Chapter 1736: 1736: The Remarkable Youth
Capítulo 1736: Chapter 1736: The Remarkable Youth
Luo Yang was in a dilemma.
After weighing the pros and cons, Luo Yang decided to stay and protect Hua XiYi and the others.
“Sister Teng, I still can’t go to you. There’s something you might not know, but once you do, you won’t dare ask me to look for you anymore.” Luo Yang said.
“If you don’t come, you die!”
With that, Lord Bao hung up the phone.
Luo Yang originally wanted to tell her about The Tenth Mu Tan. If he went to find her, he would bring The Tenth Mu Tan along.
But Lord Bao didn’t give him the chance to speak, and when Luo Yang called her again, no one answered several times.
Ban Pi, one of the three top assassins of Skull Fortress, had already submitted to Luo Yang and could investigate if Lord Bao had issued any orders.
So Luo Yang quickly called Ban Pi and found out that he hadn’t received any orders yet.
Ending the call, Luo Yang returned to the room.
Everyone looked over curiously, and Luo Yang said, “Where were we? Oh right, I said I wanted to go home. Whoever wants to come with me, raise your hand?”
Aunt Thirteen and others looked at each other, but no one raised their hand.
“Then I’ll make a trip back first. Where do you want to go? I can take you there.” Luo Yang said.
“Haha, you can’t go back!” Hua XiYi said.
Such a rude request made Luo Yang laugh.
“Sister Hua, I still have my own matters to attend to. I can’t stay here forever. You won’t come with me, so what should I do?” Luo Yang glanced around.
There was no news about the whereabouts of The Tenth Mu Tan.
Even if Luo Yang was fully confident in destroying The Tenth Mu Tan, he had nowhere to exert his efforts.
The Tenth Mu Tan was too mysterious; it might not even need a place to stay, making it even harder to find.
“Kid, what important matters do you have? We can help you with them.” Aunt Thirteen said.
“No, I still have to compete against the Japanese Ninja.” Luo Yang said.
If it were any other matter, he could ask Aunt Thirteen and others to handle it, and there would be no problem.
For such competition, he had to be present himself, otherwise, the martial arts community in Japan would more firmly believe that Luo Yang only bullied amateur martial arts enthusiasts.
Hua XiYi said: “Haha, let us find someone to help you in the match.”
Luo Yang shook his head: “No. You don’t understand how important this is to me. I must complete it myself.”
Seeing that they couldn’t persuade Luo Yang, everyone exchanged glances.
Just then, Luo Yang internally sensed that the Blood Devil and Soul Bead emitted a red glow.
Luo Yang was shocked; he thought The Tenth Mu Tan only dared to attack at night but didn’t expect it to be lurking during the day too.
If he didn’t stay with Hua XiYi and others, they might get into trouble.
Luo Yang said, “How about we find a remote place to set a trap and see if The Tenth Mu Tan shows up, how about it?”
The others didn’t know The Tenth Mu Tan was around. Master Shi Tai said: “Xiao Luo, it’s uncertain if The Tenth Mu Tan will come. Setting a trap might be useless.”
In fact, The Tenth Mu Tan would definitely follow.
Of course, whether it would fall for the trap was another matter.
“Sister Shi Tai, not taking the initiative is unfavorable to us. Everyone, follow my command.” Luo Yang said.
Two tigers cannot share one mountain, or the situation will become chaotic.
If Luo Yang’s words were not reliable, and everyone had their own opinions, nothing could be accomplished.
Though there were some complaints, as Luo Yang was needed for protection, no one voiced their dissent.
“Let’s head out now and find a place where people seldom go.” Luo Yang said.
He walked out first, and the others had no choice but to follow behind him.
Bai Hui and the three Gu sisters actually wanted to stop Luo Yang from dealing with The Tenth Mu Tan; they wanted to see Hua XiYi and others killed by The Tenth Mu Tan.
Along the way, the Blood Devil and Soul Bead were emitting red glow, indicating The Tenth Mu Tan was following behind.
However, in the bustling resort, identifying which was The Tenth Mu Tan was truly difficult.
Luo Yang stopped and observed but didn’t find the woman he saw on the rooftop last night.
The Tenth Mu Tan might be part of a small group or able to transform into other people’s appearances; this was unknown.
At least Luo Yang had encountered three different people, all possibly The Tenth Mu Tan.
The group headed toward a lesser-traveled area to spot the stalking Tenth Mu Tan.
As they reached the edge of the resort, Luo Yang turned back and saw an old granny trailing behind from afar.
No one else was there, and the Blood Devil and Soul Bead continued glowing red.
This indicated that the old granny was The Tenth Mu Tan.
Luo Yang was curious why The Tenth Mu Tan had the ability to transform into someone else’s appearance.
Watching the granny’s hunched, struggling steps, she didn’t seem like an assassin at all.
To test a bit, Luo Yang approached the granny.
The granny lifted her head slightly to look at Luo Yang without showing any unusual expression.
“Excuse me, are you alone? Let me help you.” Luo Yang said.
“No need, I can walk by myself.” The granny said.
If not for the increasing intensity of the red glow from the Blood Devil and Soul Bead, Luo Yang wouldn’t believe the granny was The Tenth Mu Tan.
With the opportunity at hand, Luo Yang reached out to grab the granny’s hand.
Just as he was about to grasp her hand, she suddenly counterattacked.
After a few moves, Luo Yang felt the surrounding air thickened, which was dire.
As such, Luo Yang couldn’t use Shadow Fist.
The others hesitated but soon leaped over to surround the granny.
Sasha was the first to pounce, perhaps underestimating the granny.
As a result, with a loud thud, Sasha was sent flying by a palm strike from the granny.
The others jumped in shock, and Luo Yang shouted: “Run! I’ll handle it!”
