WEIRDLY THE OPENING OF THE NARRATIVE, and hackneyed as it goes for obviously dominant usage in tragedy, but: "What happens in the end?"
No one prompts anyone that they take their time reading through the book if that’s the only concern. Your iffy third-person storyteller has in itself the generosity not possible for common perspectives. Probably for them, the structure of Hikoboshi and Orihime’s life entwined won’t be revealed in nonchalance.
It’d be the reward twist for the story.
Surprise─this man is playing a smart and smarter rakugo! It wasn’t the villain slapstick you expected.
However, for our narrative lost in the insignificant end of the universe, Hikoboshi is already revealed to be an unstable person. Our star would be antagonizing himself, nothing more and nothing less. Or, as iffy as this storytelling comes, maybe there is something more or something less?
At any rate, that’s the main concept already bared for you.
Now, the ending and the second concept you unlocked not by special recognition─but by cumbersome retaliation towards the system.
You see, Altair used “Perish Song” and crashed the server of a massively popular online game.
When this lonesome player was oppressed of his time and status in the virtual cyberspace, his answer was the destruction of a world.
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