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This idea just came to me from reading Margaret Edwards's album, right? In the middle of the 15th century, I sit next to him and he and me were trying to figure out they just came and they were trying to figure out what to do. I was very comfortable trying to figure out how to go around in the story very well. And I think I did some perhaps very interesting stuff with this kind of flying adventure where friends and adults were separated, the children, the parents, the children, the parents, the parents and the parents. I think I was trying to have to read a more contemporary audience in those Egypt and the United States, writing about trying to recover the letters that were other stolen from his parents' apartment in Shabra. He's clearly a different type of character than his parents were. The womanizer thinks he knows women very egotistic. And yes, he cares deeply about those letters. He doesn't want anyone touching them. There he is. His answer. And he has to recover them. Perhaps one aspect of building the story would be to show how he and contrast his parents for road to people.