It's a big house in the middle of nowhere. It belongs to a very rich man. The narrator is on his way to buy some glasses. He's bummed because he's lost his old ones. He asks the narrator why she's wearing those old glasses, and the narrator says it's because she was traumatized by seeing her dad and her mom doing the same thing in a theater. He doesn't know why. He says he'll have to demolish the house first thing. He goes on to say that the woman in the mirror is the daughter of the owner of the house. The woman is wearing glasses from the same shop that the narrator was raving about earlier in the day. He realizes that she is there to make the house sell. He tells the woman that he'd like to speak to her, but she won't answer his questions. She says she'll come back when her mother comes home. She tells the narrator that the house is for the owner to decide whether or not to sell, and that she and her family will buy it anyway. She's not worried about her family's money, she says, because they're not like that every day. She asks the woman why she invited her to come to the house, and she says it was because she wanted to see her brother's new glasses. She then asks if she could see the woman's big brother, and he says she could. She clenches her fists and says her big brother had his glasses, too. He then says he is technically a man, so he has to think about it.
It's a big house in the middle of nowhere. It belongs to a very rich man. The narrator is on his way to buy some glasses. He's bummed because he's lost his old ones. He asks the narrator why she's wearing those old glasses, and the narrator says it's because she was traumatized by seeing her dad and her mom doing the same thing in a theater. He doesn't know why. He says he'll have to demolish the house first thing. He goes on to say that the woman in the mirror is the daughter of the owner of the house. The woman is wearing glasses from the same shop that the narrator was raving about earlier in the day. He realizes that she is there to make the house sell. He tells the woman that he'd like to speak to her, but she won't answer his questions. She says she'll come back when her mother comes home. She tells the narrator that the house is for the owner to decide whether or not to sell, and that she and her family will buy it anyway. She's not worried about her family's money, she says, because they're not like that every day. She asks the woman why she invited her to come to the house, and she says it was because she wanted to see her brother's new glasses. She then asks if she could see the woman's big brother, and he says she could. She clenches her fists and says her big brother had his glasses, too. He then says he is technically a man, so he has to think about it.