The second issue of the shonenzine begins with a discussion of the seven mysteries that the students at the school are supposed to investigate. The reader is surprised to learn that there is no mystery to the mystery of the school, and that the mystery is more of a tragedy than a mystery. He wonders if the girl is too old for the girl at the other end of the class, and wonders if she would be more "appropriate ate" if she had a boyfriend. He also wonders if there is any mystery left in the world that the grown-up world does not have. He thinks that there are seven mysteries in the manga industry, and he wonders if this industry has a "downward spiral" of "malicious trends" that go on "for no good reason" . He asks if he ever had someone refuse to write a "t teaser" instead of a regular one, and the reader responds that he had never had anyone say no. He then asks if the deadline for the next edition of the magazine is Monday, but the editor replies that it is a fraction of a second. He adds that he cannot draw anything until he knows the "real dead line" , which he calculates from the information given to him by his bosses. He concludes that he has discovered six "mystery girls" and wonders whether they are indeed his grand daughter.
The second issue of the shonenzine begins with a discussion of the seven mysteries that the students at the school are supposed to investigate. The reader is surprised to learn that there is no mystery to the mystery of the school, and that the mystery is more of a tragedy than a mystery. He wonders if the girl is too old for the girl at the other end of the class, and wonders if she would be more "appropriate ate" if she had a boyfriend. He also wonders if there is any mystery left in the world that the grown-up world does not have. He thinks that there are seven mysteries in the manga industry, and he wonders if this industry has a "downward spiral" of "malicious trends" that go on "for no good reason" . He asks if he ever had someone refuse to write a "t teaser" instead of a regular one, and the reader responds that he had never had anyone say no. He then asks if the deadline for the next edition of the magazine is Monday, but the editor replies that it is a fraction of a second. He adds that he cannot draw anything until he knows the "real dead line" , which he calculates from the information given to him by his bosses. He concludes that he has discovered six "mystery girls" and wonders whether they are indeed his grand daughter.