The narrator tells us that he's staying at the house of one of his schoolmates, who's seven years older than him. He's happy that he doesn't have to worry about school anymore, but he wishes that he had more time to spend with his friend. The narrator says that he feels like he has become handsome, and that he wants to compliment him. The boy is so handsome, in fact, that the narrator wants to take a picture with him for his collection of toys. He wants to buy him the toys, and he wants the photo to be of him, not someone else. He asks the boy if there's any place he'd like to go play, and the boy says yes, and then the narrator asks him if he wants a photo of himself, too. He then asks if the photo is of him or someone else, and if it's possible that the photo could be of someone else? The boy says no, but the narrator says, "I am pure white, and I can take pictures, snap his head, and snap his eyes, but snap his hair, snap horrible" .
The narrator tells us that he's staying at the house of one of his schoolmates, who's seven years older than him. He's happy that he doesn't have to worry about school anymore, but he wishes that he had more time to spend with his friend. The narrator says that he feels like he has become handsome, and that he wants to compliment him. The boy is so handsome, in fact, that the narrator wants to take a picture with him for his collection of toys. He wants to buy him the toys, and he wants the photo to be of him, not someone else. He asks the boy if there's any place he'd like to go play, and the boy says yes, and then the narrator asks him if he wants a photo of himself, too. He then asks if the photo is of him or someone else, and if it's possible that the photo could be of someone else? The boy says no, but the narrator says, "I am pure white, and I can take pictures, snap his head, and snap his eyes, but snap his hair, snap horrible" .