Luo Binhan has no particular resistance to singing. He is not the kind of person who can't speak at all in front of outsiders, but he is not the person who occupies the microphone for the longest time in KTV. The key that prompted him to start singing to pass the time was Asabam. She seemed to have made up her mind not to answer Luo Binhan's words again, but perhaps because she wanted to know the news about "Yupsilon" at any time, she did not force Luo Binhan to shut up.
If they were accompanied by a more suitable partner at this time, like Momolo, Marin or Bangbang (Luo Binhan tried not to let himself think of this again), he would definitely be happy to spend more time chatting. However, when Luo Binhan found that his mind was filled with things about Upsilon and Jing Huang, he gave up any idea of talking to Garfield. One of the factors is that Garfield once used him as a slingshot to knock out pine cones, but the more important problem is that there are some things that he doesn't want Garfield to know. From the strategies he could currently adopt, it seemed that the best way to prevent cannibals from reading minds was to "don't even think about it."
Tired of hearing the clanging sounds of soldiers walking, he finally found another pastime for himself, filling his mind with patchwork lyrics and mixed melodies. From "Let's Swing the Oars" to "The Milky Way Makes a Circle," those songs made him feel that an old friend, a music-loving soul was approaching him from the depths of his memory, but it was not anyone from his hometown. A great musician, but his elementary school music teacher who was terrible at the piano - every song he sang casually was actually learned in elementary school. Can this be said to be reasonable? Could it be that he hasn't memorized any songs since elementary school? How could a junior high school student have such a bleak life?
Luo Binhan was thinking about this issue while singing. He heard the phrase "The sky is full of little stars" slipped out of his mouth, and couldn't help turning his head to look at Asabam. He was not a singer, so of course he sang in his own native language, so he assumed that Asabam didn't understand.
"Hang in the sky and let the light shine," he sang absently.
"I like that," Garfield commented.
Luo Binhan didn't want to talk to it. The purpose of his singing was to stop himself from leaking the secret to Garfield, but this song brought another picture into his mind. What he was thinking about was no longer the catchy melody and the familiar lyrics, but the thunderous rainstorm, the winding blood stream, and the man wearing the rotten pig's head walking through the door. She whispered in his mind, more like the shadow of a nightmare than Asabam.
He divided his thoughts again, as skillfully as switching windows on a mobile phone. Soon he was singing "Le Pamperensi" again, feeling the wind around him tremble as he sang "Meow Meow!" Luo Binhan thought about how Asabam didn't stop him yet. Even he wanted to stop, but that was absolutely impossible, because after all, this was a battle of willpower. Whoever stops it first will be embarrassed.
"Meow meow!" he continued to sing with impunity. At the same time, he couldn't help but feel a little doubtful about the taste of this universe. This song was somewhat unworthy of its honor as a famous song in the universe. It was so simple that he could easily remember it after just listening to Marin sing it once. And to be honest, he didn't think the lyrics had any connotation. Could this be the reason? The simpler it is, the more people will understand it?
"I think it's pretty simple," Garfield said. "Most people think they would be cute singing 'Meow Meow,' and they also want to know what it would be like for someone they're interested in singing 'Meow Meow.' But that can't be intentional. - I have observed that you have such a peculiar mechanism that it is better to do something unintentional in a serious situation than to do it deliberately. Once the audience realizes that the action is intentional, I mean, a kind of explicit action A conscious performance, you think it has lost its original interest, even though the act itself has not changed in any way. However, I often doubt this theory, because I find that sometimes you defend the obvious performance by claiming that it has some kind of authenticity, or At least it cannot be falsified. This makes me feel that what you are pursuing is not the truth, but to make yourself believe in what you want. Sometimes you use dreams as a metaphor for these wishes, and sometimes this makes me feel that you all seem to be a kind of lexicon to a certain extent. .”
Luo Binhan had no idea what it was talking about. He didn't allow himself to focus on understanding Garfield's language. But he still inevitably listened to some of it, thinking that when he returned to the Silence, he should entrust ∈ to accomplish something big. They were going to videotape Jing Huang's swearing scenes, replace all the lines with "meow", and then send them to the alliance for the selection of funny video highlights - there must be some similar competition show in this universe, right? Can this be auctioned on the black market in Men City?
Thinking about this, he sang "Le Ponprenci" over and over five times. This is the 90th song he has ever sung completely, because he also wants to test his own limits, and writes new numbers on the palm of his hand every time he sings a song. He couldn't think of any more songs for a while, so he had to spin to the tune of "It holds an iron rod, leather boots, and a bird-feather hat." But when he sang absentmindedly again, another very similar melody came to his mind.
Traveling from Hongxiang, you will achieve success through the ages.
Luo Binhan hummed vaguely. His volume dropped unconsciously, and he failed to sing any clear lyrics. He seemed to feel Asabam's critical gaze on the back of his head again, but he didn't intend to look back or hide a word about it. He hummed that melody alternately with "Le Pon Prenci" and compared them with many similar rhymes. He found "a dragon emerges from the Western Sea and lurks in the waves of the underworld", and "a snake's eyes appear in the water, and a dragon lurks on the ground". Le Pentin was indeed doomed, and so was the cat-hero Prentice, and the singing cat-man was an entertainer, an actor and a jester - is that what you want to say? Luo Binhan asked the guy playing the guitar in his mind, is this the reason why you used this melody? You plagiarism dog.
He was immersed in the anger and restlessness brought about by this new discovery, so he did not immediately notice the little call in his heart. After a while, he heard a voice that was not his own in the wind.
"Oh, oh...can you hear me..." the voice asked weakly, "can you hear me?"
At first Luo Binhan thought the sound was Upsilon, but soon he felt a little puzzled. Although Upsilon communicated with him through some mysterious telepathy, the actual experience was no different from communicating on the phone. Luo Binhan could distinguish all his pronunciations, accents and tones, but he just couldn't find an exact source. But this voice is just a "voice". It can hardly be heard as a human timbre. It just uses wind-like chirping to form a tone that seems to be language.
"Who?" he asked suspiciously.
"I...oh, I'm not sure if I'm the only one here...but, what can I say, maybe the guidance robot won't come to this place..."
At this time, Luo Binhan had a vague answer. But he didn't dare to be sure or judge. He turned back and stared at Asabam, giving her a meaningful look. Asabam just frowned at him.
"...Is it you, Luo?" the voice asked hesitantly, "I can't see it...but I seem to feel that it looks more like you. Oh, where are you now?"
The voice became clearer and clearer. Luo Binhan finally couldn't deceive himself anymore. He felt more and more horrified and confused about his situation, but the most urgent thing was that he had to give a response.
"...Bangbang," he said, "I thought you were dead."