The narrator tells us that he's been to a lot of different places in his life. He's never been to school, and that's why he hates him so much. He tells the narrator that he can't stay at the school anymore, since it's like a "school of dogs and story" . The narrator tries to get the narrator to explain his feelings, but the narrator doesn't know how to do it. Instead, he tells her to "politely" explain what's going on. He asks her to use analogies to explain why she's upset, and the narrator uses the analogy of a mouse and a cat to explain that the school is like a school of cats. She says that she needs to apologize to the school's owner, who's a "slack dummy schmuck" , for calling her a cat. The school is dangerous, she says, because she was injured in the fight, and she wants to go apologize to her owner before her mom gets home. She tells him to just "handle it" over the phone, and then she leaves.
The narrator tells us that he's been to a lot of different places in his life. He's never been to school, and that's why he hates him so much. He tells the narrator that he can't stay at the school anymore, since it's like a "school of dogs and story" . The narrator tries to get the narrator to explain his feelings, but the narrator doesn't know how to do it. Instead, he tells her to "politely" explain what's going on. He asks her to use analogies to explain why she's upset, and the narrator uses the analogy of a mouse and a cat to explain that the school is like a school of cats. She says that she needs to apologize to the school's owner, who's a "slack dummy schmuck" , for calling her a cat. The school is dangerous, she says, because she was injured in the fight, and she wants to go apologize to her owner before her mom gets home. She tells him to just "handle it" over the phone, and then she leaves.