The narrator asks the boy why he would apologize for eating frozen pork without him. The boy explains that he was glad to hear that the meat was fine, because it made him feel important to his cousin. The narrator says that he grew up at his aunt's house since middle school, and that his aunt would feel bad if a child lived off of her. He imagines that one day, he would win a lottery and buy whatever he wanted, buy a gift for his aunt, and become someone the family could rely on. He says that the man who gave him the money looked like a brother to him, and he is sorry that he does not like him.
The narrator asks the boy why he would apologize for eating frozen pork without him. The boy explains that he was glad to hear that the meat was fine, because it made him feel important to his cousin. The narrator says that he grew up at his aunt's house since middle school, and that his aunt would feel bad if a child lived off of her. He imagines that one day, he would win a lottery and buy whatever he wanted, buy a gift for his aunt, and become someone the family could rely on. He says that the man who gave him the money looked like a brother to him, and he is sorry that he does not like him.