The park scene makes a lot more sense now. One of these sources was the attic window she can observe in Once- specifically, its warm sunlight. This chapter shows why that is: in the orphanage, Jennifer had so few sources of comfort (most prominently Brown) that she mentally associated them with each other. In the prologue, Jennifer is sleeping on a sunlit park bench when she- apparently randomly- starts to remember Brown.
Then it's revealed that Brown has died, and Jennifer imagines otherwise because she can't cope with the truth. Because Brown is still beside Jennifer, the phrase seems like an exaggeration to first-time players, yet another example of the narrator's cynicism. In the penultimate chapter, everyone who Jennifer interacts with bullies or ignores her- prompting the narration to repeat each time that she is "all alone".In some stories, hares tend to be associated with trickery, selfishness, and being a bad example for people to follow, which is Wendy's true self. As noted on the character page, Wendy's Animal Motifs seems to be rabbits and she doesn't act like those with a rabbit motif, subverting it, however, things start to make sense when you realize that her animal motif aren't rabbits, they're hares.Which makes a lot more sense come the reveal. Despite looking tall enough, Jennifer can't reach them. Immediately after getting untied after waking up on the Airship, it's possible to try and pick the scissors out of the automatic contraption that freed you.This can also be used for why the combat is so horribly tricky and sometimes unfair: if a small girl had to defend herself against five older children, she would stumble, be scared, try to just wildly swing and use unlikely weapons of whatever she has available.She's just a kid during those events, so she is acting similarly to how she did back then. Why is Jennifer so submissive towards a bunch of prepubescent kids despite being a legal adult? That's because she is reliving events of her childhood the entire time.Crosses over into Fridge Horror when it comes to why Clara acted that way, and also the implication that Jennifer was convinced that she was more alone than she might have been, since Clara may not actually have hated her. Once learning about the way Clara has been treated by Hoffman, however, it's almost certain that Clara was talking about herself and looking away out of shame. However, she's not an Aristocrat and has no reason to treat Jennifer that way. At the time, and certainly to Jennifer, this sounds like just another one of the children being mean to Jennifer. When Jennifer talks to Clara, she says "How Dirty." and looks away from her.