Consequently, the narrator makes plans to destroy the boy's car.
The narrator at this point makes a comment on the relationship between the lord and Yoshihide's daughter.
When the teacher looks at a drawing the narrator has made, she thinks it is a man flying through the air.
After the distraught husband leaves them, the determined narrator and married woman eventually make their way to a hotel room to begin a relationship.
The narrator, however, makes a number of errors in his comparison.
The narrator makes no judgments, but shows one woman's daily difficulties and rewards clearly.
By this time, the narrator has lost any sense of calm he had remaining, and makes a run for the door.
The narrator makes a campaign appeal, associating Clinton with higher taxes and waste.
The narrator makes no comment about these ideas either.