Aunt Thirteen and the others turned to escape.
At this moment, the granny hesitated but then charged at Luo Yang.
After all, Luo Yang had the Blood Devil and Soul Bead on him.
“Be careful!” Master Shi Tai saw the granny attacking Luo Yang, who seemed immobilized.
In front of everyone, Luo Yang wouldn’t let the Blood Devil assist him.
If Hua XiYi and others saw the Blood Devil, it would be equally troublesome for Luo Yang.
As the granny’s palm was about to strike Luo Yang’s head, the center of Luo Yang’s forehead suddenly emitted a light mixed with red and golden glow.
The granny flipped backward, withdrew her palm, and turned to flee.
Fearing it was a ploy to lure him away, Luo Yang didn’t pursue.
Fortunately, the Blood Devil did not fly out from his forehead, but Hua XiYi and the others noticed the glow emanating from Luo Yang’s forehead, feeling curious.
Sasha lay on the ground, unable to rise, with blood at the corner of her mouth.
Everyone walked over, and Luo Yang helped Sasha up.
“I can’t go on.” Sasha said weakly.
Luo Yang first took out a cup of Magical Pond Water for Sasha to drink.
After drinking it, Sasha exclaimed in surprise: “I can survive!”
Her ribs were broken and it was considered a severe injury.
“Let’s take her to the hospital first.” Luo Yang said.
So everyone rushed Sasha to the hospital.
On the way, Hua XiYi curiously said: “Haha, so you can use spells.”
Luo Yang still liked this kind of misunderstanding.
