It's the morning of the second day of Lili's first visit to her new home. She wakes up in the middle of the night and wonders why she didn't sleep in the park the night before. She asks why she was taken to the park in the first place, and she wonders how people can never be unhappy. She wonders how she can feel the same way about the world as she does, and wonders if she can breathe the same things as he does. She tells him that if she were in her present state of mind, she would have died in a coma 30 years ago. Lili asks if she has a terminal disease, and he says that he did. She says that she promised that she would be happy to see her dead, and that she's glad to see that she is. She then asks if the pain in her nose was out of love. He says that maybe the pain wasn't so bad after all, and maybe love couldn't make it up. He asks if he can bring her an aspirin, but she says she doesn't need it. He tells her that he's just had a cold, and asks her to go to bed.
It's the morning of the second day of Lili's first visit to her new home. She wakes up in the middle of the night and wonders why she didn't sleep in the park the night before. She asks why she was taken to the park in the first place, and she wonders how people can never be unhappy. She wonders how she can feel the same way about the world as she does, and wonders if she can breathe the same things as he does. She tells him that if she were in her present state of mind, she would have died in a coma 30 years ago. Lili asks if she has a terminal disease, and he says that he did. She says that she promised that she would be happy to see her dead, and that she's glad to see that she is. She then asks if the pain in her nose was out of love. He says that maybe the pain wasn't so bad after all, and maybe love couldn't make it up. He asks if he can bring her an aspirin, but she says she doesn't need it. He tells her that he's just had a cold, and asks her to go to bed.