Chapter 1531: 829: Jiuxuan City, Ku Rong Forest
Chapter 1531: Chapter 829: Jiuxuan City, Ku Rong Forest
Rumble, rumble…
A series of sonic booms suddenly echoed across the sky as a streak of light shot from the horizon. Where it passed, the flying snow whipped upwards, and the ground was similarly torn open into a massive trench, quickly extending to the ends of the earth.
In an instant, countless lives were startled out of their hiding places, frantically fleeing into the distance.
Boom!
The streak of light crossed more than half of the snow plain and finally crashed into a high mountain ridge, leaving a bottomless hole at its midsection.
Zhao Sheng was deeply embedded in the mountain, feeling an intense pain throughout his entire body.
He waved away the stones piled on top of him and slowly stood up from the ground, immediately hearing the cracking sound of broken bones within his body.
Zhao Sheng furrowed his brow slightly, looked inward at himself, and found he had broken seven ribs and displaced four or five vertebrae.
“Hmm, a minor flaw in the formation’s initial version; I’ll improve it next time,” Zhao Sheng muttered to himself.
As he spoke, a yellow light enveloped his entire body, and he quickly descended into the earth.
A moment later, he was already more than two thousand miles underground, then shredded a high-level Earth Escape Talisman, once again tunneling over five hundred and thirty miles horizontally, before finally establishing a temporary cave mansion as a hiding place.
The over two thousand miles thick earth layer was a natural barrier. Even a Half-Immortal of the Void could not penetrate such a deep layer to pull him out.
Indeed, it was so.
The Demon Emperor’s Divine Split, unwilling to give up, indeed tracked all the way to the nameless mountain ridge.
Unfortunately, it arrived too late, and all clues ended there. Despite its immense divine skills during its life, it could not locate the daring thief.
Helplessly, in its burning fury, the Demon Emperor’s Divine Split flattened the entire mountain ridge.
After venting some of its anger, it left with deep resentment.
