(> How much of the activities can Seija hear?)
> You believe she can hear about as much as you can, maybe slightly less.
> How did the spring rolls come out?
> Very tasty! You don't think you've ever had better in fact!
> Get closer to the conversationalists.
> You use a stray bullet as an excuse to move over to another table and listen more easily.
> Rinnosuke has gone on a monologue about the performance of his products, mentioning something about clocks and a foreign sounding word pronounced 'megahertz'. Sanae then interrupts him to ask something about his memories which prompts him to show her some other object in his palm.
> Trying to make sense of this conversation your mind goes to different things, such as this being an old language that predates what's spoken now yet still is similar, or this being a new language from the outside world, or even this being some kind of cipher language where one makes up new words and gives existing words new meaning. Seija was really into this stuff during the revolution spending quite some time studying linguistics, her goal being to use the Tengu newspapers to signal instructions to allies around Gensokyo covertly without alerting incident investigators. She claimed a coordinated strike would have a much higher chance of overwhelming Gensokyo's strongest oppressors rather than small uprisings that could easily be dealt with.