Tim and Marty are definitely underground with SCAPE. They may have changed their looks/identities in order to protect themselves.
2. What were your thoughts as CeeCee was helping Genevieve deliver her baby?
As a new mom to a 6 month old baby, I was thinking - holy moly, I bet that hurt without an epidural. I was also thinking from Genevieve's perspective, and how scared she must have been for her life, and the life of the baby. I cannot even begin to imagine what it would feel like to be kidnapped at 37/38 weeks pregnant - and then go into labour. At this point, I was thinking as a mom, and was not thinking from CeeCee's point of view. Thinking back, CeeCee at the young age of 16, would have been traumatized by the experience - she was courageous to do what she did, although her decision to help Tim and Marty was very misguided.
3. After Genevieve died, what would you have done with her baby if you had been in CeeCee's shoes?
I would have done the same thing. That baby needed immediate medical attention/care. I would have had no idea how to take care of a newborn when I was 16. I would have also tried to give the baby back to the governer - possibly by bringing the baby to a church. I'm not sure if the Catholic Church still grants asylum and will take babies in...
4. Why do you think CeeCee/Eve is still holding onto hope that Tim will come for her?
She was so enamoured with Tim, and her entire life/being wrapped around him. She felt like she was in love, although, it is obvious to the reader that he was really using her. At 16, all of us girls go a little boy crazy, and she fell in love with the idea of Tim.
5. How do you think Eve will establish her new identity in Virginia?
She will have to get a job, and I think she will eventually go on to obtain her university degree, and possibly find love again.
6. What do you think of CeeCee/Eve now after she has gone through with the kidnapping, the delivery of the baby, the escape, and the relocation?
First I thought CeeCee made a bad decision in trusting Tim and Marty and helping in their scheme. Then I saw her courage when she delivered the baby (at 27 I couldn't even watch the labour and delivery videos in my prenatal class!), and began to care for her. And then I saw her as blossoming into an adult, almost a necessary metamorphism for her to blossom into who she really would become.