In this short scene, the two young men are playing street basketball in front of the rehearsal room of the band. They are interrupted by the sound of a knock at the door, and the two men run away from the scene. The young men ask each other if they usually play street basketball, and one of them answers that he used to play there when he was in the country. The other responds that he often played there, but that it was too cold and the weather was not so good. He tells the young men that he has both good and bad news, and that he wants to hear the good news first. The two men decide that they should tell each other the bad news before they tell the other. They decide that it is too late for them to learn to play the cello, so they can make an appointment the next day or the following day. They also decide to go to a party next Saturday, and they have to leave early for the party. They discuss how they can arrange to have a private lesson at their home after the rehearsal, and he tells them to rub the "awesome ame aroma" of the flowers that bloom in the summer. He also tells them that he won a lottery prize that night, and is now free to go anywhere he likes. He asks if they are jealous of him, but they are not. He says that the relationship between him and the young man seems to be different from before. He wonders if he would have fallen in love if he had not learned the cello.
In this short scene, the two young men are playing street basketball in front of the rehearsal room of the band. They are interrupted by the sound of a knock at the door, and the two men run away from the scene. The young men ask each other if they usually play street basketball, and one of them answers that he used to play there when he was in the country. The other responds that he often played there, but that it was too cold and the weather was not so good. He tells the young men that he has both good and bad news, and that he wants to hear the good news first. The two men decide that they should tell each other the bad news before they tell the other. They decide that it is too late for them to learn to play the cello, so they can make an appointment the next day or the following day. They also decide to go to a party next Saturday, and they have to leave early for the party. They discuss how they can arrange to have a private lesson at their home after the rehearsal, and he tells them to rub the "awesome ame aroma" of the flowers that bloom in the summer. He also tells them that he won a lottery prize that night, and is now free to go anywhere he likes. He asks if they are jealous of him, but they are not. He says that the relationship between him and the young man seems to be different from before. He wonders if he would have fallen in love if he had not learned the cello.