The narrator tells us that he can't really be friends with a girl who doesn't eat pickle noodles. He's been having a terrible stomach lately, and he'd like to try some pickled vegetables to see how they help. He says that he wishes he had a bunch of guys around to look after him, too, but he's a girl, so he'll go with the brothers to the pharmacy for some painkillers. The narrator is jealous of the girl from Chapter 1, who is always holding hands with her friends. He also says that his friends aren't as nice to him as they are to the other girls. He wants to go up to the girls and tell them, but they haven't taken the milk tea he gave them the last time. He asks the brothers why they don't approach the girls first, and they say that it's because they're not trying. He goes on to say that he just wants to let the girls know that this is way too much, and that they shouldn't be eating so much. He calls them "a bag of chips" and says that they should be ashamed of themselves for disobeying him.
The narrator tells us that he can't really be friends with a girl who doesn't eat pickle noodles. He's been having a terrible stomach lately, and he'd like to try some pickled vegetables to see how they help. He says that he wishes he had a bunch of guys around to look after him, too, but he's a girl, so he'll go with the brothers to the pharmacy for some painkillers. The narrator is jealous of the girl from Chapter 1, who is always holding hands with her friends. He also says that his friends aren't as nice to him as they are to the other girls. He wants to go up to the girls and tell them, but they haven't taken the milk tea he gave them the last time. He asks the brothers why they don't approach the girls first, and they say that it's because they're not trying. He goes on to say that he just wants to let the girls know that this is way too much, and that they shouldn't be eating so much. He calls them "a bag of chips" and says that they should be ashamed of themselves for disobeying him.