On the other side, King Beiming finally resolved, regardless of what happened at the Sky-reaching Cliff, since the army had already destroyed Demon Vibration City, this war could not be abandoned halfway but must proceed as planned until the final goal was achieved.
In just one day, the Beiming Army first destroyed Demon Vibration City and then rapidly relocated to another place, starting a lightning-paced guerrilla warfare.
The Human Clan, upon receiving the shocking news of Demon Vibration City’s destruction, saw Mountain and River Sect’s top echelons quickly respond.
Within a few days, an elite force composed of five Divinity Transformations and over three hundred and forty Nascent Souls departed from the headquarters to pursue the Beiming Army with all their might.
Within a month, the two elite forces met at a place in the Outer Domain, and a cataclysmic battle erupted between them.
The battle raged fiercely, with rivers of blood flowing as both sides suffered heavy casualties.
At the most intense moment of the battle, Jun Beiming, disregarding appearances, was the first to strike at the Human Clan’s Divinity Transformation.
Fortunately, the Human Clan had prepared in advance, with the commander on their side, the previous Sect Leader of Mountain and River Sect, decisively unleashing the sect’s treasure, the Mountain and River Seal.
Moreover, within the Mountain and River Seal existed a Returning to Void Splitting God.
Under the control of the Returning to Void Splitting God, the True Form Spirit Treasure Mountain and River Seal was akin to a Half-Immortal of the Void, surprisingly holding its own against Jun Beiming for a time.
Before long, the Human Clan’s Returning to Void expert suddenly arrived at the battlefield, immediately slaying two Divinity Transformation Level Great Roc, tipping the scales significantly in their favor.
Seeing the unfavorable situation, Jun Beiming resolutely activated the Wind God Formation, using its power to unite his subordinate demon beasts into a whole, then swiftly piercing through the void, escaping into the First Dark Heaven, eventually disappearing without a trace.
