to vis­it the camp, with Hugo hint­ing that Aidan is con­sumed with work in Boston. Soon after, Frank is reunit­ed with his vehi­cle and heads into town.

    Arriv­ing at a restau­rant, Frank maneu­vers through the area, even­tu­al­ly lead­ing to a wood­ed path where he seeks out Brody Tag­gart, hop­ing for answers about Gwen­dolyn’s death. As he approach­es Brody’s home, he hears a dog bark­ing. To his sur­prise, Brody emerges with an AR-15, threat­en­ing Frank from the porch. Frank tries to con­vey the urgency of his vis­it, reveal­ing Gwendolyn’s trag­ic demise. After a tense moment, Brody’s sis­ter Lin­da joins them, reveal­ing a more hos­pitable side.

    Lin­da and Frank begin to dis­cuss Dawn, her daugh­ter, as they delve into the nature of her rela­tion­ship with Aidan Gard­ner. Lin­da reveals her con­cerns about “Gard­ner Stan­dard Time,” manip­u­lat­ed real­i­ties cre­at­ed by Aidan and his fam­i­ly. She explains Dawn’s unsteady rela­tion­ship his­to­ry with Aidan, which is more com­pli­cat­ed than it appears.

    As the con­ver­sa­tion unfolds, Lin­da shares alarm­ing details about Dawn’s last days, includ­ing a preg­nan­cy test she dis­cov­ered and a con­cern­ing phone call from her daugh­ter before her dis­ap­pear­ance. The chap­ter con­cludes with a sense of dread and sus­pi­cion, as Lin­da express­es out­right dis­be­lief in the police’s han­dling of the inves­ti­ga­tion and hints that they might have cov­ered up cru­cial evi­dence sur­round­ing her daughter’s fate. The ten­sion esca­lates, leav­ing Frank inti­mate­ly aware of the dan­gers sur­round­ing his own daugh­ter, Mag­gie, as the pieces of an unset­tling mys­tery begin to reveal them­selves.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In the chap­ter “The Last One at the Wed­ding,” the nar­ra­tor reflects on the events dur­ing a wed­ding week­end, begin­ning with a chaot­ic lunch involv­ing Abi­gail, the nar­ra­tor’s sis­ter. Unfazed in her food-con­sum­ing fren­zy, Abi­gail finds her­self over­whelmed, lead­ing to a mess that the nar­ra­tor, Frankie, pre­dicts. This behav­ior sparks a debate between Frankie and Tam­my, where Tam­my express­es frus­tra­tion at Frankie’s irri­ta­ble demeanor. Fol­low­ing the lunch deba­cle, ten­sions ease when they head upstairs to unpack.

    Frankie describes their accom­mo­da­tions at a lav­ish venue and express­es delight at the spa­cious mas­ter suite which fea­tures a king-size bed, a pri­vate bath­room, a large flat-screen TV, and a bal­cony with a view of Lake Wyn­d­ham. Mean­while, Tam­my is in a sim­i­lar­ly grand suite next door, and Abi­gail occu­pies a whim­si­cal room adorned with nau­ti­cal themes, express­ing her excite­ment over the bunk beds.

    As Frankie unpacks, they note an event sched­ule for the wed­ding week­end, which high­lights var­i­ous activ­i­ties includ­ing a wel­come din­ner, a group hike, and the main wed­ding event, mak­ing it sound both engag­ing and intim­i­dat­ing. Feel­ing anx­ious, par­tic­u­lar­ly about meet­ing the Gard­ners, Frankie opts not to explore and instead focus­es on craft­ing a toast for Mag­gie, the bride.

    Despite attempts to per­fect the toast, Frankie strug­gles with self-doubt and finds it chal­leng­ing to artic­u­late gen­uine sen­ti­ments with­out sound­ing cheesy. Instead of giv­ing into frus­tra­tion, they reach out to Vicky, a friend, for help. She encour­ages Frankie, promis­ing to review the toast and pro­vide con­struc­tive feed­back, alle­vi­at­ing some of the pres­sure. As they send the toast to Vicky, a sud­den scream from Abi­gail sig­nals that all is still not calm in their event­ful week­end .

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    At sev­en o’clock, Lucia served an elab­o­rate meal, pre­sent­ing var­i­ous cours­es that high­light­ed veg­eta­bles, as Mag­gie and Aidan were on a veg­an diet. The meal fea­tured unique fla­vors from mush­rooms, egg­plants, and roast­ed squash, which sur­pris­ing­ly filled me up after sev­er­al cours­es. I com­pli­ment­ed Lucia on her cook­ing abil­i­ties, express­ing that I could eas­i­ly become a veg­an if she cooked for me reg­u­lar­ly. Mag­gie dom­i­nat­ed the con­ver­sa­tion, show­cas­ing her impres­sive engage­ment ring, a pear-cut dia­mond that was a fam­i­ly heir­loom from Aidan’s grand­moth­er. She enthu­si­as­ti­cal­ly described their wed­ding plans, empha­siz­ing a rus­tic and coun­try-style recep­tion. Through­out this, Aidan remained most­ly silent, a demeanor I not­ed as he seemed con­tent to let Mag­gie take the lead.

    When I inquired about their hon­ey­moon plans, Aidan men­tioned they were unde­cid­ed. I shared fond mem­o­ries of my own hon­ey­moon cruise, but real­ized I had lost Maggie’s atten­tion as she checked her Apple Watch, which kept ping­ing. She abrupt­ly excused her­self to take a call for work, a moment that show­cased her com­mit­ment to her job. Though I tried to engage Aidan fur­ther about his life, his answers remained brief, lead­ing to an awk­ward silence between us.

    Upon Maggie’s return, I sensed unease when I urged her to share some “good news,” but she hes­i­tat­ed. It soon became clear that her big announce­ment involved a sig­nif­i­cant pro­mo­tion relat­ed to a new divi­sion at her com­pa­ny, Capac­i­ti, which aimed to advance all-elec­tric air trav­el. The prospect of work­ing with high-pro­file fig­ures like Arman­do Cas­ta­do from UPS amazed me. Mag­gie shared that the dis­cus­sions were promis­ing, indi­cat­ing a bright future ahead. Over­come with emo­tion, I hugged her while pro­cess­ing this life-chang­ing news at the table.

    As the evening end­ed, Mag­gie offered to box left­overs while I head­ed to the bath­room. There, I encoun­tered an over­sized set­up filled with lux­u­ri­ous beau­ty prod­ucts. After wash­ing my hands, I noticed a run­ning toi­let, prompt­ing me to inves­ti­gate. I quick­ly iden­ti­fied and fixed the issue, only to dis­cov­er a black plas­tic bag taped beneath the toi­let lid, which piqued my curios­i­ty just as Mag­gie came knock­ing, inquir­ing about my well-being.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In Chap­ter 6, the nar­ra­tive begins with a dream­like encounter with a mys­te­ri­ous char­ac­ter named Cuné­gonde, who con­veys a crit­i­cal per­spec­tive on hope and free­dom. The pro­tag­o­nist is in a serene val­ley, reflect­ing on the absence of his fam­i­ly and con­vinced that he will find them. Cuné­gonde chal­lenges his notions, sug­gest­ing that hope is mere­ly an illu­sion and that he is, in fact, a mort­gaged property—owned by the bank like a farm or a house. She empha­sizes that despite the pres­ence of a war that might fore­stall slav­ery, free­dom remains elu­sive.

    The dream abrupt­ly shifts to real­i­ty when the pro­tag­o­nist is awak­ened by Katie, who warns him to hide as the over­seer, Hop­kins, approach­es. Katie’s fear is pal­pa­ble as she instructs him to con­ceal him­self behind a bar­rel in the cor­ner. When Hop­kins enters, he fix­ates on Katie, degrad­ing her while mak­ing demands that high­light the oppres­sive and vio­lent con­di­tions of their exis­tence. The scene esca­lates as Hop­kins abus­es Katie, dri­ving the pro­tag­o­nist into a fury, imag­in­ing retal­i­at­ing to save her but refrain­ing due to the severe con­se­quences such actions could pre­cip­i­tate for all enslaved peo­ple.

    After Hop­kins leaves, the pro­tag­o­nist emerges from hid­ing, qui­et­ly reflect­ing on their shared plight. Soon, Cot­ton enters the shack, instant­ly sens­ing the ten­sion but not under­stand­ing its cause. The pro­tag­o­nist decides to leave for Jack­son Island, where he knows he can lay low and fish while await­ing news from Huck regard­ing his fam­i­ly. He feels guilt for hav­ing endan­gered Katie and Cot­ton and is deter­mined to pro­tect them from the reper­cus­sions of his pres­ence.

    As night falls, he swims across the riv­er and set­tles on the sandy beach to rest, avoid­ing risky tra­vers­es through altered ter­rain. At dawn, he finds a cat­fish, effec­tive­ly sus­tain­ing him­self as he nav­i­gates to locate a cave where he can remain hid­den and wait, with only the weight of his pencil—a sym­bol of his endurance—accompanying him through this pre­car­i­ous time.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In Chap­ter 6, the sto­ry opens with the pro­tag­o­nist awak­en­ing to find Sam­my and Nor­man beside him, shar­ing hard­tack. The atmos­phere is tense, as they are acute­ly aware of their pre­car­i­ous sit­u­a­tion. The char­ac­ters dis­cuss their sur­round­ings, not­ing the absence of famil­iar sounds that would sig­ni­fy safe­ty. Sam­my asserts that they must move to evade cap­ture, indica­tive of their under­stand­ing of their cur­rent sta­tus as slaves. This dis­cus­sion rais­es poignant ques­tions about iden­ti­ty and choice in the face of sys­temic oppres­sion.

    As night falls, they head towards the Mis­sis­sip­pi Riv­er, still grap­pling with their sense of place and free­dom. The riv­er sym­bol­izes both a bar­ri­er and a poten­tial route to lib­er­a­tion. Sam­my reveals that she has nev­er seen the riv­er up close, under­scor­ing the con­fines imposed on her life. Plans to cross the riv­er mate­ri­al­ize but face a logis­ti­cal challenge—none can swim. The urgency of their escape is cou­pled with the real­iza­tion that fail­ure could lead to recap­ture.

    In the process of gath­er­ing mate­ri­als to make a raft, they con­front the harsh real­i­ties of their sit­u­a­tion. Sam­my reveals her trau­mat­ic past and ongo­ing vic­tim­iza­tion, stir­ring feel­ings of rage and pro­tec­tive­ness in the pro­tag­o­nist. While wait­ing for Nor­man, they pon­der their fates and the expec­ta­tions of being free ver­sus being enslaved.

    When Nor­man returns with news of dan­ger, they scram­ble to put their plan into action, result­ing in a har­row­ing escape attempt. As they push their makeshift raft into the water, the sit­u­a­tion esca­lates when they are shot at by their pur­suers. Chaos ensues as they fight against the cur­rent and the threat of drown­ing while simul­ta­ne­ous­ly evad­ing cap­ture.

    Through a series of emer­gent actions, the group remains con­nect­ed amidst the chaos, high­light­ing themes of sol­i­dar­i­ty and urgency in the face of vio­lence. Trag­i­cal­ly, Sam­my is grave­ly injured dur­ing the encounter, lead­ing to a poignant moment of grief when they acknowl­edge her death. The chap­ter clos­es with Nor­man and the pro­tag­o­nist deal­ing with the real­i­ty of bury­ing Sam­my, reflect­ing on her life and the inevitabil­i­ties of their exis­tence tied to the riv­er. Their dis­cus­sion reveals the grind­ing weight of despair and the des­per­ate hope of being free once more.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In Chap­ter 6, the pro­tag­o­nist, Jim, grap­ples with the effects of a snakebite, feel­ing dis­ori­ent­ed and ill. His phys­i­cal state dete­ri­o­rates, and he expe­ri­ences fever­ish delir­i­um, oscil­lat­ing between con­scious­ness and fever dreams. His visions bring him to var­i­ous mem­o­ries, includ­ing moments in Judge Thatch­er’s library, where he reflects on the com­plex­i­ties of read­ing and the impli­ca­tions of edu­ca­tion for a slave. This inner tur­moil is ampli­fied by hal­lu­ci­na­tions involv­ing Voltaire, who engages Jim in a philo­soph­i­cal dis­course about equal­i­ty and human nature.

