The narrator tells the audience that the food at the cafeteria is the best he has ever tasted. He tells them that he is living next door to the narrator's daughter and that he was shocked when he saw the two of them together. The narrator says that it is not a big deal and that they are all fine. He says that he would not have said anything to his daughter at her apartment if he had not seen her there. He adds that his wife and daughter do not accept pain as an expression of love and that this is why this would not be accepted as a form of violence.
The narrator tells the audience that the food at the cafeteria is the best he has ever tasted. He tells them that he is living next door to the narrator's daughter and that he was shocked when he saw the two of them together. The narrator says that it is not a big deal and that they are all fine. He says that he would not have said anything to his daughter at her apartment if he had not seen her there. He adds that his wife and daughter do not accept pain as an expression of love and that this is why this would not be accepted as a form of violence.