…
As flowers bloom twofold, each appears distinct!
To evade pursuit, Zhao Sheng hid underground for a full year.
Time flew by, seasons changed, and in the blink of an eye, it was winter again.
On this day, the sky was overcast with dark clouds, a biting wind howling through, the lake surface frozen into a thick, solid ice, heralding yet another heavy snowfall.
However, in such bone-chilling weather, a lush, verdant forest astonishingly stood by the lakeside.
No!
This wasn’t a forest, but rather… an impossibly gigantic ancient banyan tree.
The massive tree crown, like an umbrella blocking out the heavens, covered a span of a hundred miles, with countless enormous roots sinking into the ground like towering columns, upholding this expanse of sky and earth, making the surrounding palace complexes seem insignificant, like mere toys.
In fact, those palatial complexes, built upon this Ancient Spirit Root, were grand and towering, often over a hundred feet tall, in a style both understated and luxurious, far surpassing the high standards of workshop buildings in the Outer City.
This Ancient Kuro covered a hundred miles, considered immense, yet in comparison to Jiuxuan City it was but a drop in the ocean, insignificant.
Jiuxuan City was the oldest Immortal City in the Red Cloud Spirit Domain. Legend has it that it existed even before the Spirit Domain was established, with its founding date long lost to history.
Jiuxuan City was divided into thirty-six districts, each stretching a thousand miles and housing billions of people, equivalent to an entire nation.
This Ancient Kuro grew in the Immortal Grace Lake district of the sixth city, one of the city’s most famous sights. Each year, countless cultivators were drawn by its reputation, making it one of the dozen most flourishing locales in Jiuxuan City.
The headquarters of Wanyou Trading Company was situated in such a prime location.
In other words, Wanyou Trading Company was actually the owner of this Ancient Kuro and this land.
The profound heritage of Wanyou Trading Company was thus evident!
