In this chapter, we learn that the narrator is a former delinquent farmer who is now engaged to a young woman named "Chia Ki" . The narrator tells us that he is a "straight-forward guy" and that he wants to "fuck" the young woman "the way I want to you." He tells her to "put your arms around" him and "hold on" to her "puppet" , and he tells her that she can bite him or dig her nails "care . ." The narrator then goes on to tell us that she is engaged to another man named "Dago," but that she doesn't seem to be "his girl friend" because she seems to be his "wife." She tells him that she has a "pretty big age gap" between herself and him, and that she wants him to "keep learning more about Dago" and support him "in the future." She also tells him about the "circus" that led to his marriage to his "ex-wife," and she says that she thinks that she and Dago are "not a good match" because of their "age gap."
In this chapter, we learn that the narrator is a former delinquent farmer who is now engaged to a young woman named "Chia Ki" . The narrator tells us that he is a "straight-forward guy" and that he wants to "fuck" the young woman "the way I want to you." He tells her to "put your arms around" him and "hold on" to her "puppet" , and he tells her that she can bite him or dig her nails "care . ." The narrator then goes on to tell us that she is engaged to another man named "Dago," but that she doesn't seem to be "his girl friend" because she seems to be his "wife." She tells him that she has a "pretty big age gap" between herself and him, and that she wants him to "keep learning more about Dago" and support him "in the future." She also tells him about the "circus" that led to his marriage to his "ex-wife," and she says that she thinks that she and Dago are "not a good match" because of their "age gap."