Asked by Elijah

he Final Hurdle
Jasmine’s legs trembled as she approached the starting line. The track shimmered with heat, and the hurdles looked taller than usual. It was the last race of the season—the state championships—and her heart pounded like a wild drum.

“You’ve got this,” Coach Morales said, her voice steady like the wind before a storm. Jasmine nodded, swallowing her nerves.

The starting gun fired. Jasmine sprang forward, each stride a battle against fear and fatigue. Memories flashed in her mind—early mornings, skinned knees, and the day she lost to Danielle by a blink of an eye.

Halfway through the race, Jasmine clipped a hurdle. She stumbled. For a heartbeat, time froze. Then something inside her sparked—not rage, not panic, but a fierce calm. She steadied, adjusted her rhythm, and pushed forward.

She crossed the finish line, not in first, but strong—stronger than she’d ever been. The crowd erupted, not for victory, but for resilience.

Jasmine smiled through the sweat. Maybe the finish line wasn’t the end. Maybe it was a beginning.

Question
What is one way the author develops the setting of the race?
Responses
A By using a flashback to explain Jasmine’s trainingBy using a flashback to explain Jasmine’s training
B By describing the weather and track conditionsBy describing the weather and track conditions
C By focusing only on the other competitorsBy focusing only on the other competitors
D By revealing Jasmine’s exact finishing placeBy revealing Jasmine’s exact finishing place

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
B — By describing the weather and track conditions (e.g., "The track shimmered with heat, and the hurdles looked taller than usual").