This is a locked chapterChapter 4: Forbidden at the Dawn III: Consequences
About This Chapter
Azam Raharjo, the narrator of the story, warns that the episode contains "disturbing images and scenes" and that it is forbidden at dawn. He tells us that he opened the window to see edo outside, but that he did not see the body of the dead man. He also says that lala is outside, and that the body is being "split open" . He says that the sound of the flesh being ripped and sucked from the outside was heard, and in a flash everything turned into "ecstasy silence". They saw the bodies of the catfishes impaled on their tridents, and the clay jars emptied. They also saw shaw and edo, and they ended up as the same way. They had tried to report the incident to the university, but they were not allowed to do so. They sent edo back to the family in a sealed casket, and lala was sent to the asylum. They never heard from him since.
This is a locked chapterChapter 4: Forbidden at the Dawn III: Consequences
About This Chapter
Azam Raharjo, the narrator of the story, warns that the episode contains "disturbing images and scenes" and that it is forbidden at dawn. He tells us that he opened the window to see edo outside, but that he did not see the body of the dead man. He also says that lala is outside, and that the body is being "split open" . He says that the sound of the flesh being ripped and sucked from the outside was heard, and in a flash everything turned into "ecstasy silence". They saw the bodies of the catfishes impaled on their tridents, and the clay jars emptied. They also saw shaw and edo, and they ended up as the same way. They had tried to report the incident to the university, but they were not allowed to do so. They sent edo back to the family in a sealed casket, and lala was sent to the asylum. They never heard from him since.