    Voltaire argues that while all men are the­o­ret­i­cal­ly equal, dif­fer­ing cli­mates and biol­o­gy cre­ate hur­dles to achiev­ing that equal­i­ty. He pro­pos­es that African indi­vid­u­als could be trained to attain the same skills and man­ners as Euro­peans, indi­cat­ing that social and cul­tur­al pres­sures dis­tort nat­ur­al lib­er­ties into civ­il lib­er­ties. Jim, influ­enced by the fever’s delir­i­um, chal­lenges Voltaire’s notions, express­ing dis­dain for the reduc­tion of his iden­ti­ty to mere capac­i­ty for change.

    As Huck arrives, Jim regains some clar­i­ty and acknowl­edges his ill­ness, but Huck­’s ques­tions reveal the incon­gruity between his fever­ish dreams and real­i­ty. Jim wor­ries about his uncon­scious mut­ter­ings, fear­ing Huck may have over­heard thoughts that are unfil­tered by soci­etal norms. The chap­ter delves into themes of race, iden­ti­ty, and the strug­gle for self-def­i­n­i­tion with­in the oppres­sive frame­work of slav­ery.

    Ulti­mate­ly, despite feel­ing bet­ter, Jim remains painful­ly aware of his vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty and the com­plex­i­ties of self-advo­ca­cy in a world that denies him agency. As Huck fetch­es food and tends to the fire, Jim is left bat­tling his phys­i­cal weak­ness and the philo­soph­i­cal weight of his dia­logue with Voltaire, con­tem­plat­ing the nature of free­dom and dig­ni­ty amidst his oppres­sive real­i­ty. The ten­sion between hope and despair in Jim’s sit­u­a­tion high­lights the deep emo­tion­al and men­tal chal­lenges faced by enslaved indi­vid­u­als.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In Chap­ter 6 of “We Solve Mur­ders,” we delve into Felic­i­ty Woollaston’s world as a sea­soned busi­ness­woman who has nav­i­gat­ed sig­nif­i­cant changes in her pro­fes­sion­al envi­ron­ment. Despite a recent influx of clients that have revi­tal­ized her career, she remains in her mod­est office above a trav­el agency on Letch­worth Gar­den City’s High Street—a set­up she has main­tained for near­ly forty years. Felic­i­ty is accus­tomed to work­ing alone, often assum­ing the roles of both busi­ness own­er and recep­tion­ist. Although she rec­og­nizes the need for staff, her long­stand­ing pref­er­ence for inde­pen­dence has made her hes­i­tant.

    As she gazes out her win­dow, Felic­i­ty observes the mun­dane activ­i­ties of passersby—a mobil­i­ty scoot­er user, a smok­ing teenag­er, and a man in a suit engaged in a phone con­ver­sa­tion, whom she sus­pects is dis­hon­est. Recent changes in the enter­tain­ment indus­try have sparked a client shift that Felic­i­ty did not antic­i­pate. Many of her for­mer clients are no longer active due to cir­cum­stances such as health issues or con­tro­ver­sies. Nev­er­the­less, a chance meet­ing with a woman in a green trouser suit intro­duced her to the world of “influ­encers” and “brand man­age­ment,” which led to her rebrand­ing from Felic­i­ty Wool­las­ton Asso­ciates to Vivid Viral Media Agency.

    Felic­i­ty is bemused yet intrigued by this new land­scape where her name is still revered, even as invoic­es for var­i­ous dig­i­tal ser­vices flood her office. Despite her shaky under­stand­ing of the mod­ern mar­ket, she enjoys a com­fort­able income and finds plea­sure in sim­ple tasks, like deliv­er­ing pack­ages to the post office adja­cent to her favorite cof­fee shop.

    She grap­ples with the rem­nants of her social cir­cle, hav­ing lost her hus­band and accoun­tant, while remain­ing in touch with a small group of clients. This chap­ter reflects her strug­gle to adapt to the bur­geon­ing dig­i­tal world as she con­tin­ues to book oppor­tu­ni­ties for her clients, such as appear­ances on tele­vi­sion shows and social media plat­forms. Although her office remains clut­tered with new-age prod­ucts and free gifts, Felic­i­ty’s core remains unchanged; her pri­or­i­ty is still to sup­port her clients, and she con­tem­plates what her lunch will be, a throw­back to sim­pler times amidst the con­fu­sion of moder­ni­ty.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In Chap­ter 6 of “All the Col­ors of the Dark,” Saint spends an anx­ious hour in the woods sur­round­ing her home, search­ing for her miss­ing bees, hop­ing they’ve mere­ly relo­cat­ed rather than been lost or harmed. As she emerges on Main Street, her braid is slight­ly undone and sweat beads on her fore­head. She enters the small police sta­tion just as she’s about to demand action against Mr. Lewis, but her atten­tion is drawn to Misty Mey­er, who stands trem­bling before an offi­cer.

    Misty appears young, fright­ened, and out of breath, evi­dence of a recent trau­mat­ic event evi­dent from the scraped skin on her knees. As she col­laps­es, the offi­cer helps her into a chair. Con­cerned, he urges her to take a moment to breathe. Misty, how­ev­er, is fix­at­ed on the street out­side, vis­i­bly shak­en as she mur­murs that some­one “saved” her. The offi­cer tries to reas­sure her, but Misty insists on the pres­ence of a fig­ure who helped her.

    Her dis­tress only grows as she recounts her expe­ri­ence with a “pirate kid,” men­tion­ing that he con­front­ed a much larg­er man. Saint can’t help but feel a ris­ing dread as she approach­es, fueled by instinct. Misty reveals that the kid who inter­vened was Joseph Macauley, instant­ly cap­tur­ing Sain­t’s atten­tion.

    Sain­t’s small stature con­trasts with the grav­i­ty of the sit­u­a­tion as she con­tin­ues inquir­ing after Joseph’s where­abouts. The offi­cer, notic­ing her con­cern, also leans in, aware of the grav­i­ty of Misty’s words. Saint recalls her grand­fa­ther’s sud­den death, con­nect­ing the expe­ri­ence of shock to the cur­rent unfold­ing cri­sis.

    The offi­cer attempts to gath­er more infor­ma­tion while wrap­ping a jack­et around Misty, who remains silent. Saint grows increas­ing­ly fran­tic at the thought of Joseph being in dan­ger, press­ing for detailed answers. In des­per­a­tion, Misty men­tions a clear­ing near the old rail­road, prompt­ing Saint to bolt from the sta­tion, deter­mi­na­tion fuel­ing her as she rush­es toward the woods, aware that every­thing has shift­ed in that moment.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In Chap­ter 6, Phoebe wakes up in a hotel room, sur­round­ed by famil­iar scents that lead her to affirm her exis­tence. It’s ear­ly morn­ing, the par­ty atmos­phere has sub­sided, and she grap­ples with feel­ings of grief and shame that often accom­pa­ny her at this hour. Acknowl­edg­ing her painful thoughts, she resists the urge to fall into despair—especially after her recent sui­cide attempt.

    Deter­mined to take action, Phoebe thinks of small tasks to ground her­self, declar­ing she can brush her teeth or hydrate. How­ev­er, she soon finds that attempt­ing to take a bath is thwart­ed by the absence of a drain stop­per, which leads her to opt for the hotel’s hot tub instead. She pre­pares for a new expe­ri­ence, shed­ding her wed­ding ring and don­ning the plush hotel robe, inad­ver­tent­ly sym­bol­iz­ing her break from past con­straints.

    As she ven­tures down­stairs, she notices the unset­tling arrange­ment of books in the hotel lob­by, instinc­tive­ly cor­rect­ing the spines, an act of defi­ance against the mun­dan­i­ty she per­ceives. Upon reach­ing the hot tub, she enters and feels the warmth melt away her weari­ness. A hand­some man joins her, and they engage in light­heart­ed ban­ter. This unex­pect­ed con­nec­tion pro­vides her a sense of relief as they trade wit­ty remarks about their appear­ances and life expe­ri­ences.

    Their con­ver­sa­tion takes a deep­er turn when Phoebe can­did­ly reveals her strug­gles with sui­cide, not­ing the absur­di­ty of her sit­u­a­tion amid the fes­tiv­i­ties of a wed­ding. The man responds empa­thet­i­cal­ly, shar­ing his own strug­gles. Their dia­logue blends humor and heart­felt truth, turn­ing what could have been heavy into a bond­ing moment. They nav­i­gate top­ics of hon­esty, attrac­tion, and their indi­vid­ual bur­dens while stand­ing pre­car­i­ous­ly close to a thresh­old of con­nec­tion.

    Phoebe real­izes she desires inti­ma­cy, open­ly stat­ing, “I want to fuck you.” The acknowl­edg­ment of desire lays bare the rem­nants of her for­mer reser­va­tions about want­i­ng some­thing gen­uine. Their inter­ac­tion cul­mi­nates in a moment of truth that feels lib­er­at­ing for Phoebe, who enters a trans­for­ma­tive phase as she reflects on her past while savor­ing the vibrant present. Con­clud­ing the chap­ter, she retrieves *Mrs. Dal­loway* from a shelf, indi­cat­ing a shift towards a new chap­ter in her life, embody­ing her rekin­dled curios­i­ty about what lies ahead after pain and loss.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
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    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
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    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    Chap­ter Six sum­ma­rizes the pro­tag­o­nist’s new­found com­fort and sub­se­quent unease upon mov­ing from sleep­ing in their car to sleep­ing in a real bed for the first time in a long while. The cot, despite being lumpy and noisy, rep­re­sents a sig­nif­i­cant upgrade from the car, offer­ing the lux­u­ry of con­ve­nience and safety—a stark con­trast to the rest­less nights spent at rest stops, clutch­ing mace for pro­tec­tion. The relief and safe­ty the pro­tag­o­nist feels are pal­pa­ble as they describe the sim­ple plea­sure of being able to use a bath­room with­out fear and the lux­u­ry of falling asleep quick­ly in a prop­er bed.

    How­ev­er, this sense of secu­ri­ty and com­fort is short-lived. After briefly wak­ing in the mid­dle of the night, the pro­tag­o­nist expe­ri­ences a moment of pan­ic upon real­iz­ing they’re no longer in their car; this dis­rup­tion in their rou­tine brings an ini­tial fear until they recall the recent pos­i­tive changes in their life, such as accept­ing a job offer from Nina and mov­ing into a new room. The dark­ness of the night and the qui­et of their sur­round­ings bring a moment of peace that is quick­ly frag­ment­ed by the unex­pect­ed: a door that won’t open.

    This shift from com­fort to unease encap­su­lates the chap­ter’s essence, high­light­ing the pro­tag­o­nist’s strug­gle with adapt­ing to new cir­cum­stances and the fear of unfore­seen obsta­cles, sym­bol­ized by the unyield­ing door. Their attempt at nor­mal­cy and the phys­i­cal move­ment from a car to a cot in a secure room sym­bol­izes a broad­er jour­ney towards sta­bil­i­ty and safe­ty. This tran­si­tion, how­ev­er, is not with­out its chal­lenges, as indi­cat­ed by the locked door—a metaphor for the unfore­seen chal­lenges that lie ahead in their jour­ney towards a new life. The pro­tag­o­nist’s expe­ri­ences reflect a sig­nif­i­cant the­mat­ic ele­ment of change and adap­ta­tion, empha­siz­ing the com­plex­i­ties of mov­ing on from a life of uncer­tain­ty to one of rel­a­tive secu­ri­ty and the emo­tion­al and phys­i­cal adjust­ments involved in such a tran­si­tion.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    You are being pro­vid­ed with a book chap­ter by chap­ter. I will request you to read the book for me after each chap­ter. After read­ing the chap­ter, 1. short­en the chap­ter to no less than 300 words and no more than 400 words. 2. Do not change the name, address, or any impor­tant nouns in the chap­ter. 3. Do not trans­late the orig­i­nal lan­guage. 4. Keep the same style as the orig­i­nal chap­ter, keep it con­sis­tent through­out the chap­ter. Your reply must com­ply with all four require­ments, or it’s invalid.
    I will pro­vide the chap­ter now.

