The narrator tells us that the Anzai family started out as a "software firm" and then "exploded" into a "media company" . They bought up Tetaharu five years ago and are rumored to be getting into politics. The narrator says he's just looking after the girl because she is his "double" , which means she's basically his wife. He says he always thought that the family was too suited to a woman's steps, but now he thinks that it's because they attend parties all the time. He also says that the boy is "charming like a prince" and the girl is "no fatter than you." The narrator asks the boy to dance with him, but the boy refuses, saying that the grounds are too big for a girl like him to dance on. He tells the narrator that the woman he danced with was "quite the lovely lady" from the group of mitsuishi, or rich people. He adds that he didn't realize that the girl was her type, and that a woman couldn't dance until she'd been led . He's glad to see the narrator again, and he says that one of his brothers is an "unlawful brother" with a "love hate" relationship. He goes on to say that since they moved to Japan, his mother and father have been throwing parties, holding charity functions, playing golf, and all sorts of other things to build up their social connections. The two of them are "constantly throwing parties" and "holding charity functions" and all of this to "build up those connections" that they don't yet have. He doesn't know how rich people can feel this way, but he does know
The narrator tells us that the Anzai family started out as a "software firm" and then "exploded" into a "media company" . They bought up Tetaharu five years ago and are rumored to be getting into politics. The narrator says he's just looking after the girl because she is his "double" , which means she's basically his wife. He says he always thought that the family was too suited to a woman's steps, but now he thinks that it's because they attend parties all the time. He also says that the boy is "charming like a prince" and the girl is "no fatter than you." The narrator asks the boy to dance with him, but the boy refuses, saying that the grounds are too big for a girl like him to dance on. He tells the narrator that the woman he danced with was "quite the lovely lady" from the group of mitsuishi, or rich people. He adds that he didn't realize that the girl was her type, and that a woman couldn't dance until she'd been led . He's glad to see the narrator again, and he says that one of his brothers is an "unlawful brother" with a "love hate" relationship. He goes on to say that since they moved to Japan, his mother and father have been throwing parties, holding charity functions, playing golf, and all sorts of other things to build up their social connections. The two of them are "constantly throwing parties" and "holding charity functions" and all of this to "build up those connections" that they don't yet have. He doesn't know how rich people can feel this way, but he does know