The chapter opens with a rumble, a patter, and a lamentation. The narrator tells us that the angels have lost track of the Lord. He says that he was neither Heaven nor Hell accepts him. He tells his mother that she must go back to heaven when she grows up. She tells him that he must obey just because she's his mother. He replies that he can seize heaven with his own hands, and he tells her that he'll prove her wrong. He then tells his mom that the last ingredients for the potion have arrived and that she should drink it right away. He's going back to sleep, and says that now that the problem has been solved, he's not going to bother him with the next three days. He doesn't want to meet again, he says, because he knows that they can't be friends. He also says that even if there's a potion that can ward off misfortune, the truth is that humans are more fragile than any other creatures. He reminds her that she has done everything she can to protect him, even if he'd been misunderstood. He asks her why she would think that being a wizard was inherently a crime. She says that she'd never thought that she would have to be alone.
The chapter opens with a rumble, a patter, and a lamentation. The narrator tells us that the angels have lost track of the Lord. He says that he was neither Heaven nor Hell accepts him. He tells his mother that she must go back to heaven when she grows up. She tells him that he must obey just because she's his mother. He replies that he can seize heaven with his own hands, and he tells her that he'll prove her wrong. He then tells his mom that the last ingredients for the potion have arrived and that she should drink it right away. He's going back to sleep, and says that now that the problem has been solved, he's not going to bother him with the next three days. He doesn't want to meet again, he says, because he knows that they can't be friends. He also says that even if there's a potion that can ward off misfortune, the truth is that humans are more fragile than any other creatures. He reminds her that she has done everything she can to protect him, even if he'd been misunderstood. He asks her why she would think that being a wizard was inherently a crime. She says that she'd never thought that she would have to be alone.