To understand Part 2, we must briefly revisit the vertigo induced by the original prologue. Part 1 introduced us to "The Son"—not as a protagonist, but as a force of nature. The "Crazy Wanker" writing style is characterized by aggressive line breaks, unreliable time stamps, and a first-person perspective that shifts between omniscient and utterly delusional.
The search for the “lost meme” reflects scholarly discussions about memetics as a form of cultural evolution. Memes propagate, mutate, and gain “fitness” in the same way that religious ideas spread. The prologue thus functions as a commentary on how internet culture has birthed new belief systems centered on virality rather than doctrine.
The prologue continues the high-stakes narrative surrounding Camellia and her complex web of relationships. In this part, we find Camellia at the altar, about to wed Leonardo in a lavish Italian ceremony. Just as the priest asks for the final commitment, the "Crazy Son"—Jackson—makes a shocking appearance. The Revelation
The Son wanders into a 24-hour supermarket. He does not buy food. Instead, he has a 15-page argument with a freezer aisle about the thermodynamics of regret. The freezer wins.