    CHAPTER
    6
    Rhysand had mocked me about it once—had asked me while we were
    Under the Moun­tain if forc­ing me to learn how to read would be my
    per­son­al idea of tor­ture.
    “No, thank you,” I said, grip­ping my fork to keep from chuck­ing it at his
    head.
    “You’re going to be a High Lord’s wife,” Rhys said. “You’ll be expect­ed
    to main­tain your own cor­re­spon­dences, per­haps even give a speech or two.
    And the Caul­dron knows what else he and Ianthe will deem appro­pri­ate for
    you. Make menus for din­ner par­ties, write thank-you let­ters for all those
    wed­ding gifts, embroi­der sweet phras­es on pil­lows … It’s a nec­es­sary skill.
    And, you know what? Why don’t we throw in shield­ing while we’re at it.
    Read­ing and shielding—fortunately, you can prac­tice them togeth­er.”
    “They are both nec­es­sary skills,” I said through my teeth, “but you are
    not going to teach me.”
    “What else are you going to do with your­self? Paint? How’s that going
    these days, Feyre?”
    “What the hell does it even mat­ter to you?”
    “It serves var­i­ous pur­pos­es of mine, of course.”
    “What. Pur­pos­es.”
    “You’ll have to agree to work with me to find out, I’m afraid.”
    Some­thing sharp poked into my hand.
    I’d fold­ed the fork into a tan­gle of met­al.
    When I set it down on the table, Rhys chuck­led. “Inter­est­ing.”
    “You said that last night.”
    “Am I not allowed to say it twice?”
    “That’s not what I was imply­ing and you know it.”
    His gaze raked over me again, as if he could see beneath the peach fab­ric,
    through the skin, to the shred­ded soul beneath. Then it drift­ed to the
    man­gled fork. “Has any­one ever told you that you’re rather strong for a
    High Fae?”
    “Am I?”
    “I’ll take that as a no.” He popped a piece of mel­on into his mouth.
    “Have you test­ed your­self against any­one?”
    “Why would I?” I was enough of a wreck as it was.
    “Because you were res­ur­rect­ed and reborn by the com­bined pow­ers of
    the sev­en High Lords. If I were you, I’d be curi­ous to see if any­thing else
    trans­ferred to me dur­ing that process.”
    My blood chilled. “Noth­ing else trans­ferred to me.”
    “It’d just be rather … inter­est­ing,” he smirked at the word, “if it did.”
    “It didn’t, and I’m not going to learn to read or shield with you.”
    “Why? From spite? I thought you and I got past that Under the
    Moun­tain.”
    “Don’t get me start­ed on what you did to me Under the Moun­tain.”
    Rhys went still.
    As still as I’d ever seen him, as still as the death now beck­on­ing in those
    eyes. Then his chest began to move, faster and faster.
    Across the pil­lars tow­er­ing behind him, I could have sworn the shad­ow
    of great wings spread.
    He opened his mouth, lean­ing for­ward, and then stopped. Instant­ly, the
    shad­ows, the ragged breath­ing, the inten­si­ty were gone, the lazy grin
    return­ing. “We have com­pa­ny. We’ll dis­cuss this lat­er.”
    “No, we won’t.” But quick, light foot­steps sound­ed down the hall, and
    then she appeared.
    If Rhysand was the most beau­ti­ful male I’d ever seen, she was his female
    equiv­a­lent.
    Her bright, gold­en hair was tied back in a casu­al braid, and the turquoise
    of her clothes—fashioned like my own—offset her sun-kissed skin, mak­ing
    her prac­ti­cal­ly glow in the morn­ing light.
    “Hel­lo, hel­lo,” she chirped, her full lips part­ing in a daz­zling smile as her
    rich brown eyes fixed on me.
    “Feyre,” Rhys said smooth­ly, “meet my cousin, Mor­ri­g­an. Mor, meet the
    love­ly, charm­ing, and open-mind­ed Feyre.”
    I debat­ed splash­ing my tea in his face, but Mor strode toward me. Each
    step was assured and steady, grace­ful, and … ground­ed. Mer­ry but alert.
    Some­one who didn’t need weapons—or at least both­er to sheath them at her
    side. “I’ve heard so much about you,” she said, and I got to my feet,
    awk­ward­ly jut­ting out my hand.
    She ignored it and grabbed me into a bone-crush­ing hug. She smelled
    like cit­rus and cin­na­mon. I tried to relax my taut mus­cles as she pulled
    away and grinned rather fiendish­ly. “You look like you were get­ting under
    Rhys’s skin,” she said, strut­ting to her seat between us. “Good thing I came
    along. Though I’d enjoy see­ing Rhys’s balls nailed to the wall.”
    Rhys slid incred­u­lous eyes at her, his brows lift­ing.
    I hid the smile that tugged on my lips. “It’s—nice to meet you.”
    “Liar,” Mor said, pour­ing her­self some tea and load­ing her plate. “You
    want noth­ing to do with us, do you? And wicked Rhys is mak­ing you sit
    here.”
    “You’re … perky today, Mor,” Rhys said.
    Mor’s stun­ning eyes lift­ed to her cousin’s face. “For­give me for being
    excit­ed about hav­ing com­pa­ny for once.”
    “You could be attend­ing your own duties,” he said testi­ly. I clamped my
    lips tighter togeth­er. I’d nev­er seen Rhys … irked.
    “I need­ed a break, and you told me to come here when­ev­er I liked, so
    what bet­ter time than now, when you brought my new friend to final­ly meet
    me?”
    I blinked, real­iz­ing two things at once: one, she actu­al­ly meant what she
    said; two, hers was the female voice I’d heard speak last night, mock­ing
    Rhys for our squab­ble. So, that went well, she’d teased. As if there were any
    oth­er alter­na­tive, any chance of pleas­ant­ness, where he and I were
    con­cerned.
    A new fork had appeared beside my plate, and I picked it up, only to
    spear a piece of mel­on. “You two look noth­ing alike,” I said at last.
    “Mor is my cousin in the loos­est def­i­n­i­tion,” he said. She grinned at him,
    devour­ing slices of toma­to and pale cheese. “But we were raised togeth­er.
    She’s my only sur­viv­ing fam­i­ly.”
    I didn’t have the nerve to ask what hap­pened to every­one else. Or remind
    myself whose father was respon­si­ble for the lack of fam­i­ly at my own court.
    “And as my only remain­ing rel­a­tive,” Rhys went on, “Mor believes she is
    enti­tled to breeze in and out of my life as she sees fit.”
    “So grumpy this morn­ing,” Mor said, plop­ping two muffins onto her
    plate.
    “I didn’t see you Under the Moun­tain,” I found myself say­ing, hat­ing
    those last three words more than any­thing.
    “Oh, I wasn’t there,” she said. “I was in—”
    “Enough, Mor,” he said, his voice laced with qui­et thun­der.
    It was a tri­al in itself not to sit up at the inter­rup­tion, not to study them
    too close­ly.
    Rhysand set his nap­kin on the table and rose. “Mor will be here for the
    rest of the week, but by all means, do not feel that you have to oblige her
    with your pres­ence.” Mor stuck out her tongue at him. He rolled his eyes,
    the most human ges­ture I’d ever seen him make. He exam­ined my plate.
    “Did you eat enough?” I nod­ded. “Good. Then let’s go.” He inclined his
    head toward the pil­lars and sway­ing cur­tains behind him. “Your first les­son
    awaits.”
    Mor sliced one of the muffins in two in a steady sweep of her knife. The
    angle of her fin­gers, her wrist, indeed con­firmed my sus­pi­cions that
    weapons weren’t at all for­eign to her. “If he piss­es you off, Feyre, feel free
    to shove him over the rail of the near­est bal­cony.”
    Rhys gave her a smooth, filthy ges­ture as he strode down the hall.
    I eased to my feet when he was a good dis­tance ahead. “Enjoy your
    break­fast.”
    “When­ev­er you want com­pa­ny,” she said as I edged around the table,
    “give a shout.” She prob­a­bly meant that lit­er­al­ly.
    I mere­ly nod­ded and trailed after the High Lord.
    I agreed to sit at the long, wood­en table in a cur­tained-off alcove only
    because he had a point. Not being able to read had almost cost me my life
    Under the Moun­tain. I’d be damned if I let it become a weak­ness again, his
    per­son­al agen­da or no. And as for shield­ing … I’d be a damned fool not to
    take up the offer to learn from him. The thought of any­one, espe­cial­ly Rhys,
    sift­ing through the mess in my mind, tak­ing infor­ma­tion about the Spring
    Court, about the peo­ple I loved … I’d nev­er allow it. Not will­ing­ly.
    But it didn’t make it any eas­i­er to endure Rhysand’s pres­ence at the
    wood­en table. Or the stack of books piled atop it.
    “I know my alpha­bet,” I said sharply as he laid a piece of paper in front
    of me. “I’m not that stu­pid.” I twist­ed my fin­gers in my lap, then pinned my
    rest­less hands under my thighs.
    “I didn’t say you were stu­pid,” he said. “I’m just try­ing to deter­mine
    where we should begin.” I leaned back in the cush­ioned seat. “Since you’ve
    refused to tell me a thing about how much you know.”
    My face warmed. “Can’t you hire a tutor?”
    He lift­ed a brow. “Is it that hard for you to even try in front of me?”
    “You’re a High Lord—don’t you have bet­ter things to do?”
    “Of course. But none as enjoy­able as see­ing you squirm.”
    “You’re a real bas­tard, you know that?”
    Rhys huffed a laugh. “I’ve been called worse. In fact, I think you’ve
    called me worse.” He tapped the paper in front of him. “Read that.”
    A blur of let­ters. My throat tight­ened. “I can’t.”
    “Try.”
    The sen­tence had been writ­ten in ele­gant, con­cise print. His writ­ing, no
    doubt. I tried to open my mouth, but my spine locked up. “What, exact­ly, is
    your stake in all this? You said you’d tell me if I worked with you.”
    “I didn’t spec­i­fy when I’d tell you.” I peeled back from him as my lip
    curled. He shrugged. “Maybe I resent the idea of you let­ting those
    syco­phants and war-mon­ger­ing fools in the Spring Court make you feel
    inad­e­quate. Maybe I indeed enjoy see­ing you squirm. Or maybe—”
    “I get it.”
    Rhys snort­ed. “Try to read it, Feyre.”
    Prick. I snatched the paper to me, near­ly rip­ping it in half in the process. I
    looked at the first word, sound­ing it out in my head. “Y‑you … ” The next I
    fig­ured out with a com­bi­na­tion of my silent pro­nun­ci­a­tion and log­ic. “Look
    … ”
    “Good,” he mur­mured.
    “I didn’t ask for your approval.”
    Rhys chuck­led.
    “Ab … Absolute­ly.” It took me longer than I want­ed to admit to fig­ure
    that out. The next word was even worse. “De … Del … ”
    I deigned to glance at him, brows raised.
    “Deli­cious,” he purred.
    My brows now knot­ted. I read the next two words, then whipped my face
    toward him. “You look absolute­ly deli­cious today, Feyre?! That’s what you
    wrote?”
    He leaned back in his seat. As our eyes met, sharp claws caressed my
    mind and his voice whis­pered inside my head: It’s true, isn’t it?
    I jolt­ed back, my chair groan­ing. “Stop that!”
    But those claws now dug in—and my entire body, my heart, my lungs,
    my blood yield­ed to his grip, utter­ly at his com­mand as he said, The fash­ion
    of the Night Court suits you.
    I couldn’t move in my seat, couldn’t even blink.
    This is what hap­pens when you leave your men­tal shields down. Some­one
    with my sort of pow­ers could slip inside, see what they want, and take your
    mind for them­selves. Or they could shat­ter it. I’m cur­rent­ly stand­ing on the
    thresh­old of your mind … but if I were to go deep­er, all it would take would
    be half a thought from me and who you are, your very self, would be wiped
    away.
    Dis­tant­ly, sweat slid down my tem­ple.
    You should be afraid. You should be afraid of this, and you should be
    thank­ing the gods-damned Caul­dron that in the past three months, no one
    with my sorts of gifts has run into you. Now shove me out.
    I couldn’t. Those claws were everywhere—digging into every thought,
    every piece of self. He pushed a lit­tle hard­er.
    Shove. Me. Out.
    I didn’t know where to begin. I blind­ly pushed and slammed myself into
    him, into those claws that were every­where, as if I were a top loosed in a
    cir­cle of mir­rors.
    His laugh­ter, low and soft, filled my mind, my ears. That way, Feyre.
    In answer, a lit­tle open path gleamed inside my mind. The road out.
    It’d take me for­ev­er to unhook each claw and shove the mass of his
    pres­ence out that nar­row open­ing. If I could wash it away—
    A wave. A wave of self, of me, to sweep all of him out—
    I didn’t let him see the plan take form as I ral­lied myself into a crest­ing
    wave and struck.
    The claws loosened—reluctantly. As if let­ting me win this round. He
    mere­ly said, “Good.”
    My bones, my breath and blood, they were mine again. I slumped in my
    seat.
    “Not yet,” he said. “Shield. Block me out so I can’t get back in.”
    I already want­ed to go some­where qui­et and sleep for a while—
    Claws at that out­er lay­er of my mind, stroking—
    I imag­ined a wall of adamant snap­ping down, black as night and a foot
    thick. The claws retract­ed a breath before the wall sliced them in two.
    Rhys was grin­ning. “Very nice. Blunt, but nice.”
    I couldn’t help myself. I grabbed the piece of paper and shred­ded it in
    two, then four. “You’re a pig.”
    “Oh, most def­i­nite­ly. But look at you—you read that whole sen­tence,
    kicked me out of your mind, and shield­ed. Excel­lent work.”
    “Don’t con­de­scend to me.”
    “I’m not. You’re read­ing at a lev­el far high­er than I antic­i­pat­ed.”
    That burn­ing returned to my cheeks. “But most­ly illit­er­ate.”
    “At this point, it’s about prac­tice, spelling, and more prac­tice. You could
    be read­ing nov­els by Nyn­sar. And if you keep adding to those shields, you
    might very well keep me out entire­ly by then, too.”
    Nyn­sar. It’d be the first Tam­lin and his court would cel­e­brate in near­ly
    fifty years. Ama­ran­tha had banned it on a whim, along with a few oth­er
    small, but beloved Fae hol­i­days that she had deemed unnec­es­sary. But
    Nyn­sar was months from now. “Is it even possible—to tru­ly keep you out?”
    “Not like­ly, but who knows how deep that pow­er goes? Keep prac­tic­ing
    and we’ll see what hap­pens.”
    “And will I still be bound by this bar­gain at Nyn­sar, too?”
    Silence.
    I pushed, “After—after what hap­pened—” I couldn’t men­tion specifics
    on what had occurred Under the Moun­tain, what he’d done for me dur­ing
    that fight with Ama­ran­tha, what he’d done after— “I think we can agree
    that I owe you noth­ing, and you owe me noth­ing.”
    His gaze was unflinch­ing.
    I blazed on, “Isn’t it enough that we’re all free?” I splayed my tat­tooed
    hand on the table. “By the end, I thought you were dif­fer­ent, thought that it
    was all a mask, but tak­ing me away, keep­ing me here … ” I shook my head,
    unable to find the words vicious enough, clever enough to con­vince him to
    end this bar­gain.
    His eyes dark­ened. “I’m not your ene­my, Feyre.”
    “Tam­lin says you are.” I curled the fin­gers of my tat­tooed hand into a fist.
    “Every­one else says you are.”
    “And what do you think?” He leaned back in his chair again, but his face
    was grave.
    “You’re doing a damned good job of mak­ing me agree with them.”
    “Liar,” he purred. “Did you even tell your friends about what I did to you
    Under the Moun­tain?”
    So that com­ment at break­fast had got­ten under his skin. “I don’t want to
    talk about any­thing relat­ed to that. With you or them.”
    “No, because it’s so much eas­i­er to pre­tend it nev­er hap­pened and let
    them cod­dle you.”
    “I don’t let them cod­dle me—”
    “They had you wrapped up like a present yes­ter­day. Like you were his
    reward.”
    “So?”
    “So?” A flick­er of rage, then it was gone.
    “I’m ready to be tak­en home,” I mere­ly said.
    “Where you’ll be clois­tered for the rest of your life, espe­cial­ly once you
    start punch­ing out heirs. I can’t wait to see what Ianthe does when she gets
    her hands on them.”
    “You don’t seem to have a par­tic­u­lar­ly high opin­ion of her.”
    Some­thing cold and preda­to­ry crept into his eyes. “No, I can’t say that I
    do.” He point­ed to a blank piece of paper. “Start copy­ing the alpha­bet. Until
    your let­ters are per­fect. And every time you get through a round, low­er and
    raise your shield. Until that is sec­ond nature. I’ll be back in an hour.”
    “What?”
    “Copy. The. Alpha­bet. Until—”
    “I heard what you said.” Prick. Prick, prick, prick.
    “Then get to work.” Rhys uncoiled to his feet. “And at least have the
    decen­cy to only call me a prick when your shields are back up.”
    He van­ished into a rip­ple of dark­ness before I real­ized that I’d let the
    wall of adamant fade again.
    By the time Rhys returned, my mind felt like a mud pud­dle.
    I spent the entire hour doing as I’d been ordered, though I’d flinched at
    every sound from the near­by stair­well: qui­et steps of ser­vants, the flap­ping
    of sheets being changed, some­one hum­ming a beau­ti­ful and wind­ing
    melody. And beyond that, the chat­ter of birds that dwelled in the unnat­ur­al
    warmth of the moun­tain or in the many pot­ted cit­rus trees. No sign of my
    impend­ing tor­ment. No sen­tries, even, to mon­i­tor me. I might as well have
    had the entire place to myself.
    Which was good, as my attempts to low­er and raise that men­tal shield
    often result­ed in my face being twist­ed or strained or pinched.
    “Not bad,” Rhys said, peer­ing over my shoul­der.
    He’d appeared moments before, a healthy dis­tance away, and if I hadn’t
    known bet­ter, I might have thought it was because he didn’t want to star­tle
    me. As if he’d known about the time Tam­lin had crept up behind me, and
    pan­ic had hit me so hard I’d knocked him on his ass with a punch to his
    stom­ach. I’d blocked it out—the shock on Tam’s face, how easy it had been
    to take him off his feet, the humil­i­a­tion of hav­ing my stu­pid ter­ror so out in
    the open …
    Rhys scanned the pages I’d scrib­bled on, sort­ing through them, track­ing
    my progress.
    Then, a scrape of claws inside my mind—that only sliced against black,
    glit­ter­ing adamant.
    I threw my lin­ger­ing will into that wall as the claws pushed, test­ing for
    weak spots …
    “Well, well,” Rhysand purred, those men­tal claws with­draw­ing.
    “Hope­ful­ly I’ll be get­ting a good night’s rest at last, if you can man­age to
    keep the wall up while you sleep.”
    I dropped the shield, sent a word blast­ing down that men­tal bridge
    between us, and hauled the walls back up. Behind it, my mind wob­bled like
    jel­ly. I need­ed a nap. Des­per­ate­ly.
    “Prick I might be, but look at you. Maybe we’ll get to have some fun
    with our lessons after all.”
    I was still scowl­ing at Rhys’s mus­cled back as I kept a healthy ten steps
    behind him while he led me through the halls of the main build­ing, the
    sweep­ing moun­tains and blis­ter­ing­ly blue sky the only wit­ness­es to our
    silent trek.
    I was too drained to demand where we were now going, and he didn’t
    both­er explain­ing as he led me up, up—until we entered a round cham­ber at
    the top of a tow­er.
    A cir­cu­lar table of black stone occu­pied the cen­ter, while the largest
    stretch of unin­ter­rupt­ed gray stone wall was cov­ered in a mas­sive map of
    our world. It had been marked and flagged and pinned, for what­ev­er
    rea­sons I couldn’t tell, but my gaze drift­ed to the win­dows through­out the
    room—so many that it felt utter­ly exposed, breath­able. The per­fect home, I
    sup­posed, for a High Lord blessed with wings.
    Rhys stalked to the table, where there was anoth­er map spread, fig­urines
    dot­ting its sur­face. A map of Prythian—and Hybern.
    Every court in our land had been marked, along with vil­lages and cities
    and rivers and moun­tain pass­es. Every court … but the Night Court.
    The vast, north­ern ter­ri­to­ry was utter­ly blank. Not even a moun­tain range
    had been etched in. Strange, like­ly part of some strat­e­gy I didn’t
    under­stand.
    I found Rhysand watch­ing me—his raised brows enough to make me
    shut my mouth against the form­ing ques­tion.
    “Noth­ing to ask?”
    “No.”
    A feline smirk danced on his lips, but Rhys jerked his chin toward the
    map on the wall. “What do you see?”
    “Is this some sort of way of con­vinc­ing me to embrace my read­ing
    lessons?” Indeed, I couldn’t deci­pher any of the writ­ing, only the shapes of
    things. Like the wall, its mas­sive line bisect­ing our world.
    “Tell me what you see.”
    “A world divid­ed in two.”

