"You shut up" , says the narrator, who is about to leave for work. He tells the narrator that he can't stay at the chef's place any longer. He says that he's going to have to leave immediately. He wants to know why the narrator is trying to avoid admitting that she also likes him. The narrator says that she's hitting on the narrator because she wants him to admit that he also likes her. He asks the narrator why she doesn't just admit that she likes him, and she says that the narrator needs to stop thinking about her and stop worrying about her. She's not rich, she says, but she has never been in love, so she has a lot of ex-boyfriends and she has to deal with the fact that her friends and family are going to judge her for having a child with the man she loves. She also says that if the baby is a girl, she'll be hated by the elders, and that she won't be able to get a dowry from her relatives. She says that this is why she wants to hit the narrator. She wants to tell him that she loves him back, but the narrator says she'd rather hit him than be in love with someone like him. She goes on to say that she and the narrator's experiences are "incomparable" because they're both rich but single women who've never had a romantic relationship. They've had many ex-lovers, and they've all been rejected by their former lovers. They have to wait for the man they love to come back to them, and then they'll have
"You shut up" , says the narrator, who is about to leave for work. He tells the narrator that he can't stay at the chef's place any longer. He says that he's going to have to leave immediately. He wants to know why the narrator is trying to avoid admitting that she also likes him. The narrator says that she's hitting on the narrator because she wants him to admit that he also likes her. He asks the narrator why she doesn't just admit that she likes him, and she says that the narrator needs to stop thinking about her and stop worrying about her. She's not rich, she says, but she has never been in love, so she has a lot of ex-boyfriends and she has to deal with the fact that her friends and family are going to judge her for having a child with the man she loves. She also says that if the baby is a girl, she'll be hated by the elders, and that she won't be able to get a dowry from her relatives. She says that this is why she wants to hit the narrator. She wants to tell him that she loves him back, but the narrator says she'd rather hit him than be in love with someone like him. She goes on to say that she and the narrator's experiences are "incomparable" because they're both rich but single women who've never had a romantic relationship. They've had many ex-lovers, and they've all been rejected by their former lovers. They have to wait for the man they love to come back to them, and then they'll have