In this chapter, the protagonist, Huck, confronts his former boss, Chennan, and tells him that he has a "death wish" . He accuses him of looking down on women, and of taking care of them only because they are women. He tells him to go and get the woman, because she defeated him, and he will take on the "sexist muye" , the boss of class F . Huck tells the protagonist that he practiced kickboxing for Chennan to catch his punch, and that he caught his punch too. Huck says that he is ashamed to work for a girl because she is good-looking or she has a good body, but that he works for her because she does not like him. He says that she beat him with her strength, but she did not force them to do so. He explains that once she accepts them, she is a good friend, and puts now they're buddies. Huck begins to see that there is a difference between "being bad" and "being immoral," and he wants to be a "stronger person," not a "scum."
In this chapter, the protagonist, Huck, confronts his former boss, Chennan, and tells him that he has a "death wish" . He accuses him of looking down on women, and of taking care of them only because they are women. He tells him to go and get the woman, because she defeated him, and he will take on the "sexist muye" , the boss of class F . Huck tells the protagonist that he practiced kickboxing for Chennan to catch his punch, and that he caught his punch too. Huck says that he is ashamed to work for a girl because she is good-looking or she has a good body, but that he works for her because she does not like him. He says that she beat him with her strength, but she did not force them to do so. He explains that once she accepts them, she is a good friend, and puts now they're buddies. Huck begins to see that there is a difference between "being bad" and "being immoral," and he wants to be a "stronger person," not a "scum."