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    You are being pro­vid­ed with a book chap­ter by chap­ter. I will request you to read the book for me after each chap­ter. After read­ing the chap­ter, 1. short­en the chap­ter to no less than 300 words and no more than 400 words. 2. Do not change the name, address, or any impor­tant nouns in the chap­ter. 3. Do not trans­late the orig­i­nal lan­guage. 4. Keep the same style as the orig­i­nal chap­ter, keep it con­sis­tent through­out the chap­ter. Your reply must com­ply with all four require­ments, or it’s invalid.
    I will pro­vide the chap­ter now.

    M Y MOTHER HAD BEEN A cho­rus girl off Broad­way. She’d
    emi­grat­ed from Cuba with my father when she was sev­en­teen. When I
    got old­er, I found out that cho­rus girl was also a euphemism for a
    pros­ti­tute. I don’t know if she was or not. I’d like to think she wasn’t—
    not because there’s any shame in it but because I know a lit­tle bit
    about what it is to give your body to some­one when you don’t want to,
    and I hope she didn’t have to do that.
    I was eleven when she died of pneu­mo­nia. Obvi­ous­ly, I don’t have a
    lot of mem­o­ries of her, but I do remem­ber that she smelled like cheap
    vanil­la, and she made the most amaz­ing cal­do gal­lego. She nev­er called
    me Eve­lyn, only mija, which made me feel real­ly spe­cial, like I was
    hers and she was mine. Above all else, my moth­er want­ed to be a
    movie star. She real­ly thought she could get us out of there and away
    from my father by get­ting into the movies.
    I want­ed to be just like her.
    I’ve often wished that on her deathbed she’d said some­thing
    mov­ing, some­thing I could take with me always. But we didn’t know
    how sick she was until it was over. The last thing she said to me was
    Dile a tu padre que estaré en la cama. “Tell your father I’ll be in bed.”
    After she died, I would cry only in the show­er, where no one could
    see me or hear me, where I couldn’t tell what were my tears and what
    was the water. I don’t know why I did that. I just know that after a few
    months, I was able to take a show­er with­out cry­ing.
    And then, the sum­mer after she died, I began to devel­op.
    My chest start­ed grow­ing, and it wouldn’t stop. I had to rifle
    through my mom’s old things when I was twelve years old, look­ing to
    see if there was a bra that would fit. The only one I found was too
    small, but I put it on any­way.
    By the time I was thir­teen, I was five foot eight, with dark, shiny
    brown hair, long legs, light bronze skin, and a chest that pulled at the
    but­tons of my dress­es. Grown men were watch­ing me walk down the
    street, and some of the girls in my build­ing didn’t want to hang out
    with me any­more. It was a lone­ly busi­ness. Moth­er­less, with an
    abu­sive father, no friends, and a sex­u­al­i­ty in my body that my mind
    wasn’t ready for.
    The cashier at the five-and-dime on the cor­ner was this boy named
    Bil­ly. He was the six­teen-year-old broth­er of the girl who sat next to me
    in school. One Octo­ber day, I went down to the five-and-dime to buy a
    piece of can­dy, and he kissed me.
    I didn’t want him to kiss me. I pushed him away. But he held on to
    my arm.
    “Oh, come on,” he said.
    The store was emp­ty. His arms were strong. He grasped me tighter.
    And in that moment, I knew he was going to get what he want­ed from
    me whether I let him or not.
    So I had two choic­es. I could do it for free. Or I could do it for free
    can­dy.
    For the next three months, I took any­thing I want­ed from that five-
    and-dime. And in exchange, I saw him every Sat­ur­day night and let
    him take my shirt off. I nev­er felt I had much choice in the mat­ter.
    Being want­ed meant hav­ing to sat­is­fy. At least, that was my view of it
    back then.
    I remem­ber him say­ing, in the dark, cramped stock­room with my
    back against a wood­en crate, “You have this pow­er over me.”
    He’d con­vinced him­self that his want­i­ng me was my fault.
    And I believed him.
    Look what I do to these poor boys, I thought. And yet also, Here is my
    val­ue, my pow­er.
    So when he dumped me—because he was bored with me, because
    he’d found some­one else more exciting—I felt both a deep relief and a
    very real sense of fail­ure.
    There was one oth­er boy like that, whom I took my shirt off for
    because I thought I had to, before I start­ed real­iz­ing that I could be the
    one doing the choos­ing.
    I didn’t want any­one; that was the prob­lem. To be per­fect­ly blunt,
    I’d start­ed to fig­ure my body out quick­ly. I didn’t need boys in order to
    feel good. And that real­iza­tion gave me great pow­er. So I wasn’t
    inter­est­ed in any­one sex­u­al­ly. But I did want some­thing.
    I want­ed to get far away from Hell’s Kitchen.
    I want­ed out of my apart­ment, away from my father’s stale tequi­la
    breath and heavy hand. I want­ed some­one to take care of me. I want­ed
    a nice house and mon­ey. I want­ed to run, far away from my life. I
    want­ed to go where my mom had promised me we’d end up some­day.
    Here’s the thing about Hol­ly­wood. It’s both a place and a feel­ing. If
    you run there, you can run toward South­ern Cal­i­for­nia, where the sun
    always shines and the grimy build­ings and dirty side­walks are
    replaced by palm trees and orange groves. But you also run toward the
    way life is por­trayed in the movies.
    You run toward a world that is moral and just, where the good guys
    win and the bad guys lose, where the pain you face is only in an effort
    to make you stronger, so that you can win that much big­ger in the end.
    It would take me years to fig­ure out that life doesn’t get eas­i­er
    sim­ply because it gets more glam­orous. But you couldn’t have told me
    that when I was four­teen.
    So I put on my favorite green dress, the one I had just about grown
    out of. And I knocked on the door of the guy I heard was head­ed to
    Hol­ly­wood.
    I could tell just by the look on his face that Ernie Diaz was glad to
    see me.
    And that’s what I trad­ed my vir­gin­i­ty for. A ride to Hol­ly­wood.
    Ernie and I got mar­ried on Feb­ru­ary 14, 1953. I became Eve­lyn
    Diaz. I was just fif­teen by that point, but my father signed the papers. I
    have to think Ernie sus­pect­ed I wasn’t of age. But I lied right to his
    face about it, and that seemed good enough for him. He wasn’t a bad-
    look­ing guy, but he also wasn’t par­tic­u­lar­ly book-smart or charm­ing.
    He wasn’t going to get many chances to mar­ry a beau­ti­ful girl. I think
    he knew that. I think he knew enough to grab the chance when it
    swung his way.
    A few months lat­er, Ernie and I got into his ’49 Ply­mouth and drove
    west. We stayed with some friends of his as he start­ed his job as a grip.
    Pret­ty soon we had saved enough to get our own apart­ment. We were
    on Detroit Street and De Long­pre. I had some new clothes and enough
    mon­ey to make us a roast on the week­ends.
    I was sup­posed to be fin­ish­ing high school. But Ernie cer­tain­ly
    wasn’t going to be check­ing my report cards, and I knew school was a
    waste of time. I had come to Hol­ly­wood to do one thing, and I was
    going to do it.
    Instead of going to class, I would walk down to the For­mosa Cafe
    for lunch every day and stayed through hap­py hour. I had rec­og­nized
    the place from the gos­sip rags. I knew famous peo­ple hung out there.
    It was right next to a movie stu­dio.
    The red build­ing with cur­sive writ­ing and a black awning became
    my dai­ly spot. I knew it was a lame move, but it was the only one I had.
    If I want­ed to be an actress, I would have to be dis­cov­ered. And I
    wasn’t sure how you went about that, except by hang­ing around the
    spots where movie peo­ple might be.
    So I went there every day and nursed a glass of Coke.
    I did it so often and for so long that even­tu­al­ly the bar­tender got
    sick of pre­tend­ing he didn’t know what gam­ble I was run­ning.
    “Look,” he said to me about three weeks in, “if you want to sit
    around here hop­ing Humphrey Bog­a­rt shows up, that’s fine. But you
    need to make your­self use­ful. I’m not giv­ing up a pay­ing seat for you to
    sip a soda.”
    He was old­er, maybe fifty, but his hair was thick and dark. The lines
    on his fore­head remind­ed me of my father’s.
    “What do you want me to do?” I asked him.
    I was slight­ly wor­ried that he’d want some­thing from me that I had
    already giv­en to Ernie, but he threw a waiter’s pad at me and told me
    to try my hand at tak­ing orders.
    I had no clue how to be a wait­ress, but I cer­tain­ly wasn’t going to
    tell him that. “All right,” I said. “Where should I start?”
    He point­ed at the tables in the place, the booths in a tight row.
    “That’s table one. You can fig­ure out the rest of the num­bers by
    count­ing.”
    “OK,” I said. “I got it.”
    I stood up off the bar stool and start­ed walk­ing over to table two,
    where three men in suits were seat­ed, talk­ing, their menus closed.
    “Hey, kid?” the bar­tender said.
    “Yes?”
    “You’re a knock­out. Five bucks says it hap­pens for you.”
    I took ten orders, mixed up three people’s sand­wich­es, and made
    four dol­lars.
    Four months lat­er, Har­ry Cameron, then a young pro­duc­er at
    Sun­set Stu­dios, came in to meet with an exec from the lot next door.
    They each ordered a steak. When I brought the check, Har­ry looked
    up at me and said, “Jesus.”
    Two weeks lat­er, I had a deal at Sun­set Stu­dios.
      *  *  *  
    I WENT HOME and told Ernie that I was shocked that any­one at Sun­set
    Stu­dios would be inter­est­ed in lit­tle old me. I said that being an actress
    would just be a fun lark, a thing to do to pass the time until my real job
    of being a moth­er began. Grade‑A bull­shit.
    I was almost sev­en­teen by that point, although Ernie still thought I
    was old­er. It was late 1954. And I would get up every morn­ing and
    head to Sun­set Stu­dios.
    I didn’t know how to act my way out of a paper bag, but I was
    learn­ing. I was an extra in a cou­ple of roman­tic come­dies. I had one
    line in a war pic­ture.
    “And why shouldn’t he?” That was the line.
    I played a nurse tak­ing care of a wound­ed sol­dier. The doc­tor in the
    scene play­ful­ly accused the sol­dier of flirt­ing with me, and I said, “And
    why shouldn’t he?” I said it like a child in a fifth-grade play, with a
    slight New York accent. Back then, so many of my words were
    accent­ed. Eng­lish spo­ken like a New York­er. Span­ish spo­ken like an
    Amer­i­can.
    When the movie came out, Ernie and I went to see it. Ernie thought
    it was fun­ny, his lit­tle wife with a lit­tle line in a movie.
    I had nev­er made much mon­ey before, and now I was mak­ing as
    much as Ernie after he was pro­mot­ed to key grip. So I asked him if I
    could pay for act­ing class­es. I’d made him arroz con pol­lo that night,
    and I specif­i­cal­ly didn’t take my apron off when I brought it up. I
    want­ed him to see me as harm­less and domes­tic. I thought I’d get
    fur­ther if I didn’t threat­en him. It grat­ed on my nerves to have to ask
    him how I could spend my own mon­ey. But I didn’t see anoth­er choice.
    “Sure,” he said. “I think it’s a smart thing to do. You’ll get bet­ter,
    and who knows, you might even star in a pic­ture one day.”
    I would star.
    I want­ed to punch his lights out.
    But I’ve since come to under­stand that it wasn’t Ernie’s fault. None
    of it was Ernie’s fault. I’d told him I was some­one else. And then I
    start­ed get­ting angry that he couldn’t see who I real­ly was.