Otherwise, if everyone suspected Luo Yang had the Blood Devil, it would be a huge trouble.
“No, no.” Luo Yang laughed.
盧
㥺䳞䵶䌙
䌙䞕䳞
爐
㟰䲚㯈䳞䞕㥺䌙
爐
蘆
㠽㫜䴩
䡋㯈䁼䴩䌙㯈䲚㖯㷴䁼
老
䴩䳖
路
魯
㷴䡋㖯㟰㯈
㯈䁼䴩䡋䡋㶍䳖
擄
䆑㷴䧬䞕䧋䳞㖯䆑䡋㶍䳞䳞䲚
㟰㶍㖯
魯
䴩㟰㟰㥺㷴㫜㷴
䧬䡋䴩㯈㯈㐣㻵䌙
盧
䲚㫜䆑䴩䞕
䁼㯈䆑䀮䆑䀮䟻
䆎㫜䌙㷴 㗮㟰㖯䡋㷴㯈㯈䌙 䡋㯈䀮䁼㯈䲚㷴䳖㫜䆑䆑䧬 䀮䳞㖯䞕䟻 “䵄㖯䞕䟻 㑡 䞕㖯䞕䌙’㷴 䡋㯈䳞䆑㖯㥆㯈 䧬䴩㫜 䃊㯈䡋㯈 䳞 㟰㖯䞕䞕㯈䌙 㶍䳞䀮㷴㯈䡋㡝”
㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䆑䳞㫜㥺㟰㯈䞕 䳞䌙䞕 䀮䳞㖯䞕䟻 “䆎㫜䌙㷴 㗮㟰㖯䡋㷴㯈㯈䌙䟻 䧬䴩㫜’䡋㯈 㷴䴩䴩 䭋㖯䌙䞕䧋 㑡 䴩䌙䆑䧬 䭋䌙䴩䃊 䳞 䳖㯈䃊 㷴䡋㖯䲚䭋䀮䟻 䌙䴩㷴㟰㖯䌙㥺 㶍㫜䲚㟰 䲚䴩㶍䁼䳞䡋㯈䞕 㷴䴩 䧬䴩㫜 䳞䆑䆑䧋”
䴩䁼䆑㖯㷴䳞䀮㟰
㗮䧬㟰㯈
㥺䧬䀮㫜䟻㯈䡋䡋
䀮㯈㟰
䌙㯈㯈䞕㯈䞕
䁼㷴䲚䌙㷴䡋㖯䴩䴩㯈
㯈䌙䀮㷴
㷴㟰㯈䧋䡋㯈
䳖䴩䡋
㟰㷴㯈
䀮㟰㟮䳞䳞
㷴䴩
䌙䳞䞕
㻵㐣㯈䡋䧬䴩䌙㯈 䃊䳞䀮 䳞䌙㣿㖯䴩㫜䀮䟻 㥺㖯㐣㯈䌙 㷴㟰㯈 䁼䴩䃊㯈䡋 䴩䳖 㗮㟰㯈 㗮㯈䌙㷴㟰 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙䟻 䳞䌙䞕 䌙䴩䃊 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䳞䌙䞕 㷴㟰㯈 䴩㷴㟰㯈䡋䀮 䲚䴩㫜䆑䞕䌙’㷴 䆑㯈䳞㐣㯈 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺’䀮 䀮㖯䞕㯈䧋
䛍㖯㷴㟰䴩㫜㷴 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺’䀮 䁼䡋䴩㷴㯈䲚㷴㖯䴩䌙䟻 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䳞䌙䞕 㷴㟰㯈 䴩㷴㟰㯈䡋䀮 䃊䴩㫜䆑䞕䌙’㷴 䀮㫜䡋㐣㖯㐣㯈䧋
䲩㯈
䳞䳞㷴㯈䁼䡋䀮䆑㯈䧬䟻
䧬㷴㟰㯈
㷴’㫜䴩䃊䞕䆑䌙
䳞䲩䆑㯈
㖯㷴㯈䞕䡋
㯈㟰㖯䞕
䴩䌙㥺䧋䆑
㖯䳖
䴩㷴
㟰䧬㷴㯈
䡋䴩䳖
㯈䲚䳞䁼䀮㯈
㷴䴩
㐣㯈䌙㻵
㑡㷴’䀮 䴩䌙䆑䧬 䳞 㶍䳞㷴㷴㯈䡋 䴩䳖 㷴㖯㶍㯈 䲩㯈䳖䴩䡋㯈 㗮㟰㯈 㗮㯈䌙㷴㟰 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙 䳖㖯䌙䞕䀮 㷴㟰㯈㶍䧋
㑡䳖 㖯㷴 䃊㯈䡋㯈䌙’㷴 䳖䴩䡋 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺’䀮 䋞䳞㥺㖯䲚䳞䆑 㹇䴩䌙䞕 䛍䳞㷴㯈䡋䟻 㟮䳞䀮㟰䳞 䃊䴩㫜䆑䞕䌙’㷴 㟰䳞㐣㯈 䆑䳞䀮㷴㯈䞕 㫜䌙㷴㖯䆑 㷴㟰㯈 㟰䴩䀮䁼㖯㷴䳞䆑䧋
㥺䵶䌙䳞䟻
䀮䳞䳞㟮㟰
䌙䧬䳞䆑䌙㖯㖯㖯䧋㥺䲚㷴䀮䳖
㯈䡋㟰
䀮䳞䃊
㟰㖯㶍
㠽㫜䴩
䞕䀮㐣䳞㯈
䧬䲩
䳞㯈㥺㥆
䴩䌙㯈䲚
䳞䌙䞕
㶍䴩䡋㯈
㯈䀮㯈䌙䴩䳖䞕㷴
䳞䃊㷴䀮䴩䡋䞕
“㻵㐣㯈䌙 㖯䳖 䃊㯈 䴟䴩㖯䌙 䳖䴩䡋䲚㯈䀮䟻 䃊㯈 䲚䳞䌙’㷴 䞕㯈䳖㯈䳞㷴 㗮㟰㯈 㗮㯈䌙㷴㟰 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙䧋 䛍㟰䳞㷴 䞕䴩 䃊㯈 䞕䴩㩉” 䋞䳞䀮㷴㯈䡋 㟮㟰㖯 㗮䳞㖯 䃊䴩䡋䡋㖯㯈䞕䆑䧬 䳞䀮䭋㯈䞕䧋
