The bird asks to be left alone with his thoughts. He wonders what would happen if the tables turned, and if the angels would refuse to use their life-forces to recover. The bird wonders if the piano key has been in the body of the girl all along, and wonders if it is the reason for her being able to do so. He tells the bird that the girl's parents are fighting for compensation, and that her relatives are also fighting for money, but that they do not have time to visit the girl. He asks the bird if he still needs a lawyer for the girl, and the bird replies that he has already left the snowy place, and he does not need to hire one. He finds a key to the piano, but he doesn't kill the girl right away. He thinks that if the girl is still alive, it means something has happened, but if she is dead, it does not mean anything.
The bird asks to be left alone with his thoughts. He wonders what would happen if the tables turned, and if the angels would refuse to use their life-forces to recover. The bird wonders if the piano key has been in the body of the girl all along, and wonders if it is the reason for her being able to do so. He tells the bird that the girl's parents are fighting for compensation, and that her relatives are also fighting for money, but that they do not have time to visit the girl. He asks the bird if he still needs a lawyer for the girl, and the bird replies that he has already left the snowy place, and he does not need to hire one. He finds a key to the piano, but he doesn't kill the girl right away. He thinks that if the girl is still alive, it means something has happened, but if she is dead, it does not mean anything.