The day wears on, but Monday doesn't return home. At the bank, Monday's co-worker Jerry, a competitor for a promotion, hints at blackmailing her. At a checkpoint, Monday runs into Adrian Knowles, a C.A.B. The following day, Monday prepares her disguise as Karen, nervous about giving a presentation. After Monday's admonishment, everyone agrees to continue their act. Others, like Saturday, are upset at the thought of being separated, and the responsible eldest sister, Monday, insists on the importance of working together as a unit. The siblings watch the recorded incident and debate turning themselves in, particularly Thursday, who wonders if being put into cryosleep would be so bad she wouldn't mind being woken up even a hundred years in the future if it means being able to be her own person in public and find a romantic partner. agents detain a child as onlookers protest. As Sunday returns from her job at a bank, she sees C.A.B. Decades later, the sisters have all managed to survive without suspicion. A disappointed Terrence is forced to remove the same portion of finger from all the girls to maintain a single appearance, starting with Monday. When Thursday breaks the rules by going out on a day that isn't hers, she injures one of her fingers, severing it at the first knuckle. Terrence reminds them of the importance of going out only one at a time, and that what happens to one of them must happen to all of them. The sisters develop a system of wigs and makeup to cover any identifying features. To safeguard their secret, Terrence ensures they share information at a meeting on a daily basis and replicates any accident that affects one of the sisters' physical appearance. Their grandfather Terrence names them after the days of the week and trains them to pose as a single individual named after their mother. Karen Settman dies when she gives birth to identical stippled sisters. When multiple children are born to one mother, all but the eldest are put into cryosleep. In 2073, overpopulation causes a worldwide crisis, resulting in a strict one-child policy enforced by the Child Allocation Bureau.
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