User blog comment:Karinto Wolf/Really Ela?/@comment-1631480-20140302024613

There's no problem with liking the pasta; that's your preference. I'm not going to bash you or make fun of you for your opinion, I'm just going to reply to that last statement.

Okay, about the bleach.

It said in the story "A thing of bleach fell down on top of him from the top shelf. It burnt both of them and they both started to scream" and " While the alcohol burned him, the bleach bleached his skin" . I decided to do some brief research into bleach burns, and found this infomation:   ''Exposure of common household bleach to your skin is not likely to have immediate effects, especially if the bleach has been diluted with water, according to “CRC Handbook of Laboratory Safety” by A. Keith Furr. The longer the bleach is left on your skin, however, the more likely it is that you will begin to experience burning, itching and other types of irritation. If the bleach is left on your skin for an inordinately long period of time, it can cause pigment lightening and permanent tissue damage. ''I'm going to assume that the household had regular bleach, and not industrial strength bleach. When people purposely bleach their skin to make themselves look whiter, it's over a period of weeks with a special treatment cream.

Jeff would've been wet with bleach for, I assume, about 40 seconds. He then became engulphed with flames, which would've removed the bleach. Bleach burns look like this. Fire burns after healing of 2nd and 3rd degree look like this (slightly graphic). It tends to melt the skin. 1st degree burn is like sunburn. I'm guessing he would have at least recieved 2nd degree burns if he needed a face cast.