![]() Mae took out her music box and started to wind it. ![]() Now, the Tucks stopped and Winnie started to cry. Winnie did not do anything to signal for his attention. While on the road, they found the man in the yellow suit. They would explain why they were taking her away. Winnie next found herself on a horse and being kidnapped by the Tucks. Just then, Mae Tuck and Miles Tuck appeared. She wanted to drink the water but was advised not to do so by Jesse. He was a 104 years old but looked like a 17 year old. Winnie explained to him that the woods belonged to the Fosters. He started drinking water from the ground. Suddenly, she came upon a boy who was sitting down beside a tree. The woods felt alive and Winnie enjoyed walking in them. She had belief now and she wanted to exit the woods. It was one thing to talk about being by yourself, doing important things, but quite another when the opportunity arose. The man in the yellow suit started humming the tune and he skipped away happily. The man didn’t reveal who he was looking for. Later, he wanted to speak to Winnie’s dad. The man admitted that he was here because he was looking for a family. He started talking to Winnie and asking about her family. Do you know they’ve hardly ever let me out of this yard all by myself? – Winnie FosterĪ stranger in a yellow suit came to the Foster’s gate. Why should you have to be cooped up in a cage, too? It’d be better if I could be like you, out in the open and making up my mind. The toad hopped away when Winnie tried to talk to it. ![]() She vowed to escape as she couldn’t stand the incessant attention and nagging from her mum and grandma. The weather was sweltering and extremely warm. Winnie started talking to a toad near the fence. Mae, her husband, and her two boys (Miles and Jesse) looked the same since 87 years ago. Whenever she went, Mae would carry her precious music box with her. Tuck was lazy and continued sleeping, not wanting to go. It was 10 years since she last visited Treegap. Mae admitted that she wanted to take the horse to meet their sons. Tuck dreamt that he was in heaven and that he had never heard of Treegap. Winnie was a kid who was interested in the forest but had never visited it before. The woods actually belonged to the Fosters and no one except them would cross it. The first house before Treegap was extremely quiet. Treegap contained cottages, houses, roads and woods. ![]() But sometimes people find this out too late. Fixed points they are, and best left undisturbed, for without them, nothing holds together. A Ferris Wheel has one, as the sun is the hub of the wheeling calendar. This book will continue to intrigue readers way into the future.Īll wheels must have a hub. One of the themes of the book might be ‘Every choice we make has a reward and a cost.’ If you re-read a book at different phases of your life, it can contain a different meaning. They were (1) Mae Tuck travelled by horse to Treegap to visit her sons, Miles and Jesse (2) Winnie Foster (whose family owned Treegap), decided to run away (3) A stranger appeared at Foster’s home. 3 strange things with apparently no connection happened together. ![]()
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