A tense scene opens with one person urging another to come with them, warning the ship arrives at the rebel base tomorrow and that entering the operating room means certain death. The urged person confesses that after the mark was lifted they tried to hate the other, convincing themselves memories were fake and the other a tyrant. They admit they can't hate now: the other's questions, memories of being protected, and real concern replace cold indifference. They say, "That's enough for me," but with the ship imminent their decision to go remains unresolved.