Mr. Kintobotnk dives the SCAS into the saliva. The students panic some more.
"Don't panic, class!” Mr. Kintobotnik told us. “I've got everything under control! Jessie has to swallow us if we're heading for her stomach."
Jessie closes her mouth,and she swallows the saliva, along with the SCAS.
We're heading for her stomach.
"This is it, class!' Mr. Kintobotnik excitedly told us. “We're going to the stomach! But first, we need to finish going down the esophagus."
While we go down Jessie's esophagus, some of the students, including me, remember learning about the digestive system in elementary school. Mr. Kintobotnik knew that the digestive system would be at least familiar to some, so he told us that this should be like a review. All our worries have left us, and excitement replaced it.;
"As you can see, class,” Mr. Kintobotnik taught, “the walls of the esophagus slowly slide us down to her stomach."
Right when Mr. Kintobotnik finished that sentence, we make it to Jessie's stomach. The saliva we're caught in falls into some stomach acid. On the plus side, the SCAS is acid-proof, so we should be fine if we don't exit the plane.
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