Kokkoku Moment by Moment • 12TH MOMENT • Page ik-page-1797152
Kokkoku Moment by Moment • 12TH MOMENT • Page ik-page-1797140
Kokkoku Moment by Moment • 12TH MOMENT • Page ik-page-1797150
Kokkoku Moment by Moment • 12TH MOMENT • Page ik-page-1797128
12TH MOMENT
This is a locked chapter12TH MOMENT
About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph comes from the ga pen, which means "the pen" in Japanese. It's a pen that's used to write letters, and it's the same pen that the ga-pen was using when it wrote the letters. The pen was a pile of dirt, which is why the ga was writing letters in the first place. So, the ga is writing letters to the pen, and the pen is writing back to the ga. The ga asks the ga if he's figured out what's going on. He doesn't. He's just figured out that there's no point in writing letters anymore, since they're all dead. So the ga asks if the ga has figured out where all this is coming from, and he says that it probably isn't, because the ga says that they shouldn't hurt people who've been frozen for a long time. He also says that this is the same thing that the macro phage is doing. The macro phage, he says, is like a herald, a symbol of danger to humans who are living in stasis. So they should be careful not to hurt anyone who's frozen, because they'll be seen as a threat by the stasis itself. This is a good point, because it means that the sagawas aren't really worried about anything. They're just worried about the fact that they've got a giant pile of sand in their path, which they can't move. The sakuras are worried that the sand is going to freeze them to death, so they should stay in their current state of frozen immobility. They don't know how to deal with this, since the
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Kokkoku Moment by Moment • 12TH MOMENT • Page ik-page-1797152
Kokkoku Moment by Moment • 12TH MOMENT • Page ik-page-1797140
Kokkoku Moment by Moment • 12TH MOMENT • Page ik-page-1797150
Kokkoku Moment by Moment • 12TH MOMENT • Page ik-page-1797128
12TH MOMENT
This is a locked chapter12TH MOMENT
About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph comes from the ga pen, which means "the pen" in Japanese. It's a pen that's used to write letters, and it's the same pen that the ga-pen was using when it wrote the letters. The pen was a pile of dirt, which is why the ga was writing letters in the first place. So, the ga is writing letters to the pen, and the pen is writing back to the ga. The ga asks the ga if he's figured out what's going on. He doesn't. He's just figured out that there's no point in writing letters anymore, since they're all dead. So the ga asks if the ga has figured out where all this is coming from, and he says that it probably isn't, because the ga says that they shouldn't hurt people who've been frozen for a long time. He also says that this is the same thing that the macro phage is doing. The macro phage, he says, is like a herald, a symbol of danger to humans who are living in stasis. So they should be careful not to hurt anyone who's frozen, because they'll be seen as a threat by the stasis itself. This is a good point, because it means that the sagawas aren't really worried about anything. They're just worried about the fact that they've got a giant pile of sand in their path, which they can't move. The sakuras are worried that the sand is going to freeze them to death, so they should stay in their current state of frozen immobility. They don't know how to deal with this, since the
Close Viewer