I think it's wonderful that your characters are being given a say in the plot. Pat yourself on the back for this because I think it's an evolution in your writing.
My problem was different. I could see the scene but since I'd written the action, I didn't especially want to write what happened in between. Writing in a linear fashion is something I've only been able to do for a couple of years. Before that, I just wrote about the drama and didn't peg stuff together even though I knew what would happen. That might be why Acts is strung along for the first third of the book. Once I got to the action, it moves a lot smoother.
Oh, NJC and Janet. I've integrated your suggestions for 'Saving Tazar.' Took me long enough. Work smeared me for the last string of shifts, so I just limped home, fell over and then went back to the coal mines for more of the same. Today, I changed the ending slightly. Janet's point was good. I hadn't left the reader with any idea of what the rest of the story would bring. That's been fixed.
A