The narrator tells us that he doesn't really care what happens to his parents when they go on a school trip. He just wants to chill out. He's not worried about what they're going to think of him when he's gone. The narrator says that he'd rather have a good night's sleep than worry about what his parents will think about him when they get back from school. He wants to eat some rice and some fruit, but he can't seem to sleep well. He wakes up to find that Miwa is still there. He asks her why she's still there, and she tells him that she fell asleep without looking. She wakes up and finds that she has some fruit and some rice to eat. She's glad that she didn't wake up Miwa, because she'll be able to sleep better.
The narrator tells us that he doesn't really care what happens to his parents when they go on a school trip. He just wants to chill out. He's not worried about what they're going to think of him when he's gone. The narrator says that he'd rather have a good night's sleep than worry about what his parents will think about him when they get back from school. He wants to eat some rice and some fruit, but he can't seem to sleep well. He wakes up to find that Miwa is still there. He asks her why she's still there, and she tells him that she fell asleep without looking. She wakes up and finds that she has some fruit and some rice to eat. She's glad that she didn't wake up Miwa, because she'll be able to sleep better.