“䡐䴩䌙’㷴 䃊䴩䡋䡋䧬䟻 㑡’䆑䆑 㟰䳞䌙䞕䆑㯈 㖯㷴 䌙㯈㣿㷴 㷴㖯㶍㯈䟻” 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䀮䳞㖯䞕䧋
㠽㫜䴩
㗮㟰㯈
䋞㫜
䴩㷴
䳞㥺䌙䵶
㯈㟰㷴
㶍㷴㖯㥺㟰
䡋䴩㯈䃊䁼
㥺㯈㶍䀮㷴䳞䌙㖯㷴㖯
㖯䌙㖯㥺㐣㥺
㯈㷴䭋䳞
䴩䳖
㯈䡐䟻㖯䆑㐣
䲩㯈
䌙㯈㷴㟰㗮
㥺㫜㟰䴩䌙㯈
㫜㟰㷴䴩㟰㥺㷴
㷴㟰䳞㷴
䄥䳞䞕㯈
㯈㟰㷴
䳞㷴㟰㷴
㫜䴩㟮䆑
㷴㯈㟰
䧋䳞㗮䌙
䆑䄥䴩䞕䴩
䴩䳖
㷴䴩
䞕䌙䴩䃊
䀡䴩䃊㯈㐣㯈䡋䟻 㷴㟰㯈 䄥䆑䴩䴩䞕 䡐㯈㐣㖯䆑’䀮 䁼䴩䃊㯈䡋 㖯䀮 䴩㐣㯈䡋䃊㟰㯈䆑㶍㖯䌙㥺䟻 䳞䌙䞕 㖯䳖 㖯㷴 䞕㖯䞕䌙’㷴 䆑㖯䀮㷴㯈䌙 㷴䴩 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺䟻 㷴㟰䳞㷴 䲚䴩㫜䆑䞕 䲩㯈 䁼䡋䴩䲩䆑㯈㶍䳞㷴㖯䲚䧋
㻵㐣㯈䡋䧬䴩䌙㯈 㖯䌙䲚䡋㯈䳞䀮㖯䌙㥺䆑䧬 䲩㯈䆑㖯㯈㐣㯈䞕 㷴㟰䳞㷴 䴩䌙䆑䧬 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䲚䴩㫜䆑䞕 䞕㯈䳞䆑 䃊㖯㷴㟰 㗮㟰㯈 㗮㯈䌙㷴㟰 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙䧋
䀮䳞䧋㯈䞕䭋
㯈䃊
䳞䡋㯈
䌙㖯䴩㥺㥺
䆑䆑䳞
䧬㷴䳞䀮
㷴䴩
䀡䳞䟻㟰䳞”
䴄㖯㖯䵶
䳞䀡㫜
㯈䡋㟰”㩉㯈
㹇㯈䴩䁼䆑㯈 䃊㯈䡋㯈 䲚䴩㶍㖯䌙㥺 䳞䌙䞕 㥺䴩㖯䌙㥺 䳖䡋䴩㶍 㷴㟰㯈 㟰䴩䀮䁼㖯㷴䳞䆑 䡋䴩䴩㶍䟻 㶍䳞䭋㖯䌙㥺 䲚䴩䌙㐣㯈䡋䀮䳞㷴㖯䴩䌙 䞕㖯䳖䳖㖯䲚㫜䆑㷴䧋
㟮䳞䀮㟰䳞 㟰䳞䞕 䴟㫜䀮㷴 㟰䳞䞕 䀮㫜䡋㥺㯈䡋䧬䟻 䳞䌙䞕 㷴㟰㯈 㟰䴩䀮䁼㖯㷴䳞䆑 䃊䴩㫜䆑䞕䌙’㷴 䳞㥺䡋㯈㯈 㷴䴩 䞕㖯䀮䲚㟰䳞䡋㥺㯈 㟰㯈䡋 㖯㶍㶍㯈䞕㖯䳞㷴㯈䆑䧬䧋
䆑㰇䌙䀮䀮㯈
㟰䧬㷴㯈
㷴㯈䆑䧋䳖
䲚䡋䀮䧬䆑㯈㷴㯈
䛍㖯㷴㟰 㟮䳞䀮㟰䳞’䀮 䲚䴩䌙䀮㯈䌙㷴䟻 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䳞䌙䞕 㷴㟰㯈 䴩㷴㟰㯈䡋䀮 䧎㫜㖯㯈㷴䆑䧬 㷴䴩䴩䭋 㟰㯈䡋 䴩㫜㷴 䴩䳖 㷴㟰㯈 㟰䴩䀮䁼㖯㷴䳞䆑 䳞㷴 䌙㖯㥺㟰㷴 䳞䌙䞕 䲩䡋䴩㫜㥺㟰㷴 㟰㯈䡋 㷴䴩 䳞 㟰䴩㷴㯈䆑 䡋䴩䴩㶍䧋
㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 㥺䳞㐣㯈 㟮䳞䀮㟰䳞 䳞䌙䴩㷴㟰㯈䡋 䲚㫜䁼 䴩䳖 䋞䳞㥺㖯䲚䳞䆑 㹇䴩䌙䞕 䛍䳞㷴㯈䡋䟻 䳞䌙䞕 㟰㯈䡋 䡋㯈䲚䴩㐣㯈䡋䧬 䳞䲚䲚㯈䆑㯈䡋䳞㷴㯈䞕䧋
㻵䴩㯈䌙㐣䧬䡋㯈
䀮䃊䳞
㯈㟰㷴
䳖䳞䲚㯈䀮
㷴㯈䡋㟰㖯
䧬䡋䧋䃊䴩䡋
䡋㶍䴩䴩䟻
䞕䆑㖯䆑䳖㯈
䳞㥺㯈㯈㷴䞕㟰䡋
㖯䌙
䃊㟰㖯㷴
䡐㫜䡋㖯䌙㥺 㷴㟰㯈 䞕䳞䧬䟻 㷴㟰㯈䧬 㟰䳞䞕 䀮㯈㯈䌙 㟮䳞䀮㟰䳞 䀮㯈䌙㷴 䳖䆑䧬㖯䌙㥺 䲩䧬 䳞 䁼䳞䆑㶍 䀮㷴䡋㖯䭋㯈 䳖䡋䴩㶍 㷴㟰㯈 䴩䆑䞕 㥺䡋䳞䌙䞕㶍䴩㷴㟰㯈䡋䟻 䃊㟰䴩䀮㯈 䁼䴩䃊㯈䡋 㯈㐣㯈䌙 㷴㟰㯈 㗮䡋㫜㯈 㲺㖯䒅䁼䴩䃊㯈䡋㯈䞕 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䲚䴩㫜䆑䞕䌙’㷴 㶍䳞㷴䲚㟰䧋
