I think the implication is that the body had been left for an extended time and liquefied from decay. The ladies speaking in the second to last page say he'd "already" liquified, so it must have just been a while before they found the remnants. Not sure what the timeline actually is here, thoughHow the fuck did she liquified a dead body??
Oil hardener is used for cooking/frying oil, so that it's easier to toss!making gelatin/food is one thing but what would you need to harden 'used' oil for...
What a twist (well i guess there wasn't a supernatural tag so yeah)
oof.
Horror aspect aside , if the sea near you smells 'rotten' that's not like, fish, I'd still be concerned...
(not that i've ever been to the ocean versus like a lake/beach)
Thanks! i wonder if their other series will be translated
It occurs to me that a) most of our collective knowledge about what happens to corpses in water is about cold water and b) some Japanese bathtubs have temperature settings.I think the implication is that the body had been left for an extended time and liquefied from decay. The ladies speaking in the second to last page say he'd "already" liquified, so it must have just been a while before they found the remnants. Not sure what the timeline actually is here, though
Come to think of it it would be interesting to see some stories about dudes like this where instead of saying shit that just happens to end up being true their lying and gaslighting starts warping reality.Ohh this is cute...WTF...You kinda deserved that.
@MasterPannya
It occurs to me that a) most of our collective knowledge about what happens to corpses in water is about cold water and b) some Japanese bathtubs have temperature settings.
I don't know what would happen if you put a corpse in one and never turned the heat off.
Oh, it's a cute story about a slime guy and a woma-, WAIT WHAT THE FUCK.