Other People's Business
Author's Note: This is my prediction piece to I The
Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by
Mark Haddon. Included is a scene I have
written that I believe would fit well into the book's resolution.
After walking
outside to greet his friend (the neighbors dog) Wellington, Christopher was spotted stroking dead
Wellington's bloody head. Mrs. Shears,
Wellington's owner called the police and screamed repeatedly at Christopher,
who is autistic and didn't enjoy this.
After being released from jail, Christopher makes it his goal to figure
out who did kill Wellington and why.
I believe that Mrs. Shears killed her own
dog. I think this because the main
characters shows evidence that her shock after finding out that her dog had
died, couldn't have been because of surprise.
Also, when Christopher went to investigate who did kill the dog, Mrs.
Shears was not open to talk about it, yet she didn't feel sad. If Mrs. Shears did not kill her dog, because
she is not showing proper emotions, I am
positive she knows who did. The books
mode of literature from my perspective so far is a comedy.
I walked into the
shed of Mrs. Shears, father had told me not to 8 times in the past week and I
had been relying on white lies to keep me out of trouble. It was very spacious in here. I did not like
spacious, it reminded me of a show I watched with Mother once; the man walked
into a spacious room with all the lights off, and martial arts fighters jumped
out from all directions. I knew this
wasn't going to happen here, the worst thing that could happen would be that
Mrs. Shears would find me and call the police again. I would not like
this. While looking around and dreaming
about the possible uses of all the machinery in here, I spotted the fork. The fork that was used to kill Wellington was
in Mrs. Shears shed. I ran to the
police. I had solved the crime, Mother
would have been so proud.
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