When Tosaki wakes up, he finds that he's not really a human being, but a demi-human. He's from the Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare's "de-humanization" department. He tells Tosaki that he can't check if she's actually a demi human because she'll never be able to prove it. Tosaki tells him that he works hard for a living, and that he wants to be independent when he graduates from high school. He asks if he needs a job, and Tosaki says that he does, but that he doesn't need a job because he has a crush on a guy who works for a hostess club at the train station. He also tells her that the guy he used to work for ran into him at the station, and he'll pay him to go drink with him. He then asks if there's anything wrong with the other guy, and she says that it's his fault that he keeps him around. She tells him about her mother's and stepfather's attempts to sell her own child, and how the police still have a recording of her call to the police station. They can sell her for ten million yen, she tells him.
When Tosaki wakes up, he finds that he's not really a human being, but a demi-human. He's from the Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare's "de-humanization" department. He tells Tosaki that he can't check if she's actually a demi human because she'll never be able to prove it. Tosaki tells him that he works hard for a living, and that he wants to be independent when he graduates from high school. He asks if he needs a job, and Tosaki says that he does, but that he doesn't need a job because he has a crush on a guy who works for a hostess club at the train station. He also tells her that the guy he used to work for ran into him at the station, and he'll pay him to go drink with him. He then asks if there's anything wrong with the other guy, and she says that it's his fault that he keeps him around. She tells him about her mother's and stepfather's attempts to sell her own child, and how the police still have a recording of her call to the police station. They can sell her for ten million yen, she tells him.