Like Mick’s death, Lisa tries to push through the trauma of her rape on her own; she wants to burn all reminders of the night and then pretend it didn’t happen. But as she will learn—and as she perhaps already realizes from Mick’s death—life doesn’t work that way. She can’t just ignore the pain and hope it will go away. She has to deal with the tragedies and suffering that come her way, moving through them in order to grow up. This experience also introduces the forest voices, which seem to be malicious—or at least dangerous—even though they ostensibly offer her help. The crows—symbolic of changes in luck for good or bad and bearers of secret messages—reinforce the idea that the voices come from the spirit realm. The eerie circumstances, with the crab and the dead animal, imply danger. And after all, the voices demand meat as a sacrifice for their help. Although the book doesn’t specifically identify Cheese as Lisa’s rapist, it’s clear that she has drawn that conclusion from his reputation for sexual perversion (stealing girls’ underwear), the fact that she recently rejected him, and the drugged drink at the party.