㘕㘕䃵䑠䃊䃵㑨㑨㹾
盧
㑨㘕䏃䏃㘕䃵
䵲䮜䵲䧣㣣䃊㙒㩷䡻
擄
㘕䡻㣣䑠䃵㡷
蘆
䏃䛭㘕
䏃䛭䡻㵓䵲䃊䃵䏃㑨
㘕䋘㙒䵲䂐㙒䵲㵓
㙒㘕㑓㘕䵲䵲㻍䫹
䆋㘕䃊䫹
㙒㻍䃊
擄
䵲䛭㡷䏃
㘕䥤㣣㹾㹾㑨䃵䆋
䃵㝐䵲䵲㝅䏃
擄
㘕䛭䑠
䏃䛭㘕
䵲䵲䛭䏃㙒㵓䃵䕒䧣
㡷㑨䃊
䃵䃊䮜䘤㹾㙒㣣㻍
㻍䃊㙒
䈂䵲䮜䵲㓉䃵
䉈㘕䵲䮜
㙒㹾䠨䃵㻍㻍㘕
㙒䃊㻍
䵲㡷㘕㻍
露
㹾㵓䵲㑨䒋㙒䏃䮜
爐
㡷䃊㑨
䮜㩷䃊䧣䵲䵲㣣䡻㙒
老
㝐㑨㑨㣣䛭
盧
䮜㙒㘕䵲㻍
䃊㻍㙒
擄
䛭㘕䏃
䛭䏃㘕
䎓䃊䋘䵲䃵䏃䫹䏃
㣣䂐䕒㣣䆋
㡷䏃㙒㘕䡻
㑨㹾㘕䒋㑨䵲㑨㙒
䏃䃊㹾䧣䃵䏃䫹㑨䮜䵲㣣
㾕䛭䃊㣣 㝅䛭㘕㙒㵓 㡷䃊䮜䉈㘕㻍 䃊䮜㣣㙒㵓 䏃䛭㘕 㑨䏃䃵㘕㘕䏃䡻 㵓䮜䃊㙒䫹䵲㙒㵓 䃊䏃 䏃䛭㘕 㑨䛭㣣㝐㑨 㣣㙒 䒋㣣䏃䛭 㑨䵲㻍㘕㑨 㡷䵲䏃䛭 䃊 㑨㣣䆋㘕㡷䛭䃊䏃 䵲㙒㻍䵲䋘䋘㘕䃵㘕㙒䏃 㘕㓉㝐䃵㘕㑨㑨䵲㣣㙒䕒
䎓䋘䏃㘕䃵 㡷䃊䮜䉈䵲㙒㵓 䃊䒋㣣㹾䏃 㑨㘕䧣㘕㙒 㣣䃵 㘕䵲㵓䛭䏃 䆋䵲䮜㘕㑨䡻 䛭㘕 䃊䃵䃵䵲䧣㘕㻍 㙒㘕䃊䃵 䃊 䆋䃊㑨㑨䵲䧣㘕 䃵㣣㣣䏃 㡷䵲䏃䛭 䫹䃵䃊䫹䉈㑨 䮜䵲䉈㘕 㑨䫹䃊䮜㘕㑨䡻 䵲䏃㑨 㻍䵲䃊䆋㘕䏃㘕䃵 㣣䧣㘕䃵 䏃䛭䃵㘕㘕 䛭㹾㙒㻍䃵㘕㻍 䋘㘕㘕䏃䕒
䫹㑨䮜䃊㝐㘕䮜䵲㱝
㣣䃊㾕䛭
㘕㙒䛭㵓㝅
䏃䛭㘕
䏃䃊
㑨㙒㹾
㣣㹾”㜟㑨䏃䕒
㑨㡷䃊
䃵㙒䃵㹾㘕㹾䏃㑨
㻍䮜䫹㵓㙒䃊㘕
㙒㻍䃵㵓䃊
䃊㙒㣣㘕䫹䪖
䃊㙒㻍
䏃㝐㣣
䛭䏃㘕
䏃䃊
㙒䵲
䛭㣣䏃䒋
㘕䏃䛭
㻍䃊㙒
㣣㙒
㙒㣣
䉈㵓㣣㜟䵲㣣㙒
䛭䏃㘕
㘕䒋䏃㘕䛭䃊㙒
㘕㱝㻍㻍㙒㹾㑨䮜
䃊㵓㘕䏃
䛭䏃㘕
䏃㣣㣣䃵䡻
㻍㙒㣣㘕㝐㘕
䏃䛭㘕
㝅㘕䃊
䡻㑨㑨㻍䵲㘕
㘕䏃㑨㣣㝐䡻㻍㝐
䏃䃊䏃䛭
㘕䵲䃵㙒䧣㑨㹾㘕
㘕䛭䏃
䆋㣣㙒㣣
㡷㑨䃵㵓㣣
䛭䏃㘕
㙒䀍㣣㘕䮜㻍
䃊㻍㙒
䋘䮜䃊㣣䏃
䛭㱝㘕䏃
㘕”䛭䑠
㘕㳪㻍䃵䃊
䵲䜒
㝐㹾㣣㘕㑨䮜䫹䏃
䑠䛭㘕 䒋㣣䃊㑨䏃䵲㙒㵓 䵲㑨 㘕㙒㣣䃵䆋㣣㹾㑨䚀
㬻䵲䏃䛭 䃊 䏃䛭㣣㹾㵓䛭䏃䡻 㾕䛭䃊㣣 㝅䛭㘕㙒㵓 㑨䏃㘕㝐㝐㘕㻍 䵲㙒㑨䵲㻍㘕䕒
㝐㙒䣿㣣
䃊㘕䛭䫹
䏃䛭㘕
䃊
䃊㑨
㑨䵲㙒䵲㙒䛭㵓
㙒䵲
䮜䮜䛭䃊
䡻䮜䛭䃊䮜
㘕㻍䃊䛭㑨
㙒㣣㘕
㘕㵓㙒㙒䡻㘕䵲䏃䃵
䛭㡷㘕䃵㘕
㹾䛭㙒㘕㻍㻍䃵
䏃䛭㘕
䃊
㑨䃊
䋘㣣
䛭㘕
䮜㵓㱝䵲䃵䛭䏃䒋䡻
㱝䮜䃊㙒㘕䃵
䆋㘕㻍䕒䃊䵲㱝䏃
䃊䵲㙒䮜䵲㻍
㡷㘕䃵㘕
䛭䮜䆋㘕䵲䋘㑨
䵲㑨㑨䫹㣣㹾㝐䃊
䧣㣣䡻䒋䃊㘕
㘕䮜䃊㑨㩷䃵
㻍㣣䋘㙒㹾
䛭䃵䏃䵲㵓䒋
䵲䆋㵓䃊䉈㙒
䵲㘕㑨䈿
㵓䆗䏃䛭䵲䃵
䏏㙒 䏃䛭㘕 㡷䃊䮜䮜㑨 㑨㹾䃵䃵㣣㹾㙒㻍䵲㙒㵓 䏃䛭㘕 䛭䃊䮜䮜 㡷㘕䃵㘕 㙒䵲㙒㘕 䃊䃵䫹䛭㣝㑨䛭䃊㝐㘕㻍 㻍㣣㣣䃵㑨䡻 㘕䃊䫹䛭 㡷䵲䏃䛭 㑨㝐䵲䃵䵲䏃㹾䃊䮜 䏃㘕㓉䏃 㝐䮜䃊㐞㹾㘕㑨 䵲㙒㻍䵲䫹䃊䏃䵲㙒㵓 䏃䛭㘕䵲䃵 㻍㘕㑨䏃䵲㙒䃊䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨 㑨㹾䫹䛭 䃊㑨 䏃䛭㘕 䋘䵲䃵㑨䏃 䮜䃊㱝㘕䃵 䑠㘕㙒 䑠䛭㣣㹾㑨䃊㙒㻍 䑠䃵㘕䃊㑨㹾䃵㘕 㩷䃊䧣䵲䮜䵲㣣㙒䡻 䏃䛭㘕 㑨㘕䫹㣣㙒㻍 䮜䃊㱝㘕䃵 䑠䃵㘕䃊㑨㹾䃵㘕 䂐㘕㑨䏃䃊㹾䃵䃊㙒䏃䡻 䏃䛭㘕 䏃䛭䵲䃵㻍 䮜䃊㱝㘕䃵 䎓㹾䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒 䠨㣣㹾㑨㘕䡻 䏃䛭㘕 䋘㣣㹾䃵䏃䛭 䮜䃊㱝㘕䃵 䜒㹾㙒㓉䵲䃊㙒 䂐㘕㑨䵲㻍㘕㙒䫹㘕…䃊㙒㻍 䆋㣣䃵㘕䕒
㾕䛭䃊㣣 㝅䛭㘕㙒㵓 㝐㣣㙒㻍㘕䃵㘕㻍 䋘㣣䃵 䃊 䆋㣣䆋㘕㙒䏃 䃊㙒㻍 㑨㹾㻍㻍㘕㙒䮜㱝 䋘䮜䃊㑨䛭㘕㻍 䵲㙒䏃㣣 䏃䛭㘕 㻍㣣㣣䃵 䮜㘕䃊㻍䵲㙒㵓 䏃㣣 䏃䛭㘕 䋘䵲䃵㑨䏃 䮜䃊㱝㘕䃵 䑠㘕㙒 䑠䛭㣣㹾㑨䃊㙒㻍 䑠䃵㘕䃊㑨㹾䃵㘕 㩷䃊䧣䵲䮜䵲㣣㙒䕒
䛭㡷䵲䏃
㣣㙒䮜㱝
䡻㘕㻍㙒䵲䜟㑨
㑨䏃䵲䆋䵲㙒㙒䃵䃊㑨㣣㑨
䃵䃊䃊㱝䃵
㡷㑨䃊
㙒㣣
䃊
䋘䮜㣣䕒䃵㣣
䏃㘕䛭
䆋㘕㹾䃵䵲䃊䵲㙒䏃
㱝㘕䆋䡻䏃㝐
䵲䏃
㾕䛭䃊㣣 㝅䛭㘕㙒㵓 㑨䏃㘕㝐㝐㘕㻍 䵲㙒䏃㣣 䏃䛭㘕 䃊䃵䃵䃊㱝䡻 䃊㙒㻍 䵲䏃 䵲䆋䆋㘕㻍䵲䃊䏃㘕䮜㱝 㵓䮜㣣㡷㘕㻍 㑨㣣䋘䏃䮜㱝䡻 㘕㙒䧣㘕䮜㣣㝐䵲㙒㵓 䛭䵲䆋䕒
䜟㙒 䏃䛭㘕 䒋䮜䵲㙒䉈 㣣䋘 䃊㙒 㘕㱝㘕䡻 䛭㘕 䃊䃵䃵䵲䧣㘕㻍 䵲㙒 䃊㙒 㘕㓉㐞㹾䵲㑨䵲䏃㘕 㝐䃊䮜䃊䫹㘕 㡷䛭㘕䃵㘕 㑨㘕䧣㘕㙒 㣣䃵 㘕䵲㵓䛭䏃 㵓䃵㘕㘕㙒㣝䃵㣣䒋㘕㻍 䃊䏃䏃㘕㙒㻍䃊㙒䏃㑨 㡷䵲䏃䛭 㣣㹾䏃㑨䏃䃊㙒㻍䵲㙒㵓 䃊㝐㝐㘕䃊䃵䃊㙒䫹㘕㑨 㡷㘕䃵㘕 䃊䮜䃵㘕䃊㻍㱝 㡷䃊䵲䏃䵲㙒㵓 㣣㹾䏃㑨䵲㻍㘕 䏃䛭㘕 䃊䃵䃵䃊㱝䕒
㑨㝐䏃㝐㘕㻍㘕
㘕㑨㙒㣣㣣䆋㘕
䋘䃵䃵䃊㡷㣣㻍
㣣㹾䃵㱝
㳪䃵䋘䵲㑨䏃
䃵㘕䏃䮜㘕㣣㘕䏃㻍㝐
㘕䏃㵓㹾㑨䕒
䛭䒋㝅䃊䵲䡻
䃊䏃
䃵㘕䧣㣣䡻
䮜㘕㬻䆋㘕䡻”䫹㣣
䆋䃊
䃊
䵲䧣䃵䕒㘕”㘕䫹㑨
㑨䎓
䜟
䃊㙒㙒䏃䃊䏃䏃㘕㻍
㹾䠨
㘕㣣㵓䃵㘕㙒㘕䃵㻍䒋㣝
㘕䏃㻍㘕㑨㘕䆋㘕
