![]() ![]() Like Carter, Kitty focuses on the unimportant details, the fancy trimmings (like what rank she's currently pretending to be) rather than the important details - like the fact that 7 or not, Lila Hart is a powerless puppet - a teenager who can't make much of a difference in the world. This is false - those Ministers couldn't care less about her. ![]() She talks about how any of the people in that room (a bunch of Ministers) would have her killed if they knew her real identity. ![]() Sure, the back of her neck is marked by a 7, but the ridges of her original tattoo still exist - and they show a 3. But as anyone who has read Pawn knows, Kitty isn't really a 7. The book opens on a celebration of Lila Hart's birthday, and talks about how Kitty is a 7 in a room full of 6s, which makes her more powerful than any of them. In a word, Captive is as superficial and redundant as the name Blackcoat (which is what the rebels choose to call themselves). ![]()
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