Chapter 5777 (five thousand seven hundred and seventy-seven) becomes heavier
The man with brown hands said: "That's right, but even if I just seek advantages and avoid disadvantages, I think my behavior is quite strange."
"I think so too. I seek advantages and avoid disadvantages. In fact, I seek advantages and avoid disadvantages as a tool." said the man with gray hands.
As soon as the gray-handed man finished speaking, he saw the number clearly.
"It's 'Seven'." The gray-handed man said.
"Can you see clearly again?" asked the man with brown hands.
"Yes, I saw everything clearly," said the man with gray hands.
"How can you see it clearly? Has it shrunk?" asked the man with brown hands.
"Yes." The gray-handed man said.
"Will it be full of holes after shrinking?" the brown-hand man asked.
"It's still the same," the gray-hand man said, "but I feel like there are fewer holes than before."
"Did they disappear during the shrinking process?" The man with brown hands asked, "I mean those holes."
"It seems so?" the gray-handed man said, "But I didn't see it clearly. It suddenly shrank. The edges became much smoother, and it changed very quickly."
The man with brown hands asked again: "Will there be other numbers passing by?"
"I don't feel this way at the moment." The gray-hand man said.
"Will you feel it soon?" the brown-hand man asked.
"There will definitely be one." The gray-handed man said.
"In other words, what you can feel now is that you will definitely feel it in a while?" the brown-handed man asked.
"That's right." The gray-handed man replied.
The man with brown hands asked: "Will it be a long time?"
"Not really," said the man with gray hands.
"Surface feeling?" asked the brown-hand man.
"That's right," said the gray-handed man.
"Listen," said the brown-hand man, "he heard the sound of rain coming from his belly again."
"I heard it." The gray-hand man said, "Why does the sound this time sound like the rain is about to stop?"
"Yes." The man with brown hands said, "One drop at a time, very clear, and the intervals are very large." "In fact, it is much louder than the sound of rain that is about to stop." The man with gray hands said.
The man with brown hands added: "Yes, if it rains normally, even if it stops soon, the time interval between drops will not be so big."
The gray-handed man said: "What do you think will happen next? Will the sound of rain stop, or will it become denser?"
"It doesn't seem like it will stop immediately." The brown-hand man said, "I feel it."
"Surface?" asked the gray-handed man.
"Yes." said the brown-hand man. "What do you think?"
"I don't think it will stop immediately, nor will it become dense immediately." The man with gray hands said.
"That's right," said the brown-hand man, "I think so too."
The man with gray hands added: "Then can you feel any changes? Or will it continue like this without any change?"
"I feel like there's going to be a change, but it doesn't seem to be a change in the spacing between raindrops," said the brown-hand man.
"What do you think it is?" the gray-handed man asked.
"In terms of severity." The brown-hand man said.
"Do you think the sound of rain will get heavier?" the man with gray hands asked.
The man with brown hands said, "Yes. You feel it too?"
The gray-hand man said: "I feel it, and it seems that it will change soon."
"Listen, there are changes now." The man with brown hands said.
"Yes." The gray-hand man said, "It has really become heavier."
"Each drop falls with the same weight," said the brown-hand man.
"They've all become the same weight." The gray-handed man said.
"This is really neat." The brown-hand man said.
"Will it continue to gain weight?" the gray-handed man asked.
"I still feel it," said the brown-hand man, "Of course, it's just a superficial feeling."
(End of chapter)