In this chapter, Beck and the others discuss the disappearance of the girls. They realize that they must return to the trick-or-treating before the whole night has passed. They decide to go back to the woods and find the weapons that were stolen from the town. The chapter ends with a soliloquy by Beck, in which he warns his readers that society is rife with reminders that "equal rights have not yet been attained."
In this chapter, Beck and the others discuss the disappearance of the girls. They realize that they must return to the trick-or-treating before the whole night has passed. They decide to go back to the woods and find the weapons that were stolen from the town. The chapter ends with a soliloquy by Beck, in which he warns his readers that society is rife with reminders that "equal rights have not yet been attained."