The girls are all so pretty, and the narrator wants to buy them all. He doesn't realize that everyone in the village is rich too, and that the celebration party is just like a party for the nobles, so they can wipe out the girls. The narrator tells us that the leader of the cult has never been to the village before, but he's a very important person in western Turkey. He tells the narrator to act like nothing is his concern, and to act as if he'll be back in a month. He says that he can have boys play and sing with him every night, which means he can pick a guy to pick for him. The men are all ugly, and he can't find any to pick from. He asks the girls to pretend to take care of him, and if they don't, he can play with women.
The girls are all so pretty, and the narrator wants to buy them all. He doesn't realize that everyone in the village is rich too, and that the celebration party is just like a party for the nobles, so they can wipe out the girls. The narrator tells us that the leader of the cult has never been to the village before, but he's a very important person in western Turkey. He tells the narrator to act like nothing is his concern, and to act as if he'll be back in a month. He says that he can have boys play and sing with him every night, which means he can pick a guy to pick for him. The men are all ugly, and he can't find any to pick from. He asks the girls to pretend to take care of him, and if they don't, he can play with women.