Back at home, the Governess tells his son that he has met an "awesome man" and that the bullies in his village have disappeared. The Governess also tells him that he is going to school the next day, and that his leg has not recovered. He asks his son if he has any plasters that he used to make before he became a god. He says that he does fortune telling, but that he keeps the plaster as a memento as a sign of his good fortune. He wants to know where his wife and son are, and how they are doing. He has sent him the plaster, which he bought from the descendant of the man who made the plaster before becoming a god
Back at home, the Governess tells his son that he has met an "awesome man" and that the bullies in his village have disappeared. The Governess also tells him that he is going to school the next day, and that his leg has not recovered. He asks his son if he has any plasters that he used to make before he became a god. He says that he does fortune telling, but that he keeps the plaster as a memento as a sign of his good fortune. He wants to know where his wife and son are, and how they are doing. He has sent him the plaster, which he bought from the descendant of the man who made the plaster before becoming a god