In this chapter, the narrator tells us that he still wants to marry Zizirui, but he's not sure if he'll be able to make it to the wedding. He tells us, however, that the best place to send a "self-proclaimed genius" to is a "mental hospital" . The narrator is not a "psychopathic" , he says, and he doesn't want to kill Ziziruo. He's just trying to make sure that she's happy. He promises to see her at her wedding a year from now, and then he promises to throw her a "better wedding" when their baby is born. He also says that he knows that he can't get back the wedding now, because he is his only wife. The two vow to be married forever, and the narrator promises to be his "bride" when he grows up
In this chapter, the narrator tells us that he still wants to marry Zizirui, but he's not sure if he'll be able to make it to the wedding. He tells us, however, that the best place to send a "self-proclaimed genius" to is a "mental hospital" . The narrator is not a "psychopathic" , he says, and he doesn't want to kill Ziziruo. He's just trying to make sure that she's happy. He promises to see her at her wedding a year from now, and then he promises to throw her a "better wedding" when their baby is born. He also says that he knows that he can't get back the wedding now, because he is his only wife. The two vow to be married forever, and the narrator promises to be his "bride" when he grows up