Can't answer 'cause you didn't provide an image of the passage.
Answer:
In To Kill a Mockingbird, children live in an inventive world where mysteries abound but little exists to actually cause them harm. Scout and Jem spend much of their time inventing stories about their reclusive neighbor Boo Radley, gleefully scaring themselves before rushing to the secure, calming presence of their father, Atticus. As the novel progresses, however, the imaginary threat that Boo Radley poses pales in comparison to the real dangers Jem and Scout encounter in the adult world. The siblings’ recognition of the difference between the two pushes them out of childhood and toward maturity, and as they make that transition, Boo Radley, their childhood bogeyman, helps serve as link between their past and their present.
Answer:
1.
Explanation:
Valediction is the act of saying farewell.
I believe it is the second choice: It is a bitterly cold day in the north, and Jo’s frustration with her sister and friends’ negativity forced her to go ice skating with Laurie, a boy from school. Unbeknownst to Jo, her sister Amy, whom she forbade to come along, sneakily made her way behind them anyway
Because the last choice wrong because meg didn’t just magically find them in the predicament
The third choice is wrong because jo saw Amy and didn’t seem really surprised
The first choice meg was wrong because meg wasn’t there and jo saw Amy and didn’t seem surprised