The sun comes up, and the servant asks if he still hasn't made a move. The servant replies that he does, and that he'll make a move no matter who the target is. He tells the servant that the boss's orders are the rules of the eight-black servants, and this is the way they've always been set up. He says he's not going to show mercy to the servant because he doesn't want to lose to him before he makes the move. He'll ask the servant again before he does anything, he says, and there's nothing he can do about that. He calls the servant an idiot, and says that he certainly is a little angry, but that's because he has been too friendly with the eight black servants. He asks the servant if he should be afraid of him getting angry, and he says that is why he gets angry. He then asks if the servant ever told him that his electromagnetic force could only control objects with metal inside them, which means that his force can't save him from losing his knowledge. He wonders why the servant didn't ask the boss why he was being killed, and wonders if he'd asked the boss the reason for killing him
The sun comes up, and the servant asks if he still hasn't made a move. The servant replies that he does, and that he'll make a move no matter who the target is. He tells the servant that the boss's orders are the rules of the eight-black servants, and this is the way they've always been set up. He says he's not going to show mercy to the servant because he doesn't want to lose to him before he makes the move. He'll ask the servant again before he does anything, he says, and there's nothing he can do about that. He calls the servant an idiot, and says that he certainly is a little angry, but that's because he has been too friendly with the eight black servants. He asks the servant if he should be afraid of him getting angry, and he says that is why he gets angry. He then asks if the servant ever told him that his electromagnetic force could only control objects with metal inside them, which means that his force can't save him from losing his knowledge. He wonders why the servant didn't ask the boss why he was being killed, and wonders if he'd asked the boss the reason for killing him