Page 50
By Jack Joseph Smith
By Jack Joseph Smith
Original Scan
AI Interpretation
Crossing the high field above Mount Lebanon and the edge of Kennedy forest, the children move toward the orchard with the landscape itself feeling haunted, watchful, and alive in their heads.
Some lines are rough, but the ridge clearly becomes a threshold where suburb, wealth, forest, and insanity start mixing into one felt geography. Daniel and the narrator keep their attention off the town below and on the leaves, birds, and hidden places, which makes the raid feel more visionary than practical.
From the peak of Metzes hill the two generals survey Morrison Drive, the new Virginia Manor, and the far valley of Kennedy forest, with the narrator asking which side of the hill did the insanity go — the book's first adult reflection folded into a boy's reconnaissance.