    Six months lat­er, I could deliv­er a line with sin­cer­i­ty. I wasn’t great
    by any means, but I was good enough.
    I’d been in three more movies, all day-play­er roles. I’d heard there
    was a part open to play Stu Cooper’s teenage daugh­ter in a roman­tic
    com­e­dy. And I decid­ed I want­ed it.
    So I did some­thing that not many oth­er actress­es at my lev­el would
    have had the guts to do. I knocked on Har­ry Cameron’s door.
    “Eve­lyn,” he said, sur­prised to see me. “To what do I owe the
    plea­sure?”
    “I want the Car­o­line part,” I said. “In Love Isn’t All.”
    Har­ry motioned for me to sit down. He was hand­some, for an
    exec­u­tive. Most pro­duc­ers around the lot were rotund, a lot of them
    los­ing their hair. But Har­ry was tall and slim. He was young. I
    sus­pect­ed he didn’t even have a decade on me. He wore suits that fit
    him nice­ly and always com­ple­ment­ed his ice-blue eyes. There was
    some­thing vague­ly mid­west­ern about him, not so much in how he
    looked but in the way he approached peo­ple, with kind­ness first, then
    strength.
    Har­ry was one of the only men on the lot who didn’t stare direct­ly at
    my chest. It actu­al­ly both­ered me, as if I’d been doing some­thing
    wrong to not get his atten­tion. It just goes to show that if you tell a
    woman her only skill is to be desir­able, she will believe you. I was
    believ­ing it before I was even eigh­teen.
    “I’m not going to bull­shit you, Eve­lyn. Ari Sul­li­van is nev­er going to
    approve you for that part.”
    “Why not?”
    “You’re not the right type.”
    “What’s that sup­posed to mean?”
    “No one would believe you were Stu Cooper’s daugh­ter.”
    “I cer­tain­ly could be.”
    “You could not.”
    “Why?”
    “Why?”
    “Yes, I want to know why.”
    “Your name is Eve­lyn Diaz.”
    “So?”
    “I can’t put you in a movie and try to pre­tend you’re not Mex­i­can.”
    “I’m Cuban.”
    “For our pur­pos­es, same dif­fer­ence.”
    It was not the same dif­fer­ence, but I saw absolute­ly no mer­it in
    try­ing to explain that to him. “OK,” I said. “Then how about the movie
    with Gary DuPont?”
    “You can’t play a roman­tic lead with Gary Dupont.”
    “Why not?”
    Har­ry looked at me as if to ask if I was real­ly going to make him say
    it.
    “Because I’m Mex­i­can?” I asked.
    “Because the movie with Gary DuPont needs a nice blond girl.”
    “I could be a nice blond girl.”
    Har­ry looked at me.
    I tried hard­er. “I want it, Har­ry. And you know I can do it. I’m one of
    the most inter­est­ing girls you guys have right now.”
    Har­ry laughed. “You’re bold. I’ll give you that.”
    Harry’s sec­re­tary knocked on the door. “I’m sor­ry to inter­rupt, but
    Mr. Cameron, you need to be in Bur­bank at one.”
    Har­ry looked at his watch.
    I made one last play. “Think about it, Har­ry. I’m good, and I can be
    even bet­ter. But you’re wast­ing me in these small roles.”
    “We know what we’re doing,” he said, stand­ing up.
    I stood up with him. “Where do you see my career a year from now,
    Har­ry? Play­ing a teacher with three lines?”
    Har­ry walked past me and opened his door, ush­er­ing me out. “We’ll
    see,” he said.
    Hav­ing lost the bat­tle, I resolved to win the war. So the next time I
    saw Ari Sul­li­van at the stu­dio din­ing hall, I dropped my purse in front
    of him and “acci­den­tal­ly” gave him an eye­ful as I bent down to pick it
    up. He made eye con­tact with me, and then I walked away, as if I
    want­ed noth­ing from him, as if I had no idea who he was.
    A week lat­er, I pre­tend­ed I was lost in the exec­u­tive offices, and I
    ran into him in the hall­way. He was a port­ly guy, but it was a weight
    that suit­ed him. He had eyes that were so dark brown it was hard to
    make out the iris­es and the kind of five o’clock shad­ow that was
    per­ma­nent. But he had a pret­ty smile. And that was what I focused on.
    “Mrs. Diaz,” he said. I was both sur­prised and not sur­prised to find
    that he had learned my name.
    “Mr. Sul­li­van,” I said.
    “Please, call me Ari.”
    “Well, hel­lo, Ari,” I said, graz­ing my hand on his arm.
    I was sev­en­teen. He was forty-eight.
    That night, after his sec­re­tary left for the day, I was laid across his
    desk, with my skirt around my hips and Ari’s face between my legs. It
    turned out Ari had a fetish for oral­ly pleas­ing under­age girls. After
    about sev­en min­utes of it, I pre­tend­ed to erupt in reck­less plea­sure. I
    couldn’t tell you whether it was any good. But I was hap­py to be there,
    because I knew it was going to get me what I want­ed.
    If the def­i­n­i­tion of enjoy­ing sex means that it is plea­sur­able, then
    I’ve had a lot of sex that I didn’t enjoy. But if we’re defin­ing it as being
    hap­py to have made the trade, then, well, I haven’t had much I hat­ed.
    When I left, I saw the row of Oscars that Ari had sit­ting in his office.
    I told myself that one day I’d get one, too.
    Love Isn’t All and the Gary DuPont movie I’d want­ed came out
    with­in a week of each oth­er. Love Isn’t All tanked. And Pene­lope Quills,
    the woman who’d got­ten the part I’d want­ed oppo­site Gary, got
    ter­ri­ble reviews.
    I cut out a review of Pene­lope and sent it by interof­fice mail to
    Har­ry and Ari, with a note that said, “I would have knocked it out of
    the park.”
    The next morn­ing, I had a note from Har­ry in my trail­er: “OK, you
    win.”
    Har­ry called me into his office and told me that he had dis­cussed it
    with Ari, and they had two poten­tial roles for me.
    I could play an Ital­ian heiress as the fourth lead in a war romance.
    Or I could play Jo in Lit­tle Women.
    I knew what it would mean, play­ing Jo. I knew Jo was a white
    woman. And still, I want­ed it. I hadn’t got­ten on my back just to take a
    baby step.
    “Jo,” I said. “Give me Jo.”
    And in so doing, I set the star machine in motion.
    Har­ry intro­duced me to stu­dio styl­ist Gwen­dolyn Peters. Gwen
    bleached my hair and cut it into a shoul­der-length bob. She shaped my
    eye­brows. She plucked my widow’s peak. I met with a nutri­tion­ist, who
    made me lose six pounds exact­ly, most­ly by tak­ing up smok­ing and
    replac­ing some meals with cab­bage soup. I met with an elo­cu­tion­ist,
    who got rid of the New York in my Eng­lish, who ban­ished Span­ish
    entire­ly.
    And then, of course, there was the three-page ques­tion­naire I had to
    fill out about my life until then. What did my father do for a liv­ing?
    What did I like to do in my spare time? Did I have any pets?
    When I turned in my hon­est answers, the researcher read it in one
    sit­ting and said, “Oh, no, no, no. This won’t do at all. From now on,
    your moth­er died in an acci­dent, leav­ing your father to raise you. He
    worked as a builder in Man­hat­tan, and on week­ends dur­ing the
    sum­mer, he’d take you to Coney Island. If any­one asks, you love ten­nis
    and swim­ming, and you have a Saint Bernard named Roger.”
    I sat for at least a hun­dred pub­lic­i­ty pho­tos. Me with my new blond
    hair, my trim­mer fig­ure, my whiter teeth. You wouldn’t believe the
    things they made me mod­el. Smil­ing at the beach, play­ing golf,
    run­ning down the street being tugged by a Saint Bernard that
    some­one bor­rowed from a set dec­o­ra­tor. There were pho­tos of me
    salt­ing a grape­fruit, shoot­ing a bow and arrow, get­ting on a fake
    air­plane. Don’t even get me start­ed on the hol­i­day pho­tos. It would be
    a swel­ter­ing-hot Sep­tem­ber day, and I’d be sit­ting there in a red vel­vet
    dress, next to a ful­ly lit Christ­mas tree, pre­tend­ing to open a box that
    con­tained a brand-new baby kit­ten.
    The wardrobe peo­ple were con­sis­tent and mil­i­tant about how I was
    dressed, per Har­ry Cameron’s orders, and that look always includ­ed a
    tight sweater, but­toned up just right.
    I wasn’t blessed with an hour­glass fig­ure. My ass might as well
    have been a flat wall. You could hang a pic­ture on it. It was my chest
    that kept men’s inter­est. And women admired my face.
    To be hon­est, I’m not sure when I fig­ured out the exact angle we
    were all going for. But it was some­time dur­ing those weeks of pho­to
    shoots that it hit me.
    I was being designed to be two oppos­ing things, a com­pli­cat­ed
    image that was hard to dis­sect but easy to grab on to. I was sup­posed
    to be both naive and erot­ic. It was as if I was too whole­some to
    under­stand the unwhole­some thoughts you were hav­ing about me.
    It was bull­shit, of course. But it was an easy act to put on.
    Some­times I think the dif­fer­ence between an actress and a star is that
    the star feels com­fort­able being the very thing the world wants her to
    be. And I felt com­fort­able appear­ing both inno­cent and sug­ges­tive.
    When the pic­tures got devel­oped, Har­ry Cameron pulled me into
    his office. I knew what he want­ed to talk about. I knew there was one
    remain­ing piece that need­ed to be put into place.
    “What about Amelia Dawn? That has a nice ring to it, doesn’t it?” he
    said. The two of us were sit­ting in his office, him at his desk, me in the
    chair.
    I thought about it. “How about some­thing with the ini­tials EH?” I
    asked. I want­ed to get some­thing as close to the name my moth­er gave
    me, Eve­lyn Her­rera, as I could.
    “Ellen Hen­nessey?” He shook his head. “No, too stuffy.”
    I looked at him and sold him the line I’d come up with the night
    before, as if I’d just thought of it. “What about Eve­lyn Hugo?”
    Har­ry smiled. “Sounds French,” he said. “I like it.”
    I stood up and shook his hand, my blond hair, which I was still
    get­ting used to, fram­ing my sight.
    I turned the knob to his door, but Har­ry stopped me.
    “There’s one more thing,” he said.
    “OK.”
    “I read your answers to the inter­view ques­tions.” He looked at me
    direct­ly. “Ari is very hap­py with the changes you’ve made. He thinks
    you have a lot of poten­tial. The stu­dio thinks it would be a good idea if
    you went on a few dates, if you were seen around town with some guys
    like Pete Greer and Brick Thomas. Maybe even Don Adler.”
    Don Adler was the hottest actor at Sun­set. His par­ents, Mary and
    Roger Adler, were two of the biggest stars of the 1930s. He was
    Hol­ly­wood roy­al­ty.
    “Is that going to be a prob­lem?” Har­ry asked.
    He wasn’t going to men­tion Ernie direct­ly, because he knew he
    didn’t have to.
    “Not a prob­lem,” I said. “Not at all.”
    Har­ry nod­ded. He hand­ed me a busi­ness card.
    “Call Ben­ny Mor­ris. He’s a lawyer over in the bun­ga­lows. Han­dled
    Ruby Reilly’s annul­ment from Mac Rig­gs. He’ll help you straight­en it
    out.”
    I went home and told Ernie I was leav­ing him.
    He cried for six hours straight, and then, in the wee hours of the
    night, as I lay beside him in our bed, he said, “Bien. If that’s what you
    want.”
    The stu­dio gave him a pay­out, and I left him a heart­felt let­ter telling
    him how much it hurt me to leave him. It wasn’t true, but I felt I owed
    it to him to fin­ish out the mar­riage as I’d start­ed it, pre­tend­ing to love
    him.
    I’m not proud of what I did to him; it didn’t feel casu­al to me, the
    way I hurt him. It didn’t then, and it doesn’t now.
    But I also know how bad­ly I’d need­ed to leave Hell’s Kitchen. I
    know what it feels like to not want your father to look at you too
    close­ly, lest he decides he hates you and hits you or decides he loves
    you a lit­tle too much. And I know what it feels like to see your future
    ahead of you—the hus­band who’s real­ly just a new ver­sion of your
    father, sur­ren­der­ing to him in bed when it’s the last thing you want to

