The scene opens with the sound of booms and thuds. It's the end of the chapter, and the chishang is triumphant. He has defeated the vice dean, the dean's son, and a bunch of other senior war heroes. He's even got the power to bring back his father, who has been captured and tortured by the vice-dean. The thuds of the thuds indicate that the war heroes have been defeated, and they're all back on the battlefield. The narrator asks, "what a war hero is you ?" . He asks if war heroes exist, and if they exist at all, then why don't they exist when he grows up? He also asks if he's already a "war hero," and if he can become a "super war hero" like his father. He says that war heroes shouldn't exist, but that he is already a hero, and he wants to bring his father back to him. They're inside the "rebirthing harbor," and the narrator is interested in the corpses of the young people who have been tortured the day before.
The scene opens with the sound of booms and thuds. It's the end of the chapter, and the chishang is triumphant. He has defeated the vice dean, the dean's son, and a bunch of other senior war heroes. He's even got the power to bring back his father, who has been captured and tortured by the vice-dean. The thuds of the thuds indicate that the war heroes have been defeated, and they're all back on the battlefield. The narrator asks, "what a war hero is you ?" . He asks if war heroes exist, and if they exist at all, then why don't they exist when he grows up? He also asks if he's already a "war hero," and if he can become a "super war hero" like his father. He says that war heroes shouldn't exist, but that he is already a hero, and he wants to bring his father back to him. They're inside the "rebirthing harbor," and the narrator is interested in the corpses of the young people who have been tortured the day before.