The narrator wakes up in a hotel room with his boss, who is drunk. The narrator is surprised to find that his boss is so drunk. He thinks that it's because he's so different from the man he works for. He's also surprised because he hasn't seen his boss so drunk before. He asks the narrator to get up and get ready to go to sleep. He can't believe how drunk the man is, and he wonders if it might be better for the man to have a different side to him than to have the same side of him all the time. He also wonders if the narrator was serious about their conversation, and if he brought it up before, or if he didn't bring it up after all. He wonders if his boss might have said it badly, and the narrator thinks that might have been the case. He wants to know what the narrator wants to say, but he doesn't know how to say it. He says that the man looks like he likes him more than he thought he did, and that it makes him want to chase the man more, which is embarrassing.
The narrator wakes up in a hotel room with his boss, who is drunk. The narrator is surprised to find that his boss is so drunk. He thinks that it's because he's so different from the man he works for. He's also surprised because he hasn't seen his boss so drunk before. He asks the narrator to get up and get ready to go to sleep. He can't believe how drunk the man is, and he wonders if it might be better for the man to have a different side to him than to have the same side of him all the time. He also wonders if the narrator was serious about their conversation, and if he brought it up before, or if he didn't bring it up after all. He wonders if his boss might have said it badly, and the narrator thinks that might have been the case. He wants to know what the narrator wants to say, but he doesn't know how to say it. He says that the man looks like he likes him more than he thought he did, and that it makes him want to chase the man more, which is embarrassing.