This chapter's epigraph is from the play's first soliloquy, "The Second in Charge trembling ah / Win the Third in Charge was defeated / By a young guy" . It's a reference to the fact that the second in command was defeated by the third in command, and that the third was beaten beyond human strength by the young man who defeated him. The young man gave off blue light over his body, and the older brother, the eldest son, couldn't even feel the third's breath. He's worried that the other members of the "Triple A" have started preparing for war. He wants to know why they haven't prepared for war yet. He asks his servant, phoenix, if he's found out that the war god can't be controlled yet. The servant tells him that it's hard to explain, because the battle is not a battle between two warring gods, but between two "clusters of fire" that don't really want to fight. He suggests that the best thing to do is not to let the battle between the two gods go on, because it
This chapter's epigraph is from the play's first soliloquy, "The Second in Charge trembling ah / Win the Third in Charge was defeated / By a young guy" . It's a reference to the fact that the second in command was defeated by the third in command, and that the third was beaten beyond human strength by the young man who defeated him. The young man gave off blue light over his body, and the older brother, the eldest son, couldn't even feel the third's breath. He's worried that the other members of the "Triple A" have started preparing for war. He wants to know why they haven't prepared for war yet. He asks his servant, phoenix, if he's found out that the war god can't be controlled yet. The servant tells him that it's hard to explain, because the battle is not a battle between two warring gods, but between two "clusters of fire" that don't really want to fight. He suggests that the best thing to do is not to let the battle between the two gods go on, because it