When the police officers approach the chicken farm, the wolf tells them that he is the one who has eaten the chicken. He says that he thought they were just "some people" who wanted to see what a werewolf looked like. After transforming, his mind was also "muddled" and he was afraid that he would hurt the girl after he lost his senses. The officers ask him what else they want to know about him and the girl. The wolf says that she does not have a human identity, but she is clearly human. She is optimistic, kind, and has "human emotions. The only difference between her and the wolf is that the wolf has wings, but they are the same. The two officers continue to ask the wolf about his childhood, and he says that although he has never been in an orphanage before, he has been brought up here since young. He tells the officers that he was pecked at by the hen when he was a young child, and that he has seen a huge fire in his dreams. He also says that his childhood was full of strange things, but that they were also "absurd".
When the police officers approach the chicken farm, the wolf tells them that he is the one who has eaten the chicken. He says that he thought they were just "some people" who wanted to see what a werewolf looked like. After transforming, his mind was also "muddled" and he was afraid that he would hurt the girl after he lost his senses. The officers ask him what else they want to know about him and the girl. The wolf says that she does not have a human identity, but she is clearly human. She is optimistic, kind, and has "human emotions. The only difference between her and the wolf is that the wolf has wings, but they are the same. The two officers continue to ask the wolf about his childhood, and he says that although he has never been in an orphanage before, he has been brought up here since young. He tells the officers that he was pecked at by the hen when he was a young child, and that he has seen a huge fire in his dreams. He also says that his childhood was full of strange things, but that they were also "absurd".