When the scene opens, the two men are in the middle of a conversation. The man asks the man's name, and the man answers, "Kouki lax." The man tells the man that he once met him when he was a little boy, and that he is now his uncle. He tells the story of how he opened his flower shop, and how his grandmother told him about it in her letters. When he opened the shop, his grandmother said that he was "a handful during his rebellious period in Middle School." She also told him that he had been accepted at his back into high school. When the man asks what he is doing now, the man replies that he has found a job, but that he needs to find a place of his own. He says that he used to live in a park, but now he is living in a house. He is glad that his mother is like that too, because once she made a decision, she was less reckless and she acted with less thought. The two men part, and when the man leaves, he asks the woman why she didn't come to his house earlier. The woman replies that she fell asleep during the conversation.
When the scene opens, the two men are in the middle of a conversation. The man asks the man's name, and the man answers, "Kouki lax." The man tells the man that he once met him when he was a little boy, and that he is now his uncle. He tells the story of how he opened his flower shop, and how his grandmother told him about it in her letters. When he opened the shop, his grandmother said that he was "a handful during his rebellious period in Middle School." She also told him that he had been accepted at his back into high school. When the man asks what he is doing now, the man replies that he has found a job, but that he needs to find a place of his own. He says that he used to live in a park, but now he is living in a house. He is glad that his mother is like that too, because once she made a decision, she was less reckless and she acted with less thought. The two men part, and when the man leaves, he asks the woman why she didn't come to his house earlier. The woman replies that she fell asleep during the conversation.