69 pages • 2 hours read
K.A KnightA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
“I [Diesel] know how to read people, but Ryder? He’s made it a […] game, a sport, to find people’s weaknesses and exploit them, destroy them with what he learned. Little miss Roxy will be no different.”
In this passage, Diesel’s assumption about Ryder’s abilities showcases how much the Vipers underestimated Roxy’s effect. Though his admiring tone hints at his respect for Ryder, his mocking tone would later be revealed as highly misguided, given how Roxy would be the one to hold power over the Vipers. The passage also highlights K. A. Knight’s use of irony—Roxy is initially framed as a pawn in Ryder’s game, yet she ultimately becomes a player in her own right, shifting the power dynamics of the narrative.
“She’s [Roxy] now lost the biggest bet of all—her freedom and her life.”
In this quote, Knight sets the tone through which the Vipers and Roxy will interact. By declaring Roxy’s association with the Vipers as a form of gambling, she insinuates that hope is not fundamentally lost and Roxy might, in fact, win by the end of the narrative—if she plays for keeps. The extended gambling metaphor functions as foreshadowing, as Roxy ultimately turns the game in her favor by fully integrating herself into the Vipers’ world.
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