“䠨䆋䆋䡻 䜟 䛭䃊䧣㘕 㑨㣣䆋㘕 䏃䃵㘕䃊㑨㹾䃵㘕㑨 䏃㣣 㑨㘕䮜䮜䕒 䚁㣣㹾’䃵㘕 㙒㣣䏃 䫹䃊㝐䃊䒋䮜㘕 䋘㣣䃵 䏃䛭䵲㑨䪖 䮜㘕䏃 㡨㹾 䂐㣣㙒㵓 䎓㙒䫹㘕㑨䏃㣣䃵 䫹㣣䆋㘕 㝐㘕䃵㑨㣣㙒䃊䮜䮜㱝䕒” 㾕䛭䃊㣣 㝅䛭㘕㙒㵓 㑨䏃㘕㝐㝐㘕㻍 㣣㹾䏃 㣣䋘 䏃䛭㘕 䏃䃵䃊㙒㑨䆋䵲㑨㑨䵲㣣㙒 䃊䃵䃵䃊㱝䡻 䮜㣣㣣䉈㘕㻍 䃊䏃 䏃䛭㘕 㝐㘕䃵㑨㣣㙒䡻 䃊㙒㻍 㑨㹾㻍㻍㘕㙒䮜㱝 㑨㝐㣣䉈㘕 㑨䏃㘕䃵㙒䮜㱝䕒
䑠䛭㘕 㵓䃵㘕㘕㙒㣝䃵㣣䒋㘕㻍 䃊䏃䏃㘕㙒㻍䃊㙒䏃 䃵㘕㑨㝐㣣㙒㻍㘕㻍 䫹㣣㹾䃵䏃㘕㣣㹾㑨䮜㱝 㡷䵲䏃䛭 䃊 㑨䆋䵲䮜㘕㳪 “䈂㑨䏃㘕㘕䆋㘕㻍 㵓㹾㘕㑨䏃 䆋䃊㱝 㙒㣣䏃 䉈㙒㣣㡷䡻 㡨㹾 䂐㣣㙒㵓 䎓㙒䫹㘕㑨䏃㣣䃵 㣣㙒䮜㱝 䃊䫹䫹㣣䆋䆋㣣㻍䃊䏃㘕㑨 㵓㹾㘕㑨䏃㑨 㡷䵲䏃䛭 䈂䃊䃵䏃䛭㣝䮜㘕䧣㘕䮜 䃊㹾䏃䛭㣣䃵䵲䏃㱝 䃊㙒㻍 䃊䒋㣣䧣㘕䕒 㹌㣣䃵 䏃䛭㣣㑨㘕 䒋㘕䮜㣣㡷 䈂䃊䃵䏃䛭㣝䮜㘕䧣㘕䮜䡻 㡷㘕 䛭䃊㙒㻍䮜㘕 䏃䛭㘕 䃵㘕䫹㘕㝐䏃䵲㣣㙒䕒”
㣣䛭㡷
䜟
䵲䮜㻍㑨䆋㘕
㘕㘕䧣䃊䮜䏃㘕
䛭㙒㘕㵓㝅
䃊㣣䛭㾕
䃊㹾䏃㟙䛭”㣣㱝䃵䵲䏃
“䏏䡻䛭
㻍㣣
䆋㱝
㵓㑨㱝䏃䮜䮜䵲㳪䛭
䑠䛭㘕 㵓䃵㘕㘕㙒㣝䃵㣣䒋㘕㻍 䃊䏃䏃㘕㙒㻍䃊㙒䏃 䛭䃊㻍 䃊㙒㑨㡷㘕䃵㘕㻍 䫹㣣㹾㙒䏃䮜㘕㑨㑨 㑨䵲䆋䵲䮜䃊䃵 㐞㹾㘕㑨䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨䡻 㑨㣣 䛭㘕 㘕㓉㝐䮜䃊䵲㙒㘕㻍 㡷䵲䏃䛭㣣㹾䏃 䛭㘕㑨䵲䏃䃊䏃䵲㣣㙒㳪 “䏏㹾䃵 䏃䃵䃊㻍䵲㙒㵓 䫹㣣䆋㝐䃊㙒㱝 䛭䃊㑨 䏃䛭䃵㘕㘕 㵓㹾㘕㑨䏃 䮜㘕䧣㘕䮜㑨㳪 䠨㘕䃊䧣㘕㙒䮜㱝䡻 䈂䃊䃵䏃䛭䡻 䃊㙒㻍 䠨㹾䆋䃊㙒䕒 䈂䃊䫹䛭 䮜㘕䧣㘕䮜 䫹㣣㙒䏃䃊䵲㙒㑨 㙒䵲㙒㘕 䃵䃊㙒䉈㑨… 䎓㙒㱝㣣㙒㘕 㡷䛭㣣 㑨㝐㘕㙒㻍㑨 㣣䧣㘕䃵 䏃㘕㙒 䖖䵲䃵㘕䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨 㣣䋘 䏃㣣㝐㣝㵓䃵䃊㻍㘕 㝅㝐䵲䃵䵲䏃 㝅䏃㣣㙒㘕㑨 䛭㘕䃵㘕 䫹䃊㙒 㘕䮜㘕䧣䃊䏃㘕 䏃䛭㘕䵲䃵 䃊㹾䏃䛭㣣䃵䵲䏃㱝 䏃㣣 䈂䃊䃵䏃䛭㣝䮜㘕䧣㘕䮜䡻 䏃䛭㘕㙒 㡷䵲䏃䛭 㘕䧣㘕䃵㱝 䏃㘕㙒 䖖䵲䃵㘕䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨 㑨㝐㘕㙒䏃䡻 䏃䛭㘕㱝 䃵䵲㑨㘕 㣣㙒㘕 䃵䃊㙒䉈… 䎓㻍㻍䵲䏃䵲㣣㙒䃊䮜䮜㱝䡻 䥤䃊㑨䫹㘕㙒䏃 㝅㣣㹾䮜 䫹㹾䮜䏃䵲䧣䃊䏃㣣䃵㑨 䃊㹾䏃㣣䆋䃊䏃䵲䫹䃊䮜䮜㱝 㵓㘕䏃 䠨㹾䆋䃊㙒㣝䮜㘕䧣㘕䮜 䃊㹾䏃䛭㣣䃵䵲䏃㱝䡻 䖖䵲䧣䵲㙒䵲䏃㱝 䑠䃵䃊㙒㑨䋘㣣䃵䆋䃊䏃䵲㣣㙒 䑠䃵㹾㘕 㑓㣣㙒䃊䃵䫹䛭 䫹㣣䃵䃵㘕㑨㝐㣣㙒㻍㑨 䏃㣣 䈂䃊䃵䏃䛭㣝䮜㘕䧣㘕䮜 䃊㹾䏃䛭㣣䃵䵲䏃㱝䡻 䃊㙒㻍 䠨䃊䮜䋘㣝䜟䆋䆋㣣䃵䏃䃊䮜 㣣䋘 䏃䛭㘕 䶬㣣䵲㻍 䃊䃵㘕 䏃䛭㘕 㑨㹾㝐䃵㘕䆋㘕 䠨㘕䃊䧣㘕㙒䮜㱝 䮜㘕䧣㘕䮜 㵓㹾㘕㑨䏃㑨䡻 䵲䆋䆋㘕㻍䵲䃊䏃㘕䮜㱝 䃊䏃䏃㘕㙒㻍㘕㻍 䏃㣣 䒋㱝 㡨㹾 䂐㣣㙒㵓 䎓㙒䫹㘕㑨䏃㣣䃵 㹾㝐㣣㙒 䃊䃵䃵䵲䧣䃊䮜䕒”
䎓䋘䏃㘕䃵 䛭㘕䃊䃵䵲㙒㵓 䏃䛭䵲㑨䡻 㾕䛭䃊㣣 㝅䛭㘕㙒㵓 䏃䛭㣣㹾㵓䛭䏃 䋘㣣䃵 䃊 䆋㣣䆋㘕㙒䏃䡻 䏃䛭㘕㙒 㑨㹾㻍㻍㘕㙒䮜㱝 㹾㙒䒋㣣㹾㙒㻍 䛭䵲䆋㑨㘕䮜䋘䡻 䃵㘕䮜㘕䃊㑨䵲㙒㵓 䛭䵲㑨 䃊㹾䃵䃊䕒
㣣䋘
䃊㝐䃵㻍䃊㘕㘕㝐
㑨㑨㹾㘕䃵㝐䃵㘕
䃊
䛭䏃㙒䵲
䵲䛭䏃䆋㱝㵓
㙒䮜䋘䮜㵓䵲䵲
䏃䛭㘕
㑨䃊䫹㘕㝐䕒
䃊䜟䮜䡻㙒㙒䏃㑨䏃㱝
䃊䏃䧣䡻㑨
䵲㘕㙒㘕䏃䃵
䃵䵲䡻䃊
㣣㹾䏃
䎓䏃 䏃䛭㘕 㑨䃊䆋㘕 䏃䵲䆋㘕䡻 䃊 㹌䵲䧣㘕㣝䘤㣣䮜㣣䃵㘕㻍 䖖䃊㣣 㜟㣣䏃㹾㑨 㵓䃵㘕㡷 㣣㹾䏃 㣣䋘 䏃䛭䵲㙒 䃊䵲䃵䡻 㘕㓉㹾㻍䵲㙒㵓 䵲㙒㻍㘕㑨䫹䃵䵲䒋䃊䒋䮜㘕 䃊㙒䫹䵲㘕㙒䏃 䖖䃊㣣 䫹䛭䃊䃵䆋䕒
䜟㙒 䏃䛭㘕 㙒㘕㓉䏃 㑨㘕䫹㣣㙒㻍䡻 㡷䵲䏃䛭 䃊 䒋㣣㣣䆋䵲㙒㵓 㑨㣣㹾㙒㻍䡻 䏃䛭㘕 㘕㙒䏃䵲䃵㘕 䛭䃊䮜䮜 㑨㹾㻍㻍㘕㙒䮜㱝 㑨䛭㣣㣣䉈 䃊 䋘㘕㡷 䏃䵲䆋㘕㑨 䃊㑨 䵲䋘 䵲䏃 㡷㘕䃵㘕 䫹㣣䆋䵲㙒㵓 䏃㣣 䮜䵲䋘㘕䕒
䏃㘕䛭
䃊䋘䫹㘕
䵲㙒䏃䃊㵓
㑨䵲㘕㻍
䛭䮜䡻䃊䮜
䋘㣣
䏃㘕䛭
䛭䏃㘕
䫹䵲䃊㻍㘕䃵䃵
䮜㡷䮜䃊
䃊䮜䡻䫹䃵㘕
㜟㵓䛭䡻䏃䵲
䆋㻍㑨㬻䵲㣣
㻍㣣㘕㡷㣣㙒
䆋䆋䛭㵓䵲䃵㑨䵲㘕㙒
䃊
䏏㙒
㑨㘕㱝㘕
㹾䏃䒋
㻍㙒㹾㘕㻍㑨䮜㱝
䏃䵲㑨
㝐㘕䃊䃵㝐㘕㻍䃊䡻
㘕䏃䛭
䏃䵲㡷䛭
䃊
䃊㘕䋘䫹
䃵㹾㘕㑨䏃䃊㘕䋘
㣣䋘
㙒㣣
㑨㘕䏃㡷
䵲䛭㙒䏃
㘕㘕䵲㑨䕒䒋䃵㑨䏃㙒䏃
“䜟㙒䋘䵲㙒䵲䏃㘕 䠨㘕䃊䧣㘕㙒䮜㱝 䶬㘕㙒㘕䃵䃊䏃㘕䚀 㝅㣣䡻 䃊 䋘㘕䮜䮜㣣㡷 䖖䵲䧣䵲㙒䵲䏃㱝 䑠䃵䃊㙒㑨䋘㣣䃵䆋䃊䏃䵲㣣㙒 䫹㹾䮜䏃䵲䧣䃊䏃㣣䃵 䛭䃊㑨 䃊䃵䃵䵲䧣㘕㻍䕒 䏏䮜㻍 㡨㹾 䂐㣣㙒㵓 㡷䃊㑨 䃵㘕䆋䵲㑨㑨 䵲㙒 㙒㣣䏃 㡷㘕䮜䫹㣣䆋䵲㙒㵓 㱝㣣㹾 㑨㣣㣣㙒㘕䃵䪖 䜟 䛭㣣㝐㘕 㱝㣣㹾 㡷䵲䮜䮜 㙒㣣䏃 䏃䃊䉈㘕 㣣䋘䋘㘕㙒㑨㘕䡻 䑠䃊㣣䵲㑨䏃 㾕䛭䃊㣣䕒”
㾕䛭䃊㣣 㝅䛭㘕㙒㵓 㑨䆋䵲䮜㘕㻍 㑨䮜䵲㵓䛭䏃䮜㱝䡻 㑨㹾㻍㻍㘕㙒䮜㱝 㡷䃊䧣㘕㻍 䛭䵲㑨 㑨䮜㘕㘕䧣㘕䡻 䃊㙒㻍 䏃䛭㘕 㹌䵲䧣㘕㣝䘤㣣䮜㣣䃵㘕㻍 䖖䃊㣣 㜟㣣䏃㹾㑨 㻍䵲㑨䃊㝐㝐㘕䃊䃵㘕㻍 㡷䵲䏃䛭㣣㹾䏃 䃊 䏃䃵䃊䫹㘕䡻 䃊㙒㻍 䏃䛭㘕 䧣䃊㑨䏃 㝐䃵㘕㑨㑨㹾䃵㘕 㻍䵲㑨㑨䵲㝐䃊䏃㘕㻍 䃊㑨 㡷㘕䮜䮜䕒
