"Smack, smack, smack" is the title of this chapter's dialogue, and it's a reference to a famous line from Shakespeare's play The Merchant of Venice. It's about a young man who has a crush on a young woman. The scene opens with a flashback to the day Shakespeare wrote the play. The young man, who is called "Yumi," has just met a man named "Sip" , and the two men are about to meet again. Yumi tells the young man that his sister has asked him to wake her up so they can have sex. The two men rush into the elevator, and Yumi asks if he's seen his tie, which is hanging over the railing. He says he hasn't, and he thanks Yumi for waking him up. He tells Yumi that he has plans with his sister that day, and they're going to have sex, but he won't wear any clothes that day. He asks Yumi if he can see him in the smoking-room for a bit, and she says yes.
"Smack, smack, smack" is the title of this chapter's dialogue, and it's a reference to a famous line from Shakespeare's play The Merchant of Venice. It's about a young man who has a crush on a young woman. The scene opens with a flashback to the day Shakespeare wrote the play. The young man, who is called "Yumi," has just met a man named "Sip" , and the two men are about to meet again. Yumi tells the young man that his sister has asked him to wake her up so they can have sex. The two men rush into the elevator, and Yumi asks if he's seen his tie, which is hanging over the railing. He says he hasn't, and he thanks Yumi for waking him up. He tells Yumi that he has plans with his sister that day, and they're going to have sex, but he won't wear any clothes that day. He asks Yumi if he can see him in the smoking-room for a bit, and she says yes.