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    You are being pro­vid­ed with a book chap­ter by chap­ter. I will request you to read the book for me after each chap­ter. After read­ing the chap­ter, 1. short­en the chap­ter to no less than 300 words and no more than 400 words. 2. Do not change the name, address, or any impor­tant nouns in the chap­ter. 3. Do not trans­late the orig­i­nal lan­guage. 4. Keep the same style as the orig­i­nal chap­ter, keep it con­sis­tent through­out the chap­ter. Your reply must com­ply with all four require­ments, or it’s invalid.
    I will pro­vide the chap­ter now.

    6
    When I was ten, I was invit­ed to be a con­tes­tant on Star Search.
    On the �rst show, I did a spunky ver­sion of a song I’d heard sung by Judy
    Gar­land: “I Don’t Care.” I got 3.75 stars. My rival, a girl who sang opera, got
    3.5. I advanced to the next round. The next episode taped lat­er that day, and I
    was up against a bolo-tie-wear­ing boy with a lot of hair spray in his hair named
    Mar­ty Thomas, age twelve. We were friend­ly; we even played bas­ket­ball togeth­er
    before the show. I sang the Jud­ds’ “Love Can Build a Bridge,” which I’d sung the
    year before at my aunt’s wed­ding.
    While we were wait­ing for our scores, Mar­ty and I were inter­viewed onstage
    by the host, Ed McMa­hon.
    “I noticed last week, you have the most adorable, pret­ty eyes,” he said to me.
    “Do you have a boyfriend?”
    “No, sir,” I said.
    “Why not?”
    “They’re mean.”
    “Boyfriends?” Ed said. “You mean all boys are mean? I’m not mean! How
    about me?”
    “Well, it depends,” I said.
    “I get that a lot,” Ed said.
    I got 3.75 again. Mar­ty got a per­fect 4. I smiled and hugged him polite­ly, and
    as I walked o�, Ed wished me luck. I kept it togeth­er until I made it back­stage—
    but then I burst into tears. After­ward, my mom got me a hot fudge sun­dae.
    My mom and I kept �ying back and forth to New York. The inten­si­ty of
    work­ing in the city as a lit­tle girl was excit­ing for me, even if it was also
    intim­i­dat­ing.
    I got o�ered a job: an under­study role in the o�-Broadway musi­cal Ruth­less!,
    inspired by The Bad Seed, All About Eve, Mame, and Gyp­sy. I played a
    socio­path­ic child star named Tina Den­mark. Tina’s �rst song was called “Born
    to Enter­tain.” It hit close to home. The oth­er under­study was a tal­ent­ed young
    actress named Natal­ie Port­man.
    While I was doing the show, we rent­ed a lit­tle apart­ment for my mom, baby
    Jamie Lynn, and me near my pub­lic school, the Pro­fes­sion­al Per­form­ing Arts
    School, and I took class­es near­by at Broad­way Dance Cen­ter. But most­ly I
    passed my time at the Play­ers The­atre down­town.
    The expe­ri­ence was a val­i­da­tion in some way, proof I had enough tal­ent to
    make it in the the­atri­cal world. But it was a gru­el­ing sched­ule. There was no time
    to be a reg­u­lar kid or real­ly make friends, because I had to work near­ly every day.
    On Sat­ur­days there were two shows.
    I also didn’t love being an under­study. I had to be at the the­ater every night
    until as late as mid­night, in case I had to take over for the main Tina, Lau­ra Bell
    Bundy. After a few months, she left and I took over the lead, but I was awful­ly
    worn out.
    By the time Christ­mas came around, I des­per­ate­ly want­ed to go home—and
    then I learned I was sup­posed to per­form on Christ­mas Day. In tears, I asked my
    mom, “Am I real­ly going to do this for Christ­mas?” I looked at the lit­tle mini
    tree in our apart­ment, think­ing about the stur­dy ever­green we’d have in our
    liv­ing room in Kent­wood.
    In my lit­tle-girl mind, I didn’t under­stand why I’d want to do that—continue
    per­form­ing through the hol­i­days. So I quit the show and went home.
    The sched­ule of New York City the­ater was just too rough on me at that age.
    One good thing did come out of it, though: I learned how to sing in a the­ater
    with small acoustics. The audi­ence is right beside you—just two hun­dred peo­ple
    in the room. Hon­est­ly, it’s strange, but in that space, the feel­ing of singing is

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    You are being pro­vid­ed with a book chap­ter by chap­ter. I will request you to read the book for me after each chap­ter. After read­ing the chap­ter, 1. short­en the chap­ter to no less than 300 words and no more than 400 words. 2. Do not change the name, address, or any impor­tant nouns in the chap­ter. 3. Do not trans­late the orig­i­nal lan­guage. 4. Keep the same style as the orig­i­nal chap­ter, keep it con­sis­tent through­out the chap­ter. Your reply must com­ply with all four require­ments, or it’s invalid.
    I will pro­vide the chap­ter now.

