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2-3-4 Challenge Book Discussions #2 discussion

Cutting Edge (FBI Trilogy, #3)
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Cutting Edge > Question H

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Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 9296 comments Mod
We get Maggie’s point of view early on when she murders her fellow domestic terrorists at Rose College. She sets it up as a joint suicide and almost succeeded in convincing the police that’s what it was. At the time, was it self protection or were you convinced she was crazy?


Anita (anitanodiva) | 2973 comments I was convinced she was crazy, but it was self protection too. She had a bigger agenda and didn't want anyone to get in her way.


Robin (robinmy) | 2450 comments Both. She was afraid they would talk to the cops and implicate her. And, she was crazy.


message 4: by Jonetta (last edited Apr 27, 2020 12:45PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 9296 comments Mod
It felt drastic and overkill (pardon the pun) and she was so cunning in her method. I though she was bats..t crazy. It almost felt like she was punishing them for not being on board with her agenda.


Anita (anitanodiva) | 2973 comments She had no sympathy for anyone who disagreed with her.


Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 9296 comments Mod
Not a drop.


Melissa (melissasd) | 676 comments I was convinced that she was crazy. I agree that she did to protect herself as well.


Charlene (charlenethestickler) | 1203 comments Both here, too. I agree with all your perspectives. I guess that she was most affected by her biological mother, wasn't she? Plus, her father's crazed traits were passed on to her.

Imagine the time spent with Lorraine - visits to see her in jail by
Quin, too. Nora was least fooled by her mom.


Karen ♐ (kmk1214) | 909 comments I think she was just nuts! And, of course, she was afraid that since they didn't want to continue, someone would turn on her.


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