The narrator asks his childhood friend if she has calmed down enough to understand why she is living with her parents. The friend says that she has, but that her parents have decided that her home life is a "compulsory cated" one. The narrator says that he does not want to imagine that Miura will come to visit him, but wishes that he could listen to music and cheer himself up. He says that it is already late, and that he is going to bring Miura home. He sighs to bed, and says that his emotions cannot keep up with his thoughts. He wishes that his parents had just let her go home alone, but he knows that it would not be in her best interest to do so. He tells his friend that the only person he sees as a "woman" is Miura.
The narrator asks his childhood friend if she has calmed down enough to understand why she is living with her parents. The friend says that she has, but that her parents have decided that her home life is a "compulsory cated" one. The narrator says that he does not want to imagine that Miura will come to visit him, but wishes that he could listen to music and cheer himself up. He says that it is already late, and that he is going to bring Miura home. He sighs to bed, and says that his emotions cannot keep up with his thoughts. He wishes that his parents had just let her go home alone, but he knows that it would not be in her best interest to do so. He tells his friend that the only person he sees as a "woman" is Miura.