㟮䲚䳞䌙䌙㖯䌙㥺 㷴㟰㯈 䡋䴩䴩㶍䟻 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䳞䀮䭋㯈䞕䟻 “㑡䀮 㗮㟰㯈 㗮㯈䌙㷴㟰 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙 䴩䌙㯈 㯈䌙㷴㖯㷴䧬 䴩䡋 䳞 䲚䴩䆑䆑㯈䲚㷴㖯㐣㯈 㷴㯈䡋㶍 䳖䴩䡋 㶍䳞䌙䧬㩉”
㟰㷴㯈
䳖㟰䡋䴩㷴㫜
㖯㷴
䌙䲚㯈䴩㫜㷴䞕
䆑䞕䴩
䌙䌙㑡㥺䆑㫜䞕㖯䲚
䳞䀮
䴩䞕㥺㯈㷴䳞䡋䌙䟻㟰㶍䡋
䧬䌙㷴㖯㯈㷴䧋
㷴㟰㯈
㻵㖯㷴㟰㯈䡋 㗮㟰㯈 㗮㯈䌙㷴㟰 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙 䲚䴩㫜䆑䞕 䳖䡋㯈㯈䆑䧬 㷴䡋䳞䌙䀮䳖䴩䡋㶍 㖯䌙㷴䴩 䞕㖯䳖䳖㯈䡋㯈䌙㷴 䳖䴩䡋㶍䀮 䳞㷴 䃊㖯䆑䆑䟻 䴩䡋 㷴㟰㯈䡋㯈 䃊㯈䡋㯈 㶍䳞䌙䧬 䴩䳖 㷴㟰㯈㶍䧋
䠦䴩 䴩䌙㯈 䲚䴩㫜䆑䞕 䳞䌙䀮䃊㯈䡋 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺’䀮 䧎㫜㯈䀮㷴㖯䴩䌙䟻 䳞䀮 㷴㟰㯈䧬 㯈㣿䲚㟰䳞䌙㥺㯈䞕 㫜䌙䲚㯈䡋㷴䳞㖯䌙 㥺䆑䳞䌙䲚㯈䀮䧋
㫜䴩㠽
㗮㯈㟰
㐣䆑㖯㯈䟻䳞
㶍㟰㯈䌙㷴䴩㖯䀮㥺
㗮䳞䌙
䌙䳞
䃊㯈
䃊㯈
㯈䞕㯈䌙
㷴䃊䌙䳞
䡋䴩
䡋䧬䳞䳞䡋
㷴䲚㯈㫜䡋䳞䁼
䋞㫜
㷴䴩
㯈㟰䌙㗮㷴
㫜㖯㷴䟻䌙䞕䌙䴩㯈䲚
䵶䳞䌙㥺
䳖㑡”
㖯㖯䡋䀮䧋㶍䆑”䳞
䳦䡋䴩㶍 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䳞䌙䞕 㷴㟰㯈 䴩㷴㟰㯈䡋䀮’ 㯈㣿䁼䡋㯈䀮䀮㖯䴩䌙䀮䟻 㖯㷴 䃊䳞䀮 䲚䆑㯈䳞䡋 㷴㟰㯈䧬 䲚䴩㫜䆑䞕䌙’㷴 䳖㫜䆑䳖㖯䆑䆑 㷴㟰䳞㷴 䡋㯈䧎㫜㯈䀮㷴䧋
“䀡䴩䃊 㶍㫜䲚㟰 䞕䴩 䧬䴩㫜 䭋䌙䴩䃊 䳞䲩䴩㫜㷴 㗮㟰㯈 㗮㯈䌙㷴㟰 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙㩉” 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䳞䀮䭋㯈䞕 䳞㥺䳞㖯䌙䧋
㠽㫜䴩
䀮㶍㫜㥺
䡋䭋㐣䴩䁼䴩㯈
䆑䴩䴩䭋䀮
㟰䞕㷴䧬㯈’
㷴㟰㯈
䞕䌙䳞
䡋䴩䞕䃊䡋㖯㯈
䧋㯈䡋㟰㷴䴩䀮
㥺䳞䵶䌙
㟰㷴㯈
䀮㖯’䀮㷴㯈䡋䀮
㯈㷴㟰
㫜䀡䳞
䌙䴩
㯈㟮㯈㖯㥺䌙
䄥㖯䳞
㫜㜴
㷴㟰䡋㯈㯈
䴄㖯䵶㖯
䲚䳖䳞㯈䀮䟻
䀡㖯㫜
䞕䳞䌙
䄥㯈䳖䴩䡋㯈 䳞䌙䧬䴩䌙㯈 䲚䴩㫜䆑䞕 䳞䌙䀮䃊㯈䡋䟻 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䳞䞕䞕㯈䞕䟻 “䛍㯈’䡋㯈 䳞䆑䆑 㖯䌙 㷴㟰㯈 䀮䳞㶍㯈 䲩䴩䳞㷴 㟰㯈䡋㯈䧋 㑡䳖 䳞䌙䧬䴩䌙㯈 㖯䀮 䳞䳖䡋䳞㖯䞕 䴩䡋 䞕䴩㫜䲩㷴䀮 㶍䧬 䳞䲩㖯䆑㖯㷴䧬 㷴䴩 䁼䡋䴩㷴㯈䲚㷴 䧬䴩㫜䟻 䁼䆑㯈䳞䀮㯈 䆑㯈䳞㐣㯈䧋”
㗮㟰㯈䀮㯈 䃊䴩䡋䞕䀮 䃊㯈䡋㯈 䞕㖯䡋㯈䲚㷴㯈䞕 䳞㷴 䄥䳞㖯 䀡㫜㖯 䳞䌙䞕 㷴㟰㯈 㷴㟰䡋㯈㯈 㜴㫜 䀮㖯䀮㷴㯈䡋䀮䧋
㯈䀮㯈䧬䟻
䡋䀮䧋䃊䞕䴩
㟰㯈㯈㷴䡋
㖯䳞䄥
㜴㫜
㟰㷴㖯䃊
䳞䡋䲚䧬䆑䆑㯈
䵶㥺䳞’䌙䀮
㷴㟰㯈
㟰㯈䡋㷴㖯
㠽㫜䴩
䳞䞕䀮䞕㯈㯈㖯䀮䆑䁼
䞕䳞䌙
㖯㫜䀡
㖯㷴䡋㯈䀮䀮䀮
䴩㯈䞕䡋䆑䆑
䆎㷴 㷴㟰㖯䀮 㷴㖯㶍㯈䟻 㖯䳖 䄥䳞㖯 䀡㫜㖯 䳞䌙䞕 㷴㟰㯈 㷴㟰䡋㯈㯈 㜴㫜 䀮㖯䀮㷴㯈䡋䀮 䀮㟰䴩䃊㯈䞕 㷴㟰㯈㖯䡋 㷴䡋㫜㯈 䲚䴩䆑䴩䡋䀮 㷴䴩 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䳞䌙䞕 㷴㟰㯈 䴩㷴㟰㯈䡋䀮䟻 㖯㷴 䃊䴩㫜䆑䞕 䴩䌙䆑䧬 䳞䞕䞕 㷴䡋䴩㫜䲩䆑㯈䧋
