The Golden Orchid
joined Jan 19, 2017
I approve of everything contained.
@Clover, I don't know what confuses you, but I'll give my understanding of it.
The manga depicts scenes as Remilia experiences them. On her actual birthday, she's looking at her own "fate". She's dressed in black and she enters each room using the keyring. When she enters a room, a piece of her fate is shown. In this case, they're all of the 'birthdays' Sakuya held for her. She describes herself as a spectator, and a comparison is made of watching her fate like one would watch a movie. That's how little control she feels she has over her own story, to the extent that what she manipulates is only what scenes she watches.
She says that fate is timeless, and yet she starts wondering 'what time' a certain moment happened. Sakuya is the one who points out her sense of timelessness, which in extension is how stuck she is, and after viewing the third birthday party (from our POV), she runs everywhere to see the portions of her fate which are connected to Sakuya's, seeing the passage of time through Sakuya. This leads her to realize despite fate being "set in stone", she doesn't want to just accept Sakuya's death as another matter of course. Watching Sakuya on her deathbed is enough to make Remi cry, which is when Sakuya catches up to her. She takes the keyring and gives Remi a watch, symbolic of having time move forward for her. We then see Remi's life play out sequentially, as Sakuya's had been before. And at the end, she has embraced the passage of time and her ability to "control fate".
In essence, Remi had been stuck in time, Sakuya rescues her, and Remi becomes the charismatic child seen in Touhou, seizing her own fate, actively living instead of passively watching.