Do You Think You Can Run After Reincarnating, Nii-san?

Causal Boundary/Freelancer Briefing

... Yo.

I'm suddenly sorry, my fellow countrymen.

Atashi is Teena Cleese. Just like you, the one who watched this cause and effect from the outside.

I think it's terrible that Atashi, who's already back inside the cause and effect, should speak directly to you.

However, knowing that, we decided that we needed a mix of information here.

Information you know.

Information known to Atashi.

And, sister - the information Rakel knows.

How many differences do they have, or how much do they have in common?

Don't you think the opportunity to make that area clear is necessary?

... Well, unfortunately, I don't hear your reply to Atashi back inside the cause and effect, but let me move on as something I've agreed to.

Shall we start with the information Atashi knows?

The basics are the same as yours.

Until Kyoya Nojo was reincarnated into Jack Lieber and killed Philine Posford - to this point, basically, he observes the world from a Jack perspective.

Then seven years later, until the first annihilation of humanity took place, he observed around three people: Elvis, Samizina and Jack.

So, from there, it's Rachel's point of view.

Occasionally I mixed up a different point of view, but I don't know much more than Rachel could have known.

That adds the information I had as Teena Cleese.

Well, it's not a big deal about this.

It's just a little girl's, uh, weirdness. It's information about her life. - You guys have information about your life, don't you?

So it's from here that matters.

What the Atasis know and Rachel doesn't.

I mean, the information I got when I was looking at the world through Jack.

To Atashi's mind, three of the most important pieces of information fall into this category.

One is that Jack and that stalker woman are reincarnated from different worlds.

Two, that every time that woman dies, she's repeatedly reincarnated.

And three - when that woman is reincarnated, she means (...) between hours (...) with (...) retroactive (...) lines (...).

Some people might wonder why that happens.

Okay.Let's go graciously.

This is something you can see in one shot if you sort out the factual relationship.

At first, the woman was reincarnated by a liver maid named Anelli.

Representing his nature, it was when Jack was a year old that he came across a payback.

Then suppose you were reincarnated and become a filine...... of course, f (...) i (...) li (...) - (...) ne (...) is (...) j (...) ya (...) h (...) k (...) 's (...) 1 (...) year (...) under (...) and (...) y (...) u (...) to (...) this (...) and (...).

Well.

I want you to dig up your memories here and go back to the cause and effect to confirm them.

That's what Filine's father said when he introduced his own daughter.

Here's what he said.

- I have a daughter the same age as you, Jack.

When Anelli died, Jack was a year old.

Born reincarnated afterwards, Filine must therefore be one year younger than Jack.

But - in reality, Jack and Philine are the same age.

Therefore, there is one conclusion to be drawn.

That woman can also be reincarnated into a human being born in the past.

This is, so to speak, a time-leap for others.

The savepoint is the moment of birth. Time efficiency is as bad as an idiot, but in the first place, that woman spends fifteen years just to make contact with her newborn Jack.

You can assume that his "time-leap measures" and his use of this specification - "reincarnation time-leap" - are almost definitive.

Except.

One thing here, questions arise.

The time leap that Rachel uses is something that moves on to her past self.

So it disappears that Rachel herself was not there before the time leap, and remains only in our memories.

Rachel in the first round, disguised and riding into Dimkuld, taking Samizina hostage and fighting Jack, should have been completely erased from everything in the world except Rachel's own memory.

But that woman's reincarnation time leap is something that moves to others.

So he won't be overwritten himself before he's reincarnated.

That's a good example of Anelli.

Even going back in time by reincarnating into Filine, the fact that Anelli tried to take Jack away never disappeared.

If so, what about Azelea in the second circle?

As that woman is time-leaping, here's the supposed causal flow.

First, Rachel, who has been time-leaping in the wake of the results of the first circumference, banishes Azelea (that woman).

Then, in response to the result, that woman was reincarnated into Ruby's time-leap. In the third circle of the world, she staged Rachel's history-altering attack.

Actually, for once, Rachel was winning.

But the woman's further historical alteration left her with no memory of that victory.

The world where Rachel thinks it's the second circle just feels that way because she forgot the real second, which means it's actually the third.

Thinking about it like this, it's weird.

Even in the second circle of the world in Rachel's memory (actually, the third circle just because I don't remember), it would be odd if that woman wasn't left in Azerea.

Because reincarnation timeleaps can't erase who they were before reincarnation.

But it wasn't.

If there was that woman in Azerea, she wouldn't have tried to let Jack escape trying to get to the evil gods.

Whatever, it was like I got Jack.

Yet Azelea misses Jack... and then, by Ruby, reincarnated by that woman, he was murdered in vain...

In the first circle, that woman who was certainly supposed to have been in Azerea, where the hell did she disappear?

There must be a trick to ice-solve this mystery.

I want you to remember that very well.

As it stands, the only ones who can confront that woman on an equal footing are the Atasis, who can overlook the cause and effect.

Even if, like the stars of heaven, we can only watch...

Even if they don't realize the presence of the athletes...

Even the Atasis have to give in to that woman.

The Rachels say that Jack and the others... must get to the happy ending.

... a little too wild.

Forget it. I feel a little sentimental.

Let's continue with cause and effect.