I think it's a toss up as to which twin survived the fire. While, as some mentioned, we are hoping it was Emmeline - and so was Miss Winters, I think - it very well might have been Adeline. I think the author intentionally left us hanging.
As for twins, I will be very interested to see how close mine are as their lives go on. They entered this world totally inseparable - no they weren't conjoined twins
- but they were best friends and relied on each other for everything. In preschool they were put into the same classroom but were soon separated because they were like one body with two heads. They didn't socialize with others and when the teacher asked them to do something they would consult with each other and decide if they wanted to follow her request. As they have grown older they argue more, but I recall doing the same with my siblings. I think only time will tell whether they will regain their closeness. I think they will because they have no other siblings, plus twins are generally close. My brother has twins girls who are a year older than my children and they have followed a similar pattern of being close and then being not so close.
I don't recall from the book, but when Miss Winters picked Margaret to write her story, did she have any way of knowing that Margaret was once a twin
I'm thinking she didn't, but I find it a little hard to believe that employing Margaret was simply a coincidence.
Jan