Well, OBVIOUSLY, one of the girls is secretly able to fly. Let's call her... X.
The other girl, H, secretly hates X and wants to kill her. And they're playing Minecraft in H's room. H decided to kill X by pushing her off the room and having her land in this hole she dug and covered up with magical leaves that look very surreal.
H pretends to see something out the window and persuades X to climb onto the roof by climbing out the window to see what she's seeing.
X does so because she thinks that H is her best friend.
Decide what happens next :D
... Wait is there a rule against this being violent
If you can't take the heat, stay out of the kitchen
Answer:
When he beats his bars and he would be free;
It is not a carol of joy or glee,
This is the first time that the speaker tells us explicitly why the caged bird is singing: it wants to be "free." This sets up freedom as an important idea in the poem. This is a poem about a bird wanting, but not being able, to get free.
These lines continue the alliteration of the B words, in "beats" and "bars." B is a strong sound, and the repetition of this sound evokes the idea of the bird beating violently against the bars of its cage.
So, when we hear that really pretty song the bird sings in its cage, we shouldn't assume that it's singing because it's happy. As the speaker tells us, "It is not a carol of joy or glee."
Does this help?
I believe the answer is down