The next morning, the two young men discuss the events of the previous night. They decide to take leave of each other. The young men tell each other that they will not return to their families until they have resolved their differences. When they are alone, the young men ask each other if they are their biological siblings. They reply that they are, in fact, the children of the same family. When the young man asks if he was adopted when he was five years old, he is told that he is the child of the neighbor. When he is three, he tells his father that he has been cleaned of his nappy rash and that it is his father who has called his parents to send him to the hospital for a head injury. He also tells the men that he was the one who cleaned their nappies when they were three years old. He tells them that they must be out of it, because he is who he wants to be. He then tells them to stop talking to each other because he misses them so much. He wants to know where his sister is, and she has not been seen for three days. He asks if the queen sent her here to do nothing but kill people. He hears that the hunters have been killed and buried alive, and he also hears that she has lost her temper. He is sure that both of them are his loved ones, but he wants them to stay out of the conflict.
The next morning, the two young men discuss the events of the previous night. They decide to take leave of each other. The young men tell each other that they will not return to their families until they have resolved their differences. When they are alone, the young men ask each other if they are their biological siblings. They reply that they are, in fact, the children of the same family. When the young man asks if he was adopted when he was five years old, he is told that he is the child of the neighbor. When he is three, he tells his father that he has been cleaned of his nappy rash and that it is his father who has called his parents to send him to the hospital for a head injury. He also tells the men that he was the one who cleaned their nappies when they were three years old. He tells them that they must be out of it, because he is who he wants to be. He then tells them to stop talking to each other because he misses them so much. He wants to know where his sister is, and she has not been seen for three days. He asks if the queen sent her here to do nothing but kill people. He hears that the hunters have been killed and buried alive, and he also hears that she has lost her temper. He is sure that both of them are his loved ones, but he wants them to stay out of the conflict.