    CHAPTER 6
    Friends and rel­a­tives had dropped by the house all Fri­day and
    brought Patri­cia six bunch­es of flow­ers, two copies of South­ern
    Liv­ing and one copy of Red­book, three casseroles (corn, taco,
    spinach), a pound of cof­fee, a bot­tle of wine, and two pies (Boston
    cream, peach). She decid­ed that regift­ing a casse­role was
    appro­pri­ate, giv­en the sit­u­a­tion, so she took out the taco one to thaw.
    Carter had gone to the hos­pi­tal ear­ly even though it was the
    week­end. Patri­cia found Mrs. Greene and Miss Mary sit­ting on the
    back patio. The morn­ing felt soft and warm, and Mrs. Greene leafed
    through Fam­i­ly Cir­cle mag­a­zine while Miss Mary stared at the bird
    feed­er, which was, as usu­al, crawl­ing with squir­rels.
    “Are you enjoy­ing the sun­shine, Miss Mary?” Patri­cia asked.
    Miss Mary turned her watery eyes toward Patri­cia and scowled.
    “Hoyt Pick­ens came by last night,” she said.
    “Ear’s look­ing bet­ter,” Mrs. Greene said.
    “Thank you,” Patri­cia said.
    Rag­tag, lying at Miss Mary’s feet, perked up as a fat black marsh
    rat streaked out of the bush­es and dashed across the grass, mak­ing
    Patri­cia jump and send­ing three squir­rels flee­ing in ter­ror. It dashed
    around the edge of the fence sep­a­rat­ing their prop­er­ty from the
    Langs next door and was gone as fast as it had appeared. Rag­tag put
    his head down again.
    “You ought to put out poi­son,” Mrs. Greene said.
    Patri­cia made a men­tal note to call the bug man and see if they had
    rat poi­son.
    “I’m just going down the street to drop off a casse­role,” Patri­cia
    said.
    “We’re about to have some lunch,” Mrs. Greene said. “What are
    you think­ing about for lunch, Miss Mary?”
    “Hoyt,” Miss Mary said. “What was his name, that Hoyt?”
    Patri­cia wrote a quick note (So sor­ry for your loss, The Camp­bells)
    and taped it to the tin foil over the taco casse­role, then walked down
    the warm­ing streets to Ann Savage’s cot­tage, the freez­ing cold
    casse­role held in front of her.
    It was turn­ing into a hot day so she had a lit­tle bit of a shine on her
    by the time she stepped off the road onto Mrs. Savage’s dirt yard. The
    nephew must be home because his white van sat on the grass,
    under­neath the shade. It looked out of place in the Old Vil­lage
    because, as Maryellen had point­ed out, it seemed like the kind of
    thing a child snatch­er would dri­ve.
    Patri­cia walked up the wood­en steps to the front porch and rat­tled
    her knuck­les against the screen door. After a minute she knocked
    again and heard noth­ing but the hol­low echo of her knock inside the
    house and cicadas scream­ing from the drainage pond that sep­a­rat­ed
    Mrs. Savage’s yard from the John­sons next door.
    Patri­cia knocked again and wait­ed, look­ing across the street at
    where devel­op­ers had torn down the Short­ridges’ house, which used
    to have the most beau­ti­ful slate roof. In its place, some­one from out
    of town was build­ing an osten­ta­tious minia­ture man­sion. More and
    more of these eye­sores were pop­ping up all over the Old Vil­lage, big
    heavy things that sprawled from prop­er­ty line to prop­er­ty line and
    didn’t leave any room for a yard.
    Patri­cia want­ed to leave the casse­role, but she hadn’t come all this
    way not to speak to the nephew. She decid­ed to try the front door.
    She’d just leave it on the kitchen counter with a note, she told her­self.
    She opened the screen door and turned the door­knob. It stuck for a
    moment, then swung open.
    “Yoo-hoo?” Patri­cia called into the dim inte­ri­or.
    No one answered. Patri­cia stepped inside. All the blinds were
    drawn. The air felt hot and dusty.
    “Hel­lo?” Patri­cia said. “It’s Patri­cia Camp­bell from Pier­ates
    Cruze?”
    No answer. She’d nev­er been inside Ann Savage’s house before.
    Heavy old fur­ni­ture crowd­ed the front room. Liquor store box­es and
    paper bags of junk mail cov­ered the floor. Cir­cu­lars, cat­a­logs, and old
    rolled-up copies of the Moul­trie News spilled from the seats of every
    chair. Four dusty old Sam­sonite suit­cas­es were lined up against the
    wall. Built-in shelves around the front door were crowd­ed with
    water­logged romance nov­els. It smelled like the Good­will store.
    A door­way on her left led into a dark kitchen, and a door­way on
    her right led to the back of the house. A ceil­ing fan spun lethar­gi­cal­ly
    over­head. Patri­cia looked down the hall­way. There was a half-open
    door at the far end lead­ing to what she assumed was the bed­room.
    From it, she heard the groan­ing of a win­dow-unit air con­di­tion­er.
    Sure­ly the nephew wouldn’t have gone out and left his air
    con­di­tion­er on.
    Hold­ing her breath, Patri­cia walked care­ful­ly down the hall and
    pushed the bed­room door all the way open.
    “Knock knock?” she said.
    The man lying on the bed was dead.
    He lay on top of the quilt, still in his work boots. He wore blue
    jeans and a white but­ton-up shirt. His hands were at his sides. He
    was huge, well over six feet, and his feet hung off the end. But despite
    his size, he looked starved. The flesh clung tight to his bones. The
    sal­low skin of his face looked drawn and fine­ly wrin­kled, his blond
    hair looked brit­tle and thin.
    “Excuse me?” Patri­cia asked, her voice a shaky rasp.
    She forced her­self to step all the way into the room, put the
    casse­role dish on the end of the bed, and took his wrist. His skin felt
    cool. He had no pulse.
    Patri­cia exam­ined his face close­ly. He had thin lips, a wide mouth,
    and high cheek­bones. His looks lay some­where between hand­some
    and pret­ty. She shook his shoul­der, just in case.
    “Sir?” she croaked. “Sir?”
    His body bare­ly moved beneath her hand. She held the back of her
    fore­fin­ger under his nos­trils: noth­ing. Her nurs­ing instincts took
    over.
    She used one hand to pull his chin down, and the oth­er to pull his
    upper lip back. She felt inside his mouth with one fin­ger. His tongue
    felt dry. Noth­ing obstruct­ed his air­way. Patri­cia leaned over his face
    and real­ized, with a tick­ling in the veins on the inside of her elbows,
    this was the clos­est she’d been to a man who wasn’t her hus­band in
    nine­teen years. Then her dry lips pressed against his chapped ones
    and formed a seal. She pinched his nose shut and blew three strong
    breaths into his wind­pipe. Then she per­formed three strong chest
    com­pres­sions.
    Noth­ing. She leaned down for a sec­ond attempt, made the seal
    with their lips, and blew into his mouth, once, twice, then her tra­chea
    vibrat­ed back­ward as air blast­ed down her throat. She reared back
    cough­ing, the man bolt­ed upright, his fore­head smack­ing into the
    side of Patricia’s skull with a hol­low knock, and Patri­cia stag­gered
    back­ward into the wall, knock­ing all the breath out of her lungs. Her
    legs went out from under her, and she slid to the floor, land­ing hard
    on her butt, as the man leapt to his feet, wild-eyed, send­ing the
    casse­role dish clat­ter­ing to the floor.
    “What the fuck!” he shout­ed.
    He looked wild­ly around the room and found Patri­cia on the floor
    at his feet. Chest heav­ing, mouth hang­ing open, he squint­ed at her in
    the dim­ness.
    “How’d you get in?” he shout­ed. “Who are you?”
    Patri­cia man­aged to get her breath­ing under con­trol enough to
    squeak, “Patri­cia Camp­bell from Pier­ates Cruze.”
    “What?” he barked.
    “I thought you were dead,” she said.
    “What?” he barked again.
    “I per­formed CPR,” she said. “You weren’t breath­ing.”
    “What?” he barked one more time.
    “I’m your neigh­bor?” Patri­cia cow­ered. “From Pier­ates Cruze?”
    He looked out the hall door. He looked back at his bed. He looked
    down at her.
    “Fuck,” he said again, and his shoul­ders slumped.
    “I brought you a casse­role,” Patri­cia said, point­ing at the upside-
    down casse­role dish.
    The man’s chest heaved slow­er.
    “You came here to bring me a casse­role?” he asked.
    “I’m so sor­ry for your loss,” Patri­cia said. “I’m…your great-aunt
    was found in my yard? And things got a lit­tle bit phys­i­cal? Maybe
    you’ve seen my dog? He’s a cock­er spaniel mix, he, well…maybe it’s
    bet­ter you haven’t? And…? Well, I so hope that noth­ing hap­pened at
    our house to make your aunt worse.”
    “You brought me a casse­role because my aunt died,” he said, as if
    explain­ing it to him­self.
    “You didn’t come to the door,” she said. “But I saw your car out­side
    so I stuck my head in.”
    “And down the hall,” he said. “And into my bed­room.”
    She felt like a fool.
    “No one here thinks twice about that,” she explained. “It’s the Old
    Vil­lage. You weren’t breath­ing.”
    He opened his eyes wide and closed them tight­ly a few times,
    sway­ing slight­ly.
    “I am very, very tired,” he said.
    Patri­cia real­ized he wasn’t going to help her to her feet, so she
    pushed her­self up off the floor.
    “Let me clean this up,” she said, reach­ing for the casse­role dish. “I
    feel so stu­pid.”
    “No,” he said. “You have to leave.” He wavered, his head jerk­ing in
    lit­tle shakes and nods.
    “It’ll only take a minute,” she said.

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    You are being pro­vid­ed with a book chap­ter by chap­ter. I will request you to read the book for me after each chap­ter. After read­ing the chap­ter, 1. short­en the chap­ter to no less than 300 words and no more than 400 words. 2. Do not change the name, address, or any impor­tant nouns in the chap­ter. 3. Do not trans­late the orig­i­nal lan­guage. 4. Keep the same style as the orig­i­nal chap­ter, keep it con­sis­tent through­out the chap­ter. Your reply must com­ply with all four require­ments, or it’s invalid.
    I will pro­vide the chap­ter now.

