The following event occurred in the "Seventh Man":
When he was younger, he was the victim of a horrific tsunami. Why does the father of the seventh man let him venture outside in a storm? He permitted him to leave because the winds were in "intermission."
Throughout the course of the novel, The Seventh Man's perspective frequently shifts. He initially thought K had grinned at him in the space between the first and second wave. Then, as he gets away, he starts to remember it a little less and doesn't look down on it as harshly.
We learn that the best way to deal with fear is to face it rather than turn our backs and let it gradually consume us as the story progresses and the seventh man learns to reconcile his constant guilt and grief as well as his terror of the water.
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