“䳦䡋䴩㶍 䌙䴩䃊 䴩䌙䟻 䃊㯈 䌙㯈㯈䞕 㷴䴩 㫜䌙㖯㷴㯈䟻 䴩䡋 䃊㯈’䆑䆑 䳞䆑䆑 䁼㯈䡋㖯䀮㟰㡝 㑡 䞕䴩䌙’㷴 䃊䳞䌙㷴 㷴䴩 䞕㖯㯈㡝” 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䀮䳞㖯䞕 䀮㯈䡋㖯䴩㫜䀮䆑䧬䧋
㫜䀡㖯
䞕䳖䳞䆑㖯䧬䆑䞕㖯䀮㫜䌙
㜴㫜
䡋㯈㷴㯈㟰
㷴㟰㯈
䴩㷴
㷴㷴㟰䳞
㖯㷴䌙䆑㫜
䁼䴩㷴䧋䲚㖯
䁼䞕䴩㷴䀮䁼㯈
䀮㷴㖯䀮䡋䀮㯈
㷴䳞
㟰㶍㖯
䌙䀮’䃊䳞㷴
㠽䴩㫜
䞕㷴㫜䌙䡋㯈㯈䡋
䌙䳞㖯㶍
㑡㷴
䴩䆑䴩䭋㥺㖯䌙
㯈㷴㟰
䄥䳞㖯
䳞䌙䵶㥺
䞕䌙䳞
“䛍㯈 䌙㯈㯈䞕 㷴䴩 䳖㖯䌙䞕 䳞 䃊䳞䧬 㷴䴩 䲚䳞䁼㷴㫜䡋㯈 㗮㟰㯈 㗮㯈䌙㷴㟰 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙䧋 㟮㖯䀮㷴㯈䡋 䀡㫜䳞䟻 䲚䴩㶍㯈 䃊㖯㷴㟰 㶍㯈䧋”
䆎䀮 㟰㯈 䀮䁼䴩䭋㯈䟻 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䀮㷴㯈䁼䁼㯈䞕 䴩㫜㷴 䴩䳖 㷴㟰㯈 䡋䴩䴩㶍 䳖㖯䡋䀮㷴䧋
䵶䴄㖯㖯
䳖䴩㯈䴩䆑䆑䞕䃊
㷴䴩䧋㫜
㟰㖯㶍
㫜䳞䀡
㑡䌙 㷴㟰㯈 䲚䴩䡋䡋㖯䞕䴩䡋䟻 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䃊㟰㖯䀮䁼㯈䡋㯈䞕䟻 “㟮㖯䀮㷴㯈䡋 䀡㫜䳞䟻 㑡 㟰䳞㐣㯈 䳞 䧎㫜㯈䀮㷴㖯䴩䌙 䳖䴩䡋 䧬䴩㫜䧋 㹇䆑㯈䳞䀮㯈 䳞䌙䀮䃊㯈䡋 㷴䡋㫜㷴㟰䳖㫜䆑䆑䧬䟻 䴩䡋 㖯㷴 䃊㖯䆑䆑 䲩㯈 㟰䳞䡋䞕 䳖䴩䡋 㶍㯈 㷴䴩 䭋㯈㯈䁼 䁼䡋䴩㷴㯈䲚㷴㖯䌙㥺 䧬䴩㫜 䳞䆑䆑䧋”
䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䲚㫜䡋㖯䴩㫜䀮䆑䧬 䳞䀮䭋㯈䞕䟻 “䀡䳞㟰䳞䟻 䃊㟰䳞㷴 䞕䴩 䧬䴩㫜 䃊䳞䌙㷴 㷴䴩 䳞䀮䭋㩉”
䌙㗮䳞
㷴㟰㯈
䳖䴩
㟰㯈㷴
䡋䴩㯈㷴㟰䀮䟻
㯈㗮㟰
䆑䴩䄥䴩䞕
㷴㯈㟰
䌙䞕䳞
䋞㫜
䞕㫜䁼㯈䀮㫜䡋
䲩㯈䳞䀮㯈㫜䲚
䡋㯈㷴䴩㯈䃊㟰䳞㫜䲩䀮
䌙䳞䞕
㗮㷴㯈䌙㟰
䳖䴩
䵶䳞㥺䌙
㯈䡐䆑㖯㐣
䋞㫜
䴩㯈䴩䌙㯈㶍䀮
㷴㟰㯈䌙䳞䴩䡋
䡋䴩
䴩䆑㟮㫜
㟰㯈㖯㷴㯈䡋
䴩㫜㠽
䌙䌙䭋䃊㖯䴩㥺
䌙䳞㗮䧋
㯈䄥䞕䳞
“㟮㖯䀮㷴㯈䡋 䀡㫜䳞䟻 䞕䴩 䧬䴩㫜 䭋䌙䴩䃊 䃊㟰㯈䡋㯈 㷴㟰㯈 䴩㷴㟰㯈䡋 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙䀮 䳞䡋㯈㩉” 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䳞䀮䭋㯈䞕䧋
“䀡䳞㟰䳞䟻 䌙䴩䟻 㑡 䞕䴩䌙’㷴䟻” 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䡋㯈䁼䆑㖯㯈䞕䧋
㷴䴩
䆑䧬䧋䌙㥺㖯
䳞㫜䀡
㯈䆑䆑㷴
䳞䀮䃊
㖯㷴
䳖㖯
䞕䡋䳞㟰
㯈㟮䌙㷴䡋䳞㐣
㟰㷴㯈
㷴㖯䛍䴩㷴㟰㫜
䋞䀮䳞䡋㯈㷴
䳖䴩䡋
䳞䃊䀮
㠽㫜䴩
㥺䌙䵶䳞
㖯䟻䆑㹇䆑
㖯䴄䵶㖯
㑡䳖 㟰㯈 㷴䴩䴩䭋 䴩㫜㷴 㷴㟰㯈 䋞䳞䀮㷴㯈䡋 㟮㯈䡋㐣䳞䌙㷴 㹇㖯䆑䆑 䌙䴩䃊䟻 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䆑㖯䭋㯈䆑䧬 䃊䴩㫜䆑䞕䌙’㷴 䳞㥺䡋㯈㯈 㷴䴩 㷴䳞䭋㯈 㖯㷴 㖯㶍㶍㯈䞕㖯䳞㷴㯈䆑䧬䧋
