How we cite our quotes: (Chapter.Paragraph)
Quote #4
Eventually, she figured, he would suspect someone outside the pack and finally accuse her, angry but admiring her genius, acknowledging her as the superior mind. (34.3)
Frankie's not just trying to totally mess with Alpha. Here we see the real motivations for her betrayal at work. She wants recognition, acknowledgement, props.
Quote #5
"I was, I—this came up, and I promised Alpha. You and I didn't fix anything certain, did we?" (39.24)
So much for her prince charming coming to save her at Thanksgiving. Matthew keeps saying that he cares about her, but Frankie comes to realize that he doesn't want to be a part of her world. That feels like a betrayal to Frankie because it goes against what she thought having a boyfriend would mean. It's, to be quite frank, not all it's cracked up to be.
Quote #6
In Matthew's backpack was a printout of the emails between Frankie and Porter. (39.30)
Ouch, that's gotta sting. Why would Matthew have a printout of her conversations with Porter? There's something very shady going on in this relationship, and the betrayals are going back and forth more than terms of endearment. So why does Frankie stick it out?