The narrator tries to pretend that she doesn't know what's going on, but she can't figure out what he's talking about. The narrator pretends that she's not in love with Ganymede, but the narrator knows better. He tells her that she shouldn't have fallen for him in the first place, because he wants the girls to be nice to him. He also tells her to stop talking about love and romance, because it's too easy to fall for people who don't care about you. He says he could hypnotize her, but he doesn. He's starting to like Ganyme, though, and wants to know why he would ever want to like a human like her. He asks if he'd ever like a cat like him, and the narrator tells him that he was once a house cat named Kusunoki. He then tells the narrator that he learned that the bond between his wolf father and his human mother could also mean "the end" , meaning the end of the relationship between the wolf and his mother. The wolf's bond to his mother, he says, means that he can never love anyone, because that's how he'll never be able to bond with anyone. But, he adds, the bond also means that the wolf can never be born, because the wolf is tied to his father forever, and that means that his mother can never have children, too.
The narrator tries to pretend that she doesn't know what's going on, but she can't figure out what he's talking about. The narrator pretends that she's not in love with Ganymede, but the narrator knows better. He tells her that she shouldn't have fallen for him in the first place, because he wants the girls to be nice to him. He also tells her to stop talking about love and romance, because it's too easy to fall for people who don't care about you. He says he could hypnotize her, but he doesn. He's starting to like Ganyme, though, and wants to know why he would ever want to like a human like her. He asks if he'd ever like a cat like him, and the narrator tells him that he was once a house cat named Kusunoki. He then tells the narrator that he learned that the bond between his wolf father and his human mother could also mean "the end" , meaning the end of the relationship between the wolf and his mother. The wolf's bond to his mother, he says, means that he can never love anyone, because that's how he'll never be able to bond with anyone. But, he adds, the bond also means that the wolf can never be born, because the wolf is tied to his father forever, and that means that his mother can never have children, too.