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After reaching Ehime, Suzume and Souta find social media posts from locals, who have photographed and named the cat "Daijin". With the help of a friendly local girl, Chika Amabe, they locate the worm again and close the door in the entry to an abandoned school. They stay at Chika's home for the night. The next day, after parting with Chika, they hitch a ride to Kobe with a kind woman named Rumi Ninomiya, who asks Suzume to
babysit her twin children. In the evening, Suzume spots Daijin who
leads her and Souta to an abandoned amusement park, where the worm is trying to emerge again from a ferris wheel. They
manage to lock the door, and the worm disappears. Souta explains that the portal within the door leads to the Ever-After, a place where souls go after death. After tracking Daijin to Tokyo, Souta asks Suzume to take them to his apartment. There he explains the legend of the worm Namazu, and that he is the last descendant of a family that, for many generations, had been
responsible for locking all the doors that lead to the Ever-After. He says that there are two keystones that seal the worm: the western keystone has become Daijin, while the location of the eastern keystone is unknown. He warns that if the worm tries to emerge in Tokyo, it could cause an earthquake of the same magnitude as the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake.
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Retrieved May 19, 2020. ^ "Toonami
Anime Block Returns to Adult Swim on May 26 [UPDATED]". Crunchyroll. May 16, 2012. Archived from the original on September 8, 2017. Retrieved September 7, 2017. ^ Ressler, Karen (October 24, 2014). "Inuyasha: The
Final Act to Run on Toonami". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on April 24, 2020. Retrieved May 19, 2020.