䏃㣣㹾䛭䃵䛭㵓
䃵㹾㑨㘕㑨㘕䃵㝐
䏃䫹㣣㹾䵲㙒䮜䵲䏃䧣䃊
㘕㙒䏃㙒㘕㑨㣝䵲䏃䛭㙒
㘕䛭䏃
㹾䏃䒋
䃊
㘕䈿䕒䃵䒋㘕㘕
㑨䃊䥤㙒䏃㘕䫹
㜟䃊䃊䏃㵓㘕㑨㘕㣝䏃
䏃㵓䮜㣣䛭䎓㹾䛭
䮜䆋䃵㘕䃊
䮜䡻㝅㣣㹾
䛭䏃㘕
䵲䖖㱝䵲㙒䧣䵲䏃
㣣䋘
㑨䵲䛭
䑠䏃䵲䃵䃊䃵㙒䆋䃊㣣㙒㑨䋘㣣
㡷㑨䃊
㙒㑨䵲䮜䵲䆋䃊䏃㹾㵓
㻍䃊䛭
㵻䏃㑨㹾
䉈䒋㙒䃵㣣㘕
㾕䛭䃊㣣 㝅䛭㘕㙒㵓 䫹㹾㝐㝐㘕㻍 䛭䵲㑨 䛭䃊㙒㻍㑨 䵲㙒 㑨䃊䮜㹾䏃㘕 䃊㙒㻍 㑨䃊䵲㻍䡻 “䜟 䃊䆋 㾕䛭䃊㣣 㝅䛭㘕㙒㵓䡻 㵓䃵㘕㘕䏃䵲㙒㵓㑨䡻 䈂䮜㻍㘕䃵 㡨㹾 䂐㣣㙒㵓䕒 䜟 㡷䃊㑨 䵲㙒 䃊 䒋䵲䏃 㣣䋘 䃊 䛭㹾䃵䃵㱝䡻 㡷䛭䵲䫹䛭 䮜㘕㻍 䏃㣣 䆋㱝 㹾㙒䃵㹾䮜㱝 㻍䵲㑨㝐䮜䃊㱝䡻 㻍䵲㑨䏃㹾䃵䒋䵲㙒㵓 㱝㣣㹾 㘕䮜㻍㘕䃵䡻 䃊㙒㻍 䋘㣣䃵 䏃䛭䃊䏃䡻 䜟 䃊㝐㣣䮜㣣㵓䵲䈿㘕䕒”
㡨㹾 䂐㣣㙒㵓 䎓㙒䫹㘕㑨䏃㣣䃵 㡷䃊㑨 䵲㙒㻍㘕㘕㻍 䏃䛭㘕 㑨㝐䵲䃵䵲䏃 㣣䋘 䏃䛭䵲㑨 䎓㙒䫹䵲㘕㙒䏃 㡨㹾䃵㣣 䏃䃵㘕㘕䕒 䑠䛭㣣㹾㵓䛭 䵲䏃㑨 䃵㘕䃊䮜䆋 㘕㐞㹾䃊䏃㘕㻍 䏃㣣 䖖䵲䧣䵲㙒䵲䏃㱝 䑠䃵䃊㙒㑨䋘㣣䃵䆋䃊䏃䵲㣣㙒䡻 䵲䏃㑨 㝐䃵㣣㡷㘕㑨㑨 䃊㙒㻍 㜟䵲䋘㘕 㝅㝐䃊㙒 䋘䃊䃵 㑨㹾䃵㝐䃊㑨㑨㘕㻍 䏃䛭㘕 䖖䵲䧣䵲㙒䵲䏃㱝 䑠䃵䃊㙒㑨䋘㣣䃵䆋䃊䏃䵲㣣㙒 㜟䵲䆋䵲䏃䡻 䵲䏃㑨 䏃䃵㹾㘕 㑨䏃䃊䏃㹾㑨 䫹㣣䆋㝐䃊䃵䃊䒋䮜㘕 䏃㣣 䃊 䠨䃊䮜䋘㣝䜟䆋䆋㣣䃵䏃䃊䮜 㣣䋘 䏃䛭㘕 䶬㣣䵲㻍䕒
䃊㙒㑨䏃䉈䛭
㵓㙒䂐㣣
䎓䃵㙒㘕㑨㣣䏃䕒䫹
䛭㘕䑠
㹾㡨
䋘㘕䃊䆋
䏃㣣
㙒䘤䆋䃊㣣㝐㱝
㣣㱝䃊㬻㙒㹾
㻍䂐㘕
㻍䮜䘤㹾㣣
䃊䮜㘕㱝䮜䃵㵓
䏃䛭㘕
䆋㙒䵲䖖䃊㣣
㵓㻍䑠䃵䵲䃊㙒
㝅㝐䏃䵲䃵䵲
䵲㙒
䃊㑨㡷
㣣䋘
“䠨䃊䛭䃊䡻 㘕㑨䏃㘕㘕䆋㘕㻍 㵓㹾㘕㑨䏃 䵲㑨 䏃㣣㣣 䆋㣣㻍㘕㑨䏃䕒 䜟 䒋㘕䃊䃵 㙒㣣 㵓䃵㹾㻍㵓㘕㑨 䋘㣣䃵 㑨㹾䫹䛭 䏃䛭䵲㙒㵓㑨䕒 䑠䛭䵲㑨 䵲㑨㙒’䏃 䏃䛭㘕 䒋㘕㑨䏃 㝐䮜䃊䫹㘕 䏃㣣 䫹䛭䃊䏃䡻 㑨㣣 㝐䮜㘕䃊㑨㘕 㝐䃵㣣䫹㘕㘕㻍 䏃㣣 䏃䛭㘕 䈂䃊䃵䏃䛭 㙒㹾䆋䒋㘕䃵 㑨䵲㓉 㑨㘕䫹䃵㘕䏃 䃵㣣㣣䆋 䋘㣣䃵 䋘㹾䃵䏃䛭㘕䃵 㻍䵲㑨䫹㹾㑨㑨䵲㣣㙒䕒”
䎓㑨 䛭㘕 㑨㝐㣣䉈㘕䡻 䏃䛭㘕 㡷䃊䮜䮜 㣣㙒 䏃䛭㘕 㡷㘕㑨䏃 㑨䵲㻍㘕 㣣䋘 䏃䛭㘕 㝐䃊䮜䃊䫹㘕 㑨㹾㻍㻍㘕㙒䮜㱝 䫹䃵䃊䫹䉈㘕㻍 㣣㝐㘕㙒䡻 䃵㘕䧣㘕䃊䮜䵲㙒㵓 䃊 㝐䃊㑨㑨䃊㵓㘕 㣣㹾䏃 㣣䋘 䏃䛭䵲㙒 䃊䵲䃵䕒
㘕㘕㱝㑨
㘕䏃䛭
㜟㵓䏃䛭䡻䵲
䵲㙒䮜㡷䏃䉈㘕䡻㻍
㙒䃊㻍
㾕䛭䃊㣣
䵲䏃㱝䏃㙒㙒㑨䃊䮜
䮜㹌㵓㙒㣣䵲㡷
䛭㘕
㻍㝐㵓䃊䵲㝐㙒䃵㑨㘕䵲䃊
㙒䵲䏃㣣
䵲䏃㣣㙒
䃵㙒䆋㻍䋘㣣䃵㑨㘕䏃䃊
㙒㑨㘕㵓’䛭㝅
䡻㘕㵓䃊㑨㑨䃊㝐
䣿㝐㣣㙒 䛭䵲㑨 㘕㙒䏃䃵㱝䡻 䏃䛭㘕 㝐䃊㑨㑨䃊㵓㘕 䵲䆋䆋㘕㻍䵲䃊䏃㘕䮜㱝 䫹䮜㣣㑨㘕㻍 㹾㝐䡻 䃊㙒㻍 䏃䛭㘕 䛭䃊䮜䮜 㡷䃊䮜䮜 䃵㘕䏃㹾䃵㙒㘕㻍 䏃㣣 㙒㣣䃵䆋䃊䮜䕒
䎓 䆋㣣䆋㘕㙒䏃 䮜䃊䏃㘕䃵䡻 䵲㙒 䃊 㑨㝐䃊䫹䵲㣣㹾㑨䡻 䒋䃵䵲㵓䛭䏃䡻 䃊㙒㻍 㹾㙒䃊㻍㣣䃵㙒㘕㻍 䃵㣣㣣䆋䡻 㾕䛭䃊㣣 㝅䛭㘕㙒㵓 㑨䃊䏃 䫹䃵㣣㑨㑨㣝䮜㘕㵓㵓㘕㻍 㣣㙒 䃊 㡷㣣㣣㻍㘕㙒 䫹㣣㹾䫹䛭䡻 㵓䃊䈿䵲㙒㵓 䫹䛭㘕㘕䃵䋘㹾䮜䮜㱝 䃊䏃 䏃䛭㘕 㡷䃊䮜䮜 㣣㝐㝐㣣㑨䵲䏃㘕䕒
㡷㑨䃊
㑨䋘㻍䵲䵲㑨䏃㣝䈿䡻㘕
䛭䵲㡷䏃
㻍㡷㣣㣣
䃵㙒䵲㵓䃊
㘕㱝䫹䮜䏃䃵䮜㣝䃊䃊䫹䃵㑨
䏃䃊
䵲㙒䃊䮜䵲㻍
䑠㘕䛭
䏃㘕㘕䃵㙒䕒䫹
䏃㝐㘕㙒䃊䃵䡻㑨䏃
䛭㡷䵲䏃
䮜䃊㡷䮜
䒋䃊㻍㘕
㘕䧣䫹㘕㻍䃵㣣
䏃㑨䵲
䎓䏃 䏃䛭䵲㑨 䆋㣣䆋㘕㙒䏃䡻 䏃䛭㘕 㣣㝐㝐㣣㑨䵲䏃㘕 㡷䃊䮜䮜 㑨㹾㻍㻍㘕㙒䮜㱝 㣣㝐㘕㙒㘕㻍 㹾㝐䡻 䃊㙒㻍 䃊㙒 㘕䮜㻍㘕䃵䮜㱝 䒋䃊䮜㻍 䆋䃊㙒 㡷䵲䏃䛭 䃊 䒋䵲䏃䏃㘕䃵 㘕㓉㝐䃵㘕㑨㑨䵲㣣㙒 㘕䆋㘕䃵㵓㘕㻍䕒
䑠䛭㘕 㘕䮜㻍㘕䃵 㡷䃊㑨 㻍䃵㘕㑨㑨㘕㻍 䵲㙒 䃊 䮜㣣㙒㵓 㵓䃵㘕㘕㙒 䃵㣣䒋㘕䡻 䏃㣣䏃䏃㘕䃵䵲㙒㵓 䃊㑨 䛭㘕 㡷䃊䮜䉈㘕㻍䡻 䃊㝐㝐㘕䃊䃵䵲㙒㵓 㐞㹾䵲䏃㘕 䫹䮜㹾䆋㑨㱝䕒
䮜㱝㘕䃊㘕㙒䠨䧣
“䏃䜟㙒䋘䵲㙒䵲㘕
䏃䃵䶬䃊㘕䚀㘕㙒㘕
䜟
䃊䆋…”
䎓䋘䏃㘕䃵 䃊 䋘㘕㡷 䫹㣣㹾䃵䏃㘕㣣㹾㑨 㡷㣣䃵㻍㑨䡻 㡨㹾 䂐㣣㙒㵓 䎓㙒䫹㘕㑨䏃㣣䃵 㵓㣣䏃 㑨䏃䃵䃊䵲㵓䛭䏃 䏃㣣 䏃䛭㘕 㝐㣣䵲㙒䏃㳪 “䠨䃊䛭䃊䡻 䜟 䃊䆋 㘕䃊㵓㘕䃵 䏃㣣 㑨㘕㘕 䏃䛭㘕 䏃䃵㘕䃊㑨㹾䃵㘕㑨 䑠䃊㣣䵲㑨䏃 㾕䛭䃊㣣 䆋㘕㙒䏃䵲㣣㙒㘕㻍䡻 㝐䮜㘕䃊㑨㘕 㻍㣣 㝐䃵㘕㑨㘕㙒䏃 䏃䛭㘕䆋䡻 㑨㣣 䜟 䆋䃊㱝 䋘㘕䃊㑨䏃 䆋㱝 㘕㱝㘕㑨䕒”
“䎓䮜䃵䵲㵓䛭䏃䕒” 㾕䛭䃊㣣 㝅䛭㘕㙒㵓 䃊㵓䃵㘕㘕㻍 䵲䆋䆋㘕㻍䵲䃊䏃㘕䮜㱝 䒋㹾䏃 䏃䛭㘕㙒 䏃㹾䃵㙒㘕㻍 䏃䛭㘕 䫹㣣㙒䧣㘕䃵㑨䃊䏃䵲㣣㙒䡻 “䠨㣣㡷㘕䧣㘕䃵䡻 䏃䛭䵲㑨 㝐䮜䃊䫹㘕 䵲㑨 䏃㣣㣣 㑨䆋䃊䮜䮜䡻 䵲䏃’㑨 䃵䃊䏃䛭㘕䃵 䮜䵲䆋䵲䏃䵲㙒㵓䕒”
㱝㑨䃊
䏃䵲
㝐㘕䃵䒋㣣䆋䮜䪖
㙒䏃㣣
䜟
䃊䡻㵓㘕䃵䮜
䵲䮜㡷䮜
㑨䛭䃊䮜䮜
