Assuming that this is referring to the same passage that was posted before with this question, the best option would be "<span>C. Fruit trees cannot grow fruit without birds and bees to sing to them."</span>
Answer:
The new owners of the land where our trees grow seems not to want us around our trees anymore. But we do not cause any trouble and the trees are really ours even though the land now belongs to them.
Maybe, we just have to sell the trees to them as they have requested from the Don. The Don knows better, and he advised we sell it to them as they are good people. We will go back to our lands and leave the trees to them. But we are really going to miss playing and having fun around our trees again. I hope we find another playground soon enough.
Explanation:
Since the children only really played around the trees that we're really theirs, it would be quite confusing to them when the new landowners do not welcome their presence. It would also take sometime for them to finally get over not going to the trees again even after they might have reluctantly sold the trees.
A participle is a verbal ending in -ing(present)or -ed,-en, ,that functions as an adjective, modifying a noun or pronoun