Answer:
This quotation can touch on two areas worth exploring: authority and silence. Your relationship with both of those concepts will connect to people from your past as well as your present. When I was young, one of the adults in my life, whom I loved very much, would often go silent. He would go for long periods of time without talking—literally a few days to a couple of weeks. I never knew what had caused this, but as is typical for a child I would assume I had done something wrong and try to fix it. Looking back after all these years, I imagine the silence had nothing to do with me at all. Fast forward through my life, and silence from authority figures was naturally difficult for me. When a supervisor or customer would stop communicating with me, or seem cold, I assumed I had done something wrong, even though I couldn’t imagine what. As I needed my job, this often led to me being quietly hysterical and doing everything I could to be the perfect employee.
Explanation:
Your answer I believe would be A. The narrator changed what would normally happen in a story. A normal scenario the princess would be frightened by the dragon and the prince would rescue her. However that's not what happened in this story. In this story the princess befriends the dragon. Hope this helps :)
The orveeql answer is the one beside 3 when Gabriel did do it to Jessica in the story.