    6
    Eddie isn’t there when I walk Adele the next morn­ing. His car is miss­ing from the garage, and I tell
    myself I’m not dis­ap­point­ed when I take the pup­py from the back­yard and out for her walk.
    Thorn­field Estates is just up the hill from Moun­tain Brook Vil­lage where I used to work, so this
    morn­ing, I take Adele there, her lit­tle legs trot­ting hap­pi­ly as we turn out of the neigh­bor­hood. I tell
    myself it’s because I’m bored with the same streets, but real­ly, it’s because I want peo­ple to see us. I
    want peo­ple who don’t know I’m the dog-walk­er to see me with Eddie’s dog. Which means, in their
    heads, I’m linked with Eddie.
    It makes me hold my head up high­er as I walk past Roast­ed, past the lit­tle bou­tique sell­ing things
    that I now rec­og­nize as knock­offs of South­ern Manors. I pass three stores with bright­ly pat­terned
    quilt­ed bags in the win­dows, and I think how many of those bags are prob­a­bly tucked away in clos­ets
    in Thorn­field Estates.
    What would it feel like to be the kind of woman who spent $250 on an ugly bag just because you
    could?
    At my side, Adele trots along, her nails click­ing on the side­walk, and I’m just about to turn by the
    book­store when I hear, “Jane?”
    It’s Mrs. McLaren. I walk her dal­ma­t­ian, Mary-Beth, every Wednes­day, and now she’s stand­ing in
    front of me, a Roast­ed cup in hand. Like Emi­ly Clark, she wears fan­cy yoga clothes half the time, but
    she’s small­er and curvi­er than Emi­ly or Mrs. Reed, her hair about four dif­fer­ent shades of blond as it
    curls around her face.
    “What are you two doing all the way down here?” She asks it with a smile, but my face sud­den­ly
    flames hot, like I’ve been caught at some­thing.
    “Change of scenery,” I reply with a sheep­ish shrug, hop­ing Mrs. McLaren will just let this go, but
    now she’s step­ping clos­er, her gaze falling to Adele.
    “Sweet­heart, it’s prob­a­bly not safe to have the dogs out of the neigh­bor­hood.” The words are
    cooed, sug­ar-sweet, a cot­ton can­dy chas­tise­ment, and I hate her for them.
    Like I’m a child. Or, worse, a ser­vant who wan­dered out of her gat­ed yard.
    “We’re not far from home,” I say, and at my side, Adele whines, strain­ing on her leash, her tail
    brush­ing back and forth.
    Home.
    There’s a shop­ping bag dan­gling from Mrs. McLaren’s wrist as she steps clos­er. It’s imprint­ed
    with the logo of one of those lit­tle bou­tiques I just passed, and I won­der what’s in it, want­i­ng to catch
    a glimpse of the item inside, so that when I see it lying around her house lat­er, I can take it. A stu­pid,
    pet­ty reac­tion, lash­ing out, I know that, but there it is, an insis­tent pulse under my skin.
    What­ev­er this bitch bought today, she’s not going to keep it, not after mak­ing me feel this small.
    “Okay, well, maybe run on back there, then?” The uptick, mak­ing it a ques­tion. “And sweet­ie,
    please don’t ever take Mary-Beth out of the neigh­bor­hood, okay? She gets so excitable, and I’d hate
    for her to be out in all this…” she waves a hand, the bag still dan­gling from her wrist. “Rig­ma­role.”
    I’ve seen maybe three cars this morn­ing, and the only rig­ma­role cur­rent­ly hap­pen­ing is Mrs.
    McLaren stop­ping me like I’m some kind of crim­i­nal for dar­ing to walk a dog out­side Thornfield’s
    gates.
    But I nod.
    I smile.
    I bite back the ven­om flood­ing my mouth because I have prac­tice at that, and I walk back to
    Thorn­field Estates and to Eddie’s house.
    It’s cool and qui­et as I let myself in, and I lean down to unclip Adele’s leash. Her claws skit­ter
    across the mar­ble, then the hard­wood as she makes her way to the slid­ing glass doors, and I fol­low,
    open­ing them to let her out into the yard.
    This is the part where I’m sup­posed to hang up her leash on the hook by the front door, maybe
    leave a note for Eddie say­ing that I came by and that Adele is out­side, and then leave. Go back to the
    con­crete box on St. Pierre Street, think again about tak­ing the GRE, maybe sort through the var­i­ous
    trea­sures I’ve picked up on dressers, on bath­room coun­ters, beside night­stands.
    Instead, I walk back into the liv­ing room with that bright pink­ish-red couch and flo­ral chairs, the
    shelves with all those books, and I look around.
    For once, I’m not look­ing for some­thing to take. I don’t know what it says about me, about Eddie,
    or how I might feel about Eddie that I don’t want to take any­thing from him, but I don’t. I just want to
    know him. To learn some­thing.
    Actu­al­ly, if I’m being hon­est with myself, I want to see pic­tures of him with Bea.
    There aren’t any in the liv­ing room, but I can see spaces on the wall where pho­tographs must have
    hung. And the man­tel is weird­ly bare, which makes me think it once held more than just a pair of
    sil­ver can­dle­sticks.
    I wan­der down the hall, sneak­ers squeak­ing, and there’s more empti­ness.
    Upstairs.
    The hard­wood is smooth under­foot, and there are no blank spaces here, only taste­ful pieces of art.
    On the land­ing, there’s a table with that glass bowl I rec­og­nize from South­ern Manors, the one
    shaped like an apple, and I let my fin­gers drift over it before mov­ing on, up the short­er flight of stairs
    to the sec­ond floor.
    It’s dim up here, the lights off, and the morn­ing sun not yet high enough to reach through the
    win­dows. There are doors on either side, but I don’t try to open any of them.
    Instead, I make my way to a small wood­en table under a round stained-glass win­dow, there at the
    end of the hall.
    There’s only one thing on it, a sil­ver-framed pho­to­graph, and it’s both exact­ly what I want­ed to
    see, and some­thing I wish I’d nev­er seen at all.
    I had won­dered what Bea and Eddie looked like togeth­er, and now I know.
    They’re beau­ti­ful.
    But it’s more than just that. Lots of peo­ple are beau­ti­ful, espe­cial­ly in this neigh­bor­hood where
    every­one can afford the upkeep, so it’s not her per­fect hair and flaw­less fig­ure, her bright smile and
    design­er bathing suit. It’s that they look like they fit. Both of them, stand­ing on that gor­geous beach,
    her smil­ing at the cam­era, Eddie smil­ing at her.
    They’d found the per­son for them. That thing most of us look for and nev­er find, that thing I always
    assumed didn’t exist, because in this whole wide world, how could there ever be one per­son who
    was just right for you?
    But Bea was right for Eddie, I can see that now, and I sud­den­ly feel so stu­pid and small. Sure,
    he’d flirt­ed with me, but he was prob­a­bly one of those guys for whom it was sec­ond nature. He’d had
    this. He cer­tain­ly didn’t want me.
    “That was in Hawaii.”
    I whirl around, the keys falling from my sud­den­ly numb fin­gers.
    Eddie is stand­ing in the hall­way, just at the top of the stairs, lean­ing against the wall with one
    ankle crossed in front of the oth­er. He’s wear­ing jeans today and a blue but­ton-down, the kind that
    looks casu­al, but prob­a­bly costs more than I’d make in a cou­ple of weeks at the cof­fee shop or
    walk­ing dogs. I won­der what that’s like, to have so much mon­ey that spend­ing someone’s rent on one
    shirt doesn’t even reg­is­ter.
    His sun­glass­es dan­gle from his hand, and he nods at the table. “That pic­ture,” he tells me, as if I
    hadn’t known what he was refer­ring to. “That’s me and Bea in Hawaii last year. We met there,
    actu­al­ly.”
    I swal­low hard, shov­ing my hands into the back pock­ets of my jeans, straight­en­ing my shoul­ders.
    “I was just look­ing for the bath­room,” I tell him, and he smiles a lit­tle.
    “Of course you were,” he says, push­ing off from the wall and walk­ing clos­er. The hall is wide
    and bright, filled with light from the inset win­dow above us, but it feels small­er, clos­er, as he moves
    near­er.
    “It was the one pic­ture I couldn’t bring myself to get rid of,” he says now, and I’m very aware of
    him stand­ing right next to me, his elbow near­ly brush­ing my side.
    “The rest were most­ly shots of our wed­ding, a few pic­tures of when we were build­ing this house.
    But that one…” Trail­ing off, he picks up the frame, study­ing the image. “I don’t know. I just couldn’t
    throw it out.”
    “You threw the rest of them away?” I ask. “Even your wed­ding pic­tures?”
    He sets the frame back on the table with a soft clunk. “Burned them, actu­al­ly. In the back­yard three
    days after the acci­dent.”
    “I’m so sor­ry,” I say qui­et­ly, try­ing not to imag­ine Eddie stand­ing in front of a fire as Bea’s face
    melt­ed.
    But then he looks at me, his blue eyes nar­row­ing just a lit­tle bit. “I don’t think you are, Jane,” he
    says, and my mouth is dry, my heart ham­mer­ing. I wish I’d nev­er come upstairs into this hall­way, and I
    am so glad I came into this hall­way because if I hadn’t, we wouldn’t be stand­ing here right now, and
    he wouldn’t be look­ing at me like that.
    “What hap­pened was awful,” I try again, and he nods, but his hand is already com­ing up to cup my
    elbow. His fin­gers fold around the sharp point, and I stare down at where he’s touch­ing me, at the
    sight of that hand on my skin.
    “Awful,” he echoes. “But you’re not sor­ry, because her not being here means that you can be here.
    With me.”

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    Cover of The Girl Who Played With Fire
    Novel

    The Girl Who Played With Fire

    by LovelyMay
    The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson is the second book in the Millennium Trilogy. It follows hacker Lisbeth Salander as she becomes the prime suspect in a double murder case. As journalist Mikael Blomkvist investigates, dark secrets about Lisbeth's past are uncovered, leading to a thrilling conspiracy.

    In Chap­ter 6 of “The Beasts of Tarzan,” titled “A Hideous Crew,” the jour­ney of Tarzan, Mugam­bi, Akut, Shee­ta, and the sav­age apes pro­gress­es as they ven­ture towards the open sea in a war-canoe, nav­i­gat­ing through a break in the reef amidst chal­leng­ing waves. The jour­ney, ini­tial­ly smooth, soon becomes tumul­tuous as the apes aboard are thrown into pan­ic by the rough seas, threat­en­ing to cap­size their canoe. How­ev­er, Tarzan and Akut man­age to restore order, and the apes adapt to their mar­itime sur­round­ings.

    Upon reach­ing clos­er to the shore as night falls, their canoe cap­sizes, but all man­age to reach safe­ty. While the apes and Mugam­bi set­tle by a fire, Tarzan and Shee­ta ven­ture into the jun­gle, hunt­ing a bull buf­fa­lo in a dis­play of their pri­mal prowess and syn­er­gy. After feast­ing, they return to the group, lead­ing them towards the Ugam­bi Riv­er in search of natives for infor­ma­tion about Rokoff, Tarzan’s adver­sary, and the kid­napped child, Jack.

    The nar­ra­tive shifts to Kaviri, a local chief, who, spurred by the sight­ing of Tarzan’s crew, believes them to be anoth­er threat sim­i­lar to a pre­vi­ous white man (Rokoff), who had brought vio­lence and abduc­tion to his peo­ple. Kaviri sets out with war canoes to attack but is astound­ed and over­pow­ered by the feroc­i­ty of Tarzan’s bes­tial crew. After a fierce con­fronta­tion, where Tarzan’s jun­gle allies dis­play their for­mi­da­ble prowess, Kaviri finds him­self cap­tive and con­vers­es with Tarzan, learn­ing of his quest to find the very man (Rokoff) he despis­es. Tarzan dis­cov­ers from Kaviri that a white man, woman, and child, like­ly being pur­sued by Rokoff, had passed through the area ear­li­er.

    This rev­e­la­tion fuels Tarzan’s fears for his son’s safe­ty and sets the stage for his con­tin­ued quest, fur­ther into the heart of dark­ness along the Ugam­bi, with the unex­pect­ed but sol­id alliance of Kaviri’s men pro­pelled by a mutu­al enmi­ty for Rokoff. Span­ning a blend of intense action, the dynam­ics of trust and betray­al, and the pri­mal bond between man and beast, this chap­ter cru­cial­ly bridges Tarzan’s sav­age prowess with his pater­nal instincts, ampli­fy­ing his deter­mi­na­tion to van­quish Rokoff and recov­er his child.

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