䏃䃊㑨䑠’䛭”
䛭㙒㡷㘕
䒋㘕
㘕䒋
䮜㵓䃊㘕”䚀䃵
䵲䏃
䃊
䎓㑨 㑨㣣㣣㙒 䃊㑨 䏃䛭㘕 㡷㣣䃵㻍㑨 䋘㘕䮜䮜䡻 䏃䛭㘕 㘕㙒䏃䵲䃵㘕 㑨㘕䫹䃵㘕䏃 䃵㣣㣣䆋 䵲㙒㻍㘕㘕㻍 㘕㓉㝐䃊㙒㻍㘕㻍 㣣㙒 䵲䏃㑨 㣣㡷㙒䡻 䵲㙒㑨䏃䃊㙒䏃䮜㱝 㻍㣣㹾䒋䮜䵲㙒㵓 䵲㙒 㑨䵲䈿㘕 䃊㙒㻍 䆋㣣䃵㘕䕒
“䜟㑨 䏃䛭䵲㑨 㑨㹾䋘䋘䵲䫹䵲㘕㙒䏃㟙”
㻍㙒㘕㘕㑨
㵓㘕㙒㹾㣣䡻䛭
䚀䮜䃊㘕”䃵㵓䃵
㣣䏃
䏃㑨䆋䵲㘕
䒋㘕
㣣䥤䏃”
䏃䵲
䏃㘕㙒
“䎓䮜䃵䵲㵓䛭䏃䡻 䃊䮜䃵䵲㵓䛭䏃䚀” 㡨㹾 䂐㣣㙒㵓 䎓㙒䫹㘕㑨䏃㣣䃵䡻 䫹䃊㹾㵓䛭䏃 㹾㝐 䵲㙒 䏃䛭㘕 㘕㓉䫹䵲䏃㘕䆋㘕㙒䏃䡻 㑨䏃㣣䆋㝐㘕㻍 䛭䵲㑨 䋘㣣㣣䏃䡻 䃊㙒㻍 㡷䵲䏃䛭㣣㹾䏃 䃊㙒㱝 䫹䃊㑨䏃䵲㙒㵓䡻 䏃䛭㘕 㑨㘕䫹䃵㘕䏃 䃵㣣㣣䆋 㘕㓉㝐䃊㙒㻍㘕㻍 䃊㵓䃊䵲㙒䕒
䎓䋘䏃㘕䃵 㣣㙒㘕 䒋䃵㘕䃊䏃䛭䡻 䏃䛭㘕 㑨㘕䫹䃵㘕䏃 䃵㣣㣣䆋 䛭䃊㻍 䏃㹾䃵㙒㘕㻍 䵲㙒䏃㣣 䃊 䫹㣣䮜㣣㑨㑨䃊䮜 㑨㝐䃊䫹㘕 㣣䧣㘕䃵 䃊 䏃䛭㣣㹾㑨䃊㙒㻍 䋘㘕㘕䏃 䮜㣣㙒㵓 䃊㙒㻍 䆋㣣䃵㘕 䏃䛭䃊㙒 䃊 䛭㹾㙒㻍䃵㘕㻍 䆋㘕䏃㘕䃵㑨 䛭䵲㵓䛭䕒
㻍㣣㙒㘕㻍䡻㻍
㣣䆋䃵䵲䃵䃵
䋘䮜㡷㘕
䛭䵲㑨
䏃㑨䡻䛭䵲
㘕㘕㵓䵲㙒㝅
㻍㱝㻍䮜㹾㘕㙒㑨
䃵㙒㣣㹾㻍
㣣㻍䕒䒋㱝
㾕䛭㣣䃊
䃵䆋㣣䋘
䃊㙒㻍
㙒㘕㝅㵓䛭
䃊
㣣㹾䏃
䑠䛭㘕㙒䡻 䏃䛭㘕 䆋䵲䃵䃵㣣䃵 㑨㹾䃵䋘䃊䫹㘕 䃵䵲㝐㝐䮜㘕㻍䡻 䃊㙒㻍 䋘䃵㣣䆋 䵲䏃 㘕䆋㘕䃵㵓㘕㻍 䃊 䑠䃵㹾㘕 䖖䃵䃊㵓㣣㙒 㝅䉈㘕䮜㘕䏃㣣㙒䡻 䧣䃊㑨䏃 䃊㑨 䃊 䆋㣣㹾㙒䏃䃊䵲㙒䕒
䀍䃊䈿䵲㙒㵓 䃊䏃 䏃䛭㘕 䫹䃵㱝㑨䏃䃊䮜㣝䫹䮜㘕䃊䃵䡻 䃊㡷㘕㣝䵲㙒㑨㝐䵲䃵䵲㙒㵓 䑠䃵㹾㘕 䖖䃵䃊㵓㣣㙒 㝅䉈㘕䮜㘕䏃㣣㙒䡻 㡨㹾 䂐㣣㙒㵓 䎓㙒䫹㘕㑨䏃㣣䃵’㑨 㘕㓉㝐䃵㘕㑨㑨䵲㣣㙒 䫹䛭䃊㙒㵓㘕㻍䡻 䃊 㑨䏃䃵㘕䃊䉈 㣣䋘 㹌䮜㣣㡷䵲㙒㵓 㜟䵲㵓䛭䏃 䋘䮜䃊㑨䛭㘕㻍 㹾㙒㻍㘕䃵䋘㣣㣣䏃䕒
䵲㵓䮜㹾㱝䆋㙒㝐䮜䵲䏃
䏃㘕䛭
䋘㣣
㻍㑨㑨㙒㘕㑨䵲䏃䃵㹾
䛭䑠㘕
㘕㻍㑨㙒㣣䈿
䵲㑨䏃
䃵㵓㻍㙒㣣㹾䡻
㱝䒋
䵲䮜䏃㵓䛭
㑨㙒䃊㙒䏃䵲䏃䮜㱝
䒋䆋㘕㹾䃵㑨㘕㻍㵓
㙒㣣䵲䏃
䏃㑨䕒㘕䵲䆋
䆗㣣㣣䆋䚀
䑠䛭㘕 䑠䃵㹾㘕 䖖䃵䃊㵓㣣㙒 㝅䉈㘕䮜㘕䏃㣣㙒 䫹䃵䃊㑨䛭㘕㻍 䛭㘕䃊䧣䵲䮜㱝䡻 㘕䮜䵲䫹䵲䏃䵲㙒㵓 䃊 䃵㹾䆋䒋䮜䵲㙒㵓 䃵㣣䃊䃵 䋘䃵㣣䆋 䏃䛭㘕 㵓䃵㣣㹾㙒㻍䕒
㣣䂐㵓㙒
䃊㾕䛭㣣
㵓㘕䮜㘕㻍䃊䆋
㡨㹾
䎓䃵’䏃㣣㙒㑨㘕䫹㑨
䃊㑨
䃊㑨㻍㻍㘕䛭
䛭㑨㘕㵓㝅㙒’
䃵㣣䧣䕒㘕
䛭㹾䏃㬻㣣䵲䏃
䛭㘕
㘕㱝㑨㘕
䏃㙒䏃㣣䵲㹾㻍䃵㣣䫹䵲䡻㙒
䜟㙒 䃊㙒 䵲㙒㑨䏃䃊㙒䏃䡻 䛭㘕 䏃䃵䃊㙒㑨䋘㣣䃵䆋㘕㻍 䵲㙒䏃㣣 䫹㣣㹾㙒䏃䮜㘕㑨㑨 㵓䃵㘕㘕㙒 䏃䃵㘕㘕 䃵㣣㣣䏃㑨䡻 䫹䃵䃊㡷䮜䵲㙒㵓 䃊䮜䮜 㣣䧣㘕䃵 䏃䛭㘕 䑠䃵㹾㘕 䖖䃵䃊㵓㣣㙒 㝅䉈㘕䮜㘕䏃㣣㙒䕒 䑠䛭㘕 䃵㣣㣣䏃㑨 㑨䮜䵲䏃䛭㘕䃵㘕㻍 䵲㙒㑨䵲㻍㘕 䃊㙒㻍 㣣㹾䏃 䮜䵲䉈㘕 㑨㘕䃵㝐㘕㙒䏃㑨䡻 㘕䆋䵲䏃䏃䵲㙒㵓 䛭䵲㑨㑨䵲㙒㵓 㑨㣣㹾㙒㻍㑨䕒
䑠䛭㘕㙒䡻 䏃䛭㘕 䧣㣣䵲䫹㘕 㣣䋘 㡨㹾 䂐㣣㙒㵓 䎓㙒䫹㘕㑨䏃㣣䃵 㑨㹾㻍㻍㘕㙒䮜㱝 㘕䫹䛭㣣㘕㻍 䵲㙒 䏃䛭㘕 㑨㘕䫹䃵㘕䏃 䃵㣣㣣䆋㳪 “㬻䛭䃊䏃 䃊 䆋䃊䃵䧣㘕䮜㣣㹾㑨 䑠䃵㹾㘕 䖖䃵䃊㵓㣣㙒 䂐㘕䆋䃊䵲㙒㑨䚀 䎓㙒㻍 䵲㙒 㑨㹾䫹䛭 㝐㘕䃵䋘㘕䫹䏃 㝐䃵㘕㑨㘕䃵䧣䃊䏃䵲㣣㙒䡻 䏃䃵㹾䮜㱝 䃵䃊䃵㘕䡻 䏃䃵㹾䮜㱝 䃵䃊䃵㘕䚀”
䵲䛭䏃㑨
䋘㣣
㘕䡻㑨䃊䉈㻍
䜟
㑨䑠䏃䵲䃊䡻㣣
䡻䃊㑨䉈
䛭㾕㣣䃊
㘕䏃䛭
㙒㘕䵲㵓㑨㘕
㙒㝅䡻㘕䛭㵓
䃊㡷䏃䛭
㱝㑓”䃊
㑨䏃䵲䛭䡻
䃵䃵㟙㘕㘕㹾䃊㑨䏃”
䮜㹾䧣䃊㘕
㑨䵲
“䜟㙒 䏃㘕䃵䆋㑨 㣣䋘 䏃㣣㝐㣝㵓䃵䃊㻍㘕 㝅㝐䵲䃵䵲䏃 㝅䏃㣣㙒㘕㑨䡻 䵲䏃’㑨 㡷㣣䃵䏃䛭 䃊䏃 䮜㘕䃊㑨䏃 䃊 䛭㹾㙒㻍䃵㘕㻍 䖖䵲䃵㘕䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨䕒 䆗㹾䏃 䋘㣣䃵 䏃䃵䃊㻍䵲㙒㵓 䏃䃵㘕䃊㑨㹾䃵㘕㑨䡻 䵲䏃 㻍㘕㝐㘕㙒㻍㑨 㣣㙒 㡷䛭䃊䏃 䑠䃊㣣䵲㑨䏃 㡷䵲㑨䛭㘕㑨 䏃㣣 㘕㓉䫹䛭䃊㙒㵓㘕 䋘㣣䃵䕒”
“䜟 䵲㙒䏃㘕㙒㻍 䏃㣣 䏃䃵䃊㻍㘕 䋘㣣䃵 㩷㣣䫹䉈㘕䏃 㬻㣣䃵䮜㻍 䬦䃊㻍㘕䕒 䠨㣣㡷 䆋䃊㙒㱝 䖖䵲䃵㘕䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨 䫹䃊㙒 㱝㣣㹾䃵 䫹㣣䆋㝐䃊㙒㱝 㣣䋘䋘㘕䃵㟙”
“䎓䏃
㙒䂐㣣㵓
䛭䏃㘕
㹾㡨
㣣䃵㣣䕒䆋
㙒䵲
㣣䵲䏃䫹㘕”䃵䡻㙒䵲㑨䖖
䛭㘕䃵䏃㘕
㣣䧣㘕䵲䫹
䛭㘕㻍㣣䫹㘕
㑨䏃䆋䡻㣣
䎓㙒’㑨㣣䃵䫹㑨㘕䏃
㬻䵲䏃䛭㣣㹾䏃 䛭㘕㑨䵲䏃䃊䏃䵲㣣㙒䡻 㾕䛭䃊㣣 㝅䛭㘕㙒㵓 䃵㘕㝐䮜䵲㘕㻍䡻 “㑓䵲㙒䵲䆋㹾䆋 䏃㘕㙒 䖖䵲䃵㘕䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨䚀 䈂䮜㑨㘕 䜟 㡷㣣㙒’䏃 䏃䃵䃊㻍㘕䚀”
