In this short scene, Seong Eun explains that if a student feels guilty about something, then he or she hasn't done anything wrong. He says that he thought he wouldn't be able to feel emotions like a guilty person, because he used to be so used to killing people. But now, he thinks, he's too used to living with that feeling. He asks where the symbol came from, and the teacher tells him to give it back. He's in trouble, he says, and he needs to collect symbols to pass the test. The teacher gives him a symbol that looks like the King's, but he doesn't like it, because it reminds him of his own laziness. He tells the teacher that the top student on the test has been decided, and that he'll work harder on the next test.
In this short scene, Seong Eun explains that if a student feels guilty about something, then he or she hasn't done anything wrong. He says that he thought he wouldn't be able to feel emotions like a guilty person, because he used to be so used to killing people. But now, he thinks, he's too used to living with that feeling. He asks where the symbol came from, and the teacher tells him to give it back. He's in trouble, he says, and he needs to collect symbols to pass the test. The teacher gives him a symbol that looks like the King's, but he doesn't like it, because it reminds him of his own laziness. He tells the teacher that the top student on the test has been decided, and that he'll work harder on the next test.