I might if i liked yogurt
I'll do my name.
Ready for fun
You will enjoy
A great time
Never ending
Answer:
See below
Explanation:
I began to panic, wondering what was wrong. Did someone drop a cigarette on some tissue boxes? Was bread left in the bakery oven for too long? Before I had time to contemplate what was wrong, I was overtaken by a swarm of terrified shoppers. Screams rang in my ears as we moved as one to the exit, panicking even as a calm voice over the loudspeaker told us to exit quietly and orderly. I held the one thing I had, a bag of Mrs. Baird's donuts, to my chest, determined not to let them go. I'd pay for them later, but at the moment, the cash register was far from my mind. We spilled out into the parking lot, mother's shrieking in fear and babies crying. A fire truck pulled up to the scene as flames began shooting out of the building, schorching me with their heat. I backpedaled, unable to look away as the supermarket slowly burned to the ground.
On my opinion, Lehna’s Narrative is a non-chronological story that starts with a description of his regrets after being sent to prison and it also presents some flashbacks about his life as a young man and how was it like to live in his hometown. Then, Lehna starts to guide the reader and explains what is the story going to be about. After that, he changes the order of events and starts telling the story in a chronological order, first, the reason and the circumstances of his arrest, then the life in prison and at last, the moment he got out and how people treated him as an ex-convict. I consider the story is very effective because he starts telling he was in prison and that catches’ people attention, because he doesn’t clearly explain the reasons, so, as a reader you want to know what really happened and how he manage to live after that.