Read the following excerpt from "The Passage" and answer the question that follows.

Garrick's sister was nine and a genius. She looked up from her maps . . . I watched her do it once, one Saturday when I was over and Garrick and I played Risk for three hours at the table. Andi sat with us, a table spoon in front of her, didn't move or say a thing the whole time, and when we finally stood up, the spoon had a little twist in its handle.

Which sentence best explains how this passage represents an example of magical realism?

The passage creates an entirely magical world in which all the characters have magical abilities.
The author creates a confusing and contradictory world in which the magic and story elements are entirely impossible.
The author creates a magical world with ordinary characters and abilities.
The author introduces magical elements into a realistic world, and the magical elements are treated as ordinary by the characters.