Memory - Fourth Day of Third Day of The Country With the School — Assignment
Description: A younger Kino takes the bomb bag out with Master, carefully dismantling the bomb and checking out all of the pieces. The woman compliments Kino's craftsmanship and is happy that they were able to diagram the entire construction. They then put it together again as if it had never been taken apart.
They then head out with Hermes into the forest, away from the house. Kino hangs the bag with the bomb on a branch with the detonation cord leading to Master and Hermes taking cover behind a thick tree trunk. Kino joins them and checks to make sure everyone is ready before pulling the cord, leading the high-powered military bomb to detonate and send nails for shrapnel burying themselves into the trees. Master, Kino, and Hermes all celebrate the successful detonation as the two humans remove earplugs - Kino built it perfectly!
Note: the original Japanese does not particularly gender Kino, and by default most people tend to assume Kino is male upon sight, so assume cases of "Miss" etc. are just some polite referral to Kino (one official translation uses Mx.) unless otherwise noted.
Day 374
Description: A younger Kino takes the bomb bag out with Master, carefully dismantling the bomb and checking out all of the pieces. The woman compliments Kino's craftsmanship and is happy that they were able to diagram the entire construction. They then put it together again as if it had never been taken apart.
They then head out with Hermes into the forest, away from the house. Kino hangs the bag with the bomb on a branch with the detonation cord leading to Master and Hermes taking cover behind a thick tree trunk. Kino joins them and checks to make sure everyone is ready before pulling the cord, leading the high-powered military bomb to detonate and send nails for shrapnel burying themselves into the trees. Master, Kino, and Hermes all celebrate the successful detonation as the two humans remove earplugs - Kino built it perfectly!
Note: the original Japanese does not particularly gender Kino, and by default most people tend to assume Kino is male upon sight, so assume cases of "Miss" etc. are just some polite referral to Kino (one official translation uses Mx.) unless otherwise noted.