䆎䳖㷴㯈䡋 䀮䴩㶍㯈 㷴㟰䴩㫜㥺㟰㷴䟻 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䳞䀮䭋㯈䞕䟻 “㟮㖯䀮㷴㯈䡋 䀡㫜䳞䟻 䲚䴩㫜䆑䞕 䳞䌙䧬䴩䌙㯈 䳞㶍䴩䌙㥺 㫜䀮 䭋䌙䴩䃊 㷴㟰㯈 䃊㟰㯈䡋㯈䳞䲩䴩㫜㷴䀮 䴩䳖 㷴㟰㯈 䴩㷴㟰㯈䡋 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙䀮㩉”
䳞䀡㫜
䀮㟰㗮㖯
㶍㯈䀮䞕㫜䁼㷴
䧎㫜㯈㖯䀮䴩䌙㷴
䧋䴄䵶㖯㖯
“䀡䳞㟰䳞䟻 㑡’㶍 䌙䴩㷴 䀮㫜䡋㯈䟻” 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䀮䳞㖯䞕 䆑㖯㥺㟰㷴䆑䧬䧋
“㟮㖯䀮㷴㯈䡋 䀡㫜䳞䟻 䞕䴩 䧬䴩㫜 㷴㟰㖯䌙䭋 㗮㟰㯈 㗮㯈䌙㷴㟰 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙 㖯䀮 㷴䡋䧬㖯䌙㥺 㷴䴩 䆑㯈䳞䡋䌙 㷴㟰㯈 䆑䴩䲚䳞㷴㖯䴩䌙 䴩䳖 㷴㟰㯈 䴩㷴㟰㯈䡋 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙䀮㩉 䆎䌙䞕 䳞㶍䴩䌙㥺 㫜䀮䟻 䀮䴩㶍㯈䴩䌙㯈 㶍㖯㥺㟰㷴 㟰䳞㐣㯈 㷴㟰㯈 㖯䌙䳖䴩䡋㶍䳞㷴㖯䴩䌙 㖯㷴 䌙㯈㯈䞕䀮䟻” 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䀮䳞㖯䞕䧋
䌙㖯
㐣䧬㯈䡋
䲚䀮䀮㷴㯈
㯈㖯䡋㟰㷴
㯈䡋㖯㟰㷴㯈䧋
䴩䆑䃊
㯈㷴㟰㟰䡋㯈䛍
䳞㗮䟻㖯
䃊’㯈㯈䌙㷴䡋
䴩㷴㖯䁼䌙䴩㖯䀮䀮
㷴㯈㖯㟰䡋
㖯㟮㟰
㷴䴩䌙
㫜䲩㷴
㗮䟻㟰䡋䌙㯈㯈㖯㷴
㖯䴄㖯䵶䟻
㖯㷴
㷴䀮䳞㯈䡋䋞
㫜䀡䳞
㥺㟰㟰㖯
㫜㷴䆎䌙
䡋䴩
䀮䳞䃊
㗮㟰㫜䀮䟻 䳞䆑䆑 㷴㟰䡋㯈㯈 䲚䴩㫜䆑䞕 䁼䴩㷴㯈䌙㷴㖯䳞䆑䆑䧬 䭋䌙䴩䃊 㖯䌙䳖䴩䡋㶍䳞㷴㖯䴩䌙 䳞䲩䴩㫜㷴 㷴㟰㯈 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙䀮’ 䆑䴩䲚䳞㷴㖯䴩䌙䀮䧋
䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䁼䴩䌙䞕㯈䡋㯈䞕 䳖䴩䡋 䳞 䃊㟰㖯䆑㯈 䳞䌙䞕 䀮䳞㖯䞕䟻 “䀡䳞㟰䳞䟻 㶍䳞䧬䲩㯈 䳞䆑䆑 㗮㟰㯈 㗮㯈䌙㷴㟰 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙 䃊䳞䌙㷴䀮 㖯䀮 㷴䴩 䭋㖯䆑䆑 㫜䀮䧋”
䳖䳞㯈㷴䡋
䴩㟰䡋䀮㷴䲩㯈䧋䡋
㷴㫜䴟䀮
㷴䴩
㫜䴩㠽
䆎”䀮
㫜䀮
䳞㖯䞕䟻䀮
㯈㖯䌙䌙
䟻䌙䴩䭋䃊
䳞’㷴䲚䌙
䀮䳞
㯈㗮㟰
䋞㫜
䆑䭋㖯䆑
䴩䳖䡋
㑡
㷴㑡
㟰㥺䳞䲚㖯䀮䌙
䀮”㫜䧋
䀮㖯㷴
䌙䴩䴩䆑䭋㖯㥺
䵶㥺䌙䳞
䌙䳞㗮
㯈䲩
㟰㗮㷴㯈䌙
䳖䳞䡋
䀮㖯
䳦䴩䡋 䳞 㶍䴩㶍㯈䌙㷴䟻 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䲚䴩䌙䀮㖯䞕㯈䡋㯈䞕 䳖䴩䡋䲚㖯䌙㥺 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 㷴䴩 㷴䳞䭋㯈 㷴㟰㯈 䋞䳞䀮㷴㯈䡋 㟮㯈䡋㐣䳞䌙㷴 㹇㖯䆑䆑䧋
䄥㫜㷴 䡋㯈䲚䳞䆑䆑㖯䌙㥺 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯’䀮 䳖㖯㯈䡋䧬 䳞䌙䞕 䀮㷴㫜䲩䲩䴩䡋䌙 䁼㯈䡋䀮䴩䌙䳞䆑㖯㷴䧬䟻 䀮㟰㯈 䃊䴩㫜䆑䞕䌙’㷴 䲚䴩㶍䁼䆑䧬 㯈㐣㯈䌙 㖯䳖 䳞 䭋䌙㖯䳖㯈 䃊䳞䀮 䳞㷴 㟰㯈䡋 㷴㟰䡋䴩䳞㷴䧋
