Kafka says he doesn’t want to go to the police, because he doesn’t want to be forced to return to Tokyo and school.
Oshima is supportive but points out that Kafka will have to be on the run from now on. Kafka says that he feels as if he is following a predetermined path decided by someone else, and losing his own identity in the process, which is terrifying. Oshima responds that Kafka is living the motif of many Greek tragedies, in which the protagonist is drawn into a horrible fate despite their most valiant efforts. He gives the example of Sophocles’
Oedipus Rex, in which Oedipus inadvertently fulfills the prophecy of murdering his father and marrying his mother. But, says Oshima, this kind of story is a metaphor meant to teach us about irony and hope, rather than serving as a literal warning about murder and incest.