She makes Reeve drive her to New Jersey in an effort to locate the people she believes are her family of origin. Janie isn’t sure her parents’ story adds up. They changed their last name and, frequently, their location so cult members wouldn’t find and try to take Janie. Hannah’s parents raised Janie as if she were their own. But the cult’s hold on her was too strong, and Hannah eventually left home again, alone. Hannah returned one day with a child, saying she wanted to escape. Their daughter, Hannah, became deeply involved in a Hare Krishna cult and left home. They admit that Janie is their granddaughter. When Janie can no longer stand the suspense, she confronts her parents. He urges her not to rock the boat by trying to find her biological parents. Reeve is mainly interested in having sex with Janie and maintaining a stable relationship between their two families. She shares her secret with Reeve, the neighbor with whom she’s developing a romance. Though she adores her parents and doesn’t want to upend her comfortable life, she’s no longer sure she can trust the people she believed were her mom and dad. She realizes that she is the child that was abducted 12 years earlier. During school lunch one day, she sees a picture of a missing girl on a milk carton. Fifteen-year-old Janie Johnson has a happy life, good friends and loving parents.
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