"Not much different," he answered her in a quiet tone, mostly to himself. He may still be on Earth, but their cultures are vastly different. To him, he may as well be on an alien planet. Had she forgotten so quickly he hadn't even eaten chocolate before today? This really was a different world to him. "You believe these coincidences exist?" His tone sounded doubtful, like he wasn't convinced, but it wasn't like he had a better idea to offer. The more he learned, the more confusing it got. They were getting nowhere fast. If anything they were backpedaling. "We should ask one of the natives. Even if they are our enemy, it may clue us in on what is happening. It is better than not knowing," Raizo put in his two cents. Of course they were walking away from the suburban area of the city and closer to where a sparse population would be. Nearing a place where trees became more dense, Raizo noticed a large purple-skinned creature terrorizing two crying children. As the pair run up toward the towering beast, rather than working together with Jubilee, he pushed her hard enough that she would be at least lowered to the ground before he reached his kyoketsu-shoge in what seemed like super human speed. Whipping the chained blade around him, he cut the beast's arms off before it released a roar of both anger and pain. With a final spin, he lashed the weapon above his head a second time, cutting the beast's head. Instead of falling into a bloody mess, the creature dissipated into thin air like he never existed. It dropped a few items into the grass, but Raizo turned his attention toward Jubilee. Collecting his weapon in one hand, he reached out the other toward her, "I'm sorry. I didn't want to accidentally hurt you." Had she been standing, he could have harmed her, or worse, killed her. Until she proved herself his enemy, he would protect her from that sort of fate.