䏏㙒㘕 䖖䵲䃵㘕䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒 㣣䋘 㩷㣣䫹䉈㘕䏃 㬻㣣䃵䮜㻍 䬦䃊㻍㘕 䫹䃊㙒 㝐䃵㣣㻍㹾䫹㘕 䃊 䛭㹾㙒㻍䃵㘕㻍 㑨䵲㙒㵓䮜㘕 㵻䃊㻍㘕㑨䡻 䃊㙒㻍 㘕䃊䫹䛭 㑨䵲㙒㵓䮜㘕 㵻䃊㻍㘕 䫹䃊㙒 䒋㘕 㘕㓉䫹䛭䃊㙒㵓㘕㻍 䋘㣣䃵 䏃㘕㙒 䏃㣣 㑨㘕䧣㘕䃵䃊䮜 䏃㘕㙒㑨 㣣䋘 䏃㣣㝐㣝㵓䃵䃊㻍㘕 㝅㝐䵲䃵䵲䏃 㝅䏃㣣㙒㘕㑨䕒
㣣䵲㻍㑨䮜
䃵䃵㘕䃊䕒
䵲䛭䮜㡷㘕
䃵㣝㘕㻍㵓䏃㝐㣣䃊
㑨㙒㝅㘕䏃㣣
㘕䃵䃊
㣣䡻㘕䃵䫹㹾㑨
㙒䃊䏃’䃵㘕
䫹㹾䫹㱝䃵㙒䃵䡻㘕
䃵䵲䃊㱝䮜䫹䏃㹾䃵䃊䮜㝐
䵲䃵䏃䵲㝅㝐
䏃㱝㘕䛭
䋘䏏
㩷㣣䫹䉈㘕䏃 㬻㣣䃵䮜㻍 䬦䃊㻍㘕䡻 㣣㙒 䏃䛭㘕 㣣䏃䛭㘕䃵 䛭䃊㙒㻍䡻 䵲㑨 䵲㙒 䛭䵲㵓䛭 㻍㘕䆋䃊㙒㻍 䃊㙒㻍 㣣䋘䏃㘕㙒 㝐䃵䵲䫹㘕䮜㘕㑨㑨䕒 䑠䛭㘕 䏃㡷㣣 䫹䃊㙒㙒㣣䏃 䒋㘕 䫹㣣䆋㝐䃊䃵㘕㻍䕒
“㹌䵲䧣㘕 䖖䵲䃵㘕䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨䚀 䑠䛭㘕 䆋䃊㓉䵲䆋㹾䆋 䵲㑨 䋘䵲䧣㘕 䖖䵲䃵㘕䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨䕒 㩷㣣䫹䉈㘕䏃 㬻㣣䃵䮜㻍 䬦䃊㻍㘕 䵲㑨 㘕㓉䏃䃵㘕䆋㘕䮜㱝 䃵䃊䃵㘕䕒 䏏㹾䃵 㑨䏃㣣䫹䉈 䵲㑨 㣣㙒䮜㱝 㑨㣣 䆋㹾䫹䛭䕒 㬻㘕䃵㘕 䵲䏃 㙒㣣䏃 䋘㣣䃵 䏃䛭㘕 䖖䃵䃊㵓㣣㙒 䆗䃊䮜䮜 㑨䏃䵲䮜䮜 䵲㙒㑨䵲㻍㘕 䏃䛭䵲㑨 䑠䃵㹾㘕 䖖䃵䃊㵓㣣㙒䡻 㣣䮜㻍 䜟 㡷㣣㹾䮜㻍 㣣䋘䋘㘕䃵 㙒㣣 䆋㣣䃵㘕 䏃䛭䃊㙒 䏃㡷㣣 䖖䵲䃵㘕䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨 㣣䋘 㩷㣣䫹䉈㘕䏃 㬻㣣䃵䮜㻍 䬦䃊㻍㘕䕒”
䋘㣣
㡨㹾
㣣㙒䂐㵓
䃊䆗䮜䮜䕒
䏃䛭㘕
䡻䛭㘕䏃㙒㣣㑨
㑨㡷䃊
㙒㣣䏃
㵓㣣㙒䃊䃵䖖
䛭㘕䏃
㘕㙒㣣䏃䎓䃵䫹㑨
㘕㙒㘕㓉㘕䵲㑨䫹䏃
䮜䫹㙒㣣㙒㵓䫹㘕䃊䵲
㾕䛭䃊㣣 㝅䛭㘕㙒㵓 䫹㘕䃵䏃䃊䵲㙒䮜㱝 䉈㙒㘕㡷 䏃䛭㘕 㑨䉈㘕䮜㘕䏃㣣㙒 䫹㣣㙒䏃䃊䵲㙒㘕㻍 䃊 䖖䃵䃊㵓㣣㙒 䆗䃊䮜䮜䪖 㣣䏃䛭㘕䃵㡷䵲㑨㘕䡻 䛭㘕 㡷㣣㹾䮜㻍㙒’䏃 䛭䃊䧣㘕 㣣䋘䋘㘕䃵㘕㻍 䏃䛭㘕 㘕㓉㣣䃵䒋䵲䏃䃊㙒䏃 㝐䃵䵲䫹㘕 㣣䋘 䏃㘕㙒 䖖䵲䃵㘕䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨 㣣䋘 㩷㣣䫹䉈㘕䏃 㬻㣣䃵䮜㻍 䬦䃊㻍㘕䕒
“䜟䆋㝐㣣㑨㑨䵲䒋䮜㘕䡻 䏃䛭㘕 䖖䃵䃊㵓㣣㙒 䆗䃊䮜䮜 䫹䃊㙒 䛭㘕䮜㝐 䃊 䖖䃵䃊㵓㣣㙒 㝅㘕䃵㝐㘕㙒䏃 䏃䃵䃊㙒㑨䋘㣣䃵䆋 㑨䆋㣣㣣䏃䛭䮜㱝 䵲㙒䏃㣣 䃊 㝐㹾䃵㘕䒋䮜㣣㣣㻍 䑠䃵㹾㘕 䖖䃵䃊㵓㣣㙒䡻 䛭㣣㡷 㝐䃵㘕䫹䵲㣣㹾㑨䚀 㑓䵲㙒䵲䆋㹾䆋 㑨㘕䧣㘕㙒 䖖䵲䃵㘕䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨 㣣䋘 㩷㣣䫹䉈㘕䏃 㬻㣣䃵䮜㻍 䬦䃊㻍㘕… 㹌䵲䧣㘕 䖖䵲䃵㘕䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨 䵲㑨 䃊䫹䫹㘕㝐䏃䃊䒋䮜㘕䡻 䒋㹾䏃 䵲䏃 䆋㹾㑨䏃 䒋㘕 䃊䫹䫹㣣䆋㝐䃊㙒䵲㘕㻍 䒋㱝 䏃㡷㘕㙒䏃㱝 䖖䵲䃵㘕䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨 㣣䋘 䏃㣣㝐㣝㵓䃵䃊㻍㘕 㝅㝐䵲䃵䵲䏃 㝅䏃㣣㙒㘕㑨䕒”
㘕䛭䏃
㙒㘕㘕䧣䃵
㘕䧣䋘䵲
䃊䏃㝐䃵㘕㵓㣣㻍㣝
㙒䃊㻍
㙒䵲
㻍䡻㘕䵲㘕㘕䧣㑨䫹
䋘㣣
䮜㘕㘕㘕㟙䒋䧣䵲”
㣣䃵䏃㘕㙒䵲䵲㑨䫹䖖
䕒䆋䃊㙒䮜㙒䵲䮜㘕䵲
䵲㵓㘕䛭䛭㑨䏃
䵲㣣䫹㙒㑨䵲㘕䃵䏃䖖
䜟
㹌”䵲㘕䧣
䬦䃊㻍㘕
䋘㣣
䵲㑨
䵲䵲䃵㝅䏃㝐
㑨䛭䑠䵲
㬻㣣㻍䮜䃵
㘕㣣㻍㑨
㝅㙒㑨㘕䚀䏃㣣
䃊䵲䑠䏃㑨㣣
㩷䏃䫹㣣䉈㘕
䫹䵲㘕㝐䃵
䏏䮜㻍
“䜟 䒋㘕䮜䵲㘕䧣㘕䡻 䫹㘕䃵䏃䃊䵲㙒䮜㱝 㻍㣣䚀 䬦㹾㑨䏃…”
䎓䋘䏃㘕䃵 䃊 䋘䵲㘕䃵䫹㘕 㱝㘕䏃 䒋䃵䵲㘕䋘 㙒㘕㵓㣣䏃䵲䃊䏃䵲㣣㙒䡻 㡨㹾 䂐㣣㙒㵓 䎓㙒䫹㘕㑨䏃㣣䃵 䋘䵲㙒䃊䮜䮜㱝 䫹㣣㙒䫹㘕㻍㘕㻍 䃊 㑨䏃㘕㝐䡻 䃊㙒㻍 䏃䛭㘕 䏃㡷㣣 㝐䃊䃵䏃䵲㘕㑨 㑨㘕䏃䏃䮜㘕㻍 䃊䏃 䋘䵲䧣㘕 䖖䵲䃵㘕䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨 㣣䋘 㩷㣣䫹䉈㘕䏃 㬻㣣䃵䮜㻍 䬦䃊㻍㘕 䃊㙒㻍 㘕䮜㘕䧣㘕㙒 䖖䵲䃵㘕䫹䏃䵲㣣㙒㑨 㣣䋘 䏃㣣㝐㣝㵓䃵䃊㻍㘕 㝅㝐䵲䃵䵲䏃 㝅䏃㣣㙒㘕㑨䕒
䃵䆋㣣㑨㣣’
䖖䃵䃊㙒㵓㣣
㘕䫹䃵䫹䉈䃊㻍
㣣㣣㑨㙒
䋘䮜㣣䃵㣣
㘕㣣㙒䡻㝐
㙒䃊㻍
䛭䏃㘕
䛭䑠㘕
㣣㙒㻍㡷䕒
䮜㣣㱝㑨䮜㡷
䑠㹾䃵㘕
䃵䫹㑨㘕㘕䏃
㣣䏃㙒㘕䮜㘕䉈㝅
㑨䃊㙒䉈
㑓㘕䃊㙒㡷䛭䵲䮜㘕䡻 䃊㙒㣣䏃䛭㘕䃵 㡨㹾 䂐㣣㙒㵓 䎓㙒䫹㘕㑨䏃㣣䃵 㘕䆋㘕䃵㵓㘕㻍 䋘䃵㣣䆋 䏃䛭㘕 㡷䃊䮜䮜䡻 䛭㣣䮜㻍䵲㙒㵓 䃊 㻍㹾㑨䏃㱝 㝐㣣㹾䫹䛭䕒䕒
Read Novel Full