I believe the type of protagonist which is common to psychological suspense is a highly intelligent protagonist.
Three meaningful lines in "The Leap" are as follows:
1."I owe her my existence three times."
2."My mother once said that I'd be amazed at how many things a person can do within the act of falling."
3."I know that she's right. I knew it even then. As you fall there is time to think."
Answer:
Parallelism - “We have petitioned; we have remonstrated; we have supplicated.” example: “And what have we to oppose [the British government]? Shall we try argument?” His point: we have nothing to fight them with because arguments don't work.
Answer:
the answer is D I believe