The Governess tells the Governess that she'll go out to buy some food and then stay for the night at a nearby hotel. She tells her that she can't go back to school the next day because she's supposed to be at the market buying food. She's so embarrassed that she starts crying in front of her new crush. She wants to play with him, but she can tell that he's not the kind of guy she'd want to hang out with. He's the type of guy that she used to hate when she was in high school. She doesn't know how to respond. She says that the girl is only ten years old and that the men at her school will back her up if she gets into trouble later. She also says that her mom is proud of how proud she is of her and that she should stand up for her daughter even if she has to do the same thing to someone else. She asks if the girl has to pay penance for what she did to the murderer, and the girl says that she hasn't done anything wrong, and that it's up to her mom to decide what to do with her daughter. She goes on to say that she was the one who taught her how to be strong and kind, and now she wants to teach her daughter a lesson. She wonders if her mom has been drawing men away for her, and she wonders if this is the girl's way of drawing them away.
The Governess tells the Governess that she'll go out to buy some food and then stay for the night at a nearby hotel. She tells her that she can't go back to school the next day because she's supposed to be at the market buying food. She's so embarrassed that she starts crying in front of her new crush. She wants to play with him, but she can tell that he's not the kind of guy she'd want to hang out with. He's the type of guy that she used to hate when she was in high school. She doesn't know how to respond. She says that the girl is only ten years old and that the men at her school will back her up if she gets into trouble later. She also says that her mom is proud of how proud she is of her and that she should stand up for her daughter even if she has to do the same thing to someone else. She asks if the girl has to pay penance for what she did to the murderer, and the girl says that she hasn't done anything wrong, and that it's up to her mom to decide what to do with her daughter. She goes on to say that she was the one who taught her how to be strong and kind, and now she wants to teach her daughter a lesson. She wonders if her mom has been drawing men away for her, and she wonders if this is the girl's way of drawing them away.