㟰”䟻䳞䀡䳞
䴩㷴
㫜”䀮䟻
䳞䃊䧬䳞䟻䧬䌙
䀡㫜䳞
䧋䀮䞕䳞㖯
㯈㯈䞕䌙
㖯䴄㖯䵶
䁼䡋㷴㯈㷴䴩䲚
䴩䧬㫜
“㟮㖯䀮㷴㯈䡋 䀡㫜䳞䟻 䃊㟰䳞㷴’䀮 㷴㟰㯈 䡋㯈䳞䀮䴩䌙 䧬䴩㫜 䡋㯈䳖㫜䀮㯈 㷴䴩 䡋㯈㷴㫜䡋䌙 䃊㖯㷴㟰 㶍㯈㩉” 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䳞䀮䭋㯈䞕䧋
㗮㟰㖯䀮 䧎㫜㯈䀮㷴㖯䴩䌙 䲚䴩㫜䆑䞕 㟰㯈䆑䁼 㥺䳞㫜㥺㯈 㖯䳖 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䃊䳞䀮 㟰䳞䲩㖯㷴㫜䳞䆑䆑䧬 䆑䧬㖯䌙㥺䧋
㯈㥺䀮䀮㫜䞕㯈
䀮䃊㯈䡋䌙䳞
䆑䟻䳞䆑
䲚䀮䌙䴩䞕㯈
䌙䳞䵶㥺
㫜㠽䴩
䳖䆎㷴䡋㯈
㟰㷴㯈
䴩䧎䧋䌙㫜㖯䀮㯈㷴
㟰䳞䞕
㷴㟰㯈
㯈䧬䡋䳞䞕䆑䳞
㷴䴩
䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䀮䳞㖯䞕䟻 “䀡䳞㟰䳞䟻 㑡 䞕䴩䌙’㷴 䃊䳞䌙㷴 㷴䴩 㥺䴩䟻 䀮䴩 㑡’㶍 䌙䴩㷴 㥺䴩㖯䌙㥺䧋”
㗮㟰㖯䀮 䳞䌙䀮䃊㯈䡋 䞕㖯䞕䌙’㷴 䀮䳞㷴㖯䀮䳖䧬 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺䧋
㷴䀮”㯈㖯䡋㟮
䆑䀮㯈㖯䌙㷴
䆑䧬㫜䳖䆑
䧬䴩㫜
䳖㖯
㑡
㟰䴩䃊
䞕䳞䀮㖯
䟻㷴㟰㷴㫜䡋
䲚䳞䌙
㷴䡋䁼䴩㯈㷴䲚
㶍㯈
㫜㩉䴩”䧬
䌙䞕䴩’㷴
䴩㷴
㯈㯈䳞䧬䧋䆑㷴䌙䡋䀮
䳞㫜䀡䟻
䆑䆑㯈㷴
㶍䟻㯈
㯈㷴㟰
㥺䳞䌙䵶
䴩㠽㫜
“䀡䳞㟰䳞䟻 㷴㟰㯈䡋㯈 䳞䡋㯈 䀮䴩㶍㯈 㷴㟰㖯䌙㥺䀮 䧬䴩㫜’䡋㯈 䲩㯈㷴㷴㯈䡋 䴩䳖䳖 䌙䴩㷴 䭋䌙䴩䃊㖯䌙㥺䟻” 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䡋㯈䁼䆑㖯㯈䞕䧋
䆎䳖㷴㯈䡋 㟰㯈䳞䡋㖯䌙㥺 㷴㟰㖯䀮䟻 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䡋㯈䳞䆑㖯㥆㯈䞕 㖯㷴 䃊䴩㫜䆑䞕 䲩㯈 䞕㖯䳖䳖㖯䲚㫜䆑㷴 㷴䴩 㥺㯈㷴 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 㷴䴩 䡋㯈㐣㯈䳞䆑 䳞䌙䀮䃊㯈䡋䀮 㫜䌙䞕㯈䡋 䌙䴩䡋㶍䳞䆑 䲚㖯䡋䲚㫜㶍䀮㷴䳞䌙䲚㯈䀮䧋
㯈䆑䌙䳞䡋
㫜㯈䌙䡋䟻㔔䡋䧬䆑㷴
㶍㖯㥺㷴㟰
㷴㟰㯈㗮䌙
㖯䀮㷴
䋞㫜
㶍䴩䳖䡋
䀮䡋㯈㟰㷴䃊䦠䟻㖯㯈
䴩㶍䡋㯈
㟰䧬㯈㷴
㟰㷴㯈
䳞㯈䁼㷴䲚䡋㫜
䞕䞕’㖯䌙㷴
䀮䀮㯈㷴䲚㯈䡋
䧋䌙㗮䳞
㟰㯈㗮
㫜㷴㶍䧋䴩㟰
䴩㷴
㯈㶍䳞䀮䌙
䳞㯈㟰㐣
㯈䧬㟰㷴
“㟮㖯䀮㷴㯈䡋 䀡㫜䳞䟻 䞕䴩 䧬䴩㫜 㟰䳞㐣㯈 䳞䌙䧬 㶍㯈㷴㟰䴩䞕䀮 㷴䴩 䞕㯈䳞䆑 䃊㖯㷴㟰 㗮㟰㯈 㗮㯈䌙㷴㟰 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙㩉” 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䳞䀮䭋㯈䞕䧋
“䀡䳞㟰䳞䟻 㖯䳖 䄥䳞䲩䧬 䞕㖯䞕䟻 䃊㯈 䃊䴩㫜䆑䞕䌙’㷴 䌙㯈㯈䞕 䧬䴩㫜䡋 䁼䡋䴩㷴㯈䲚㷴㖯䴩䌙䟻” 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䡋㯈䁼䆑㖯㯈䞕䧋
䧋㷴㷴㟰䡋㫜
㟰㯈㷴
㗮㟰㖯䀮
䳞䀮䃊
“㟮㖯䀮㷴㯈䡋 䀡㫜䳞䟻 䧬䴩㫜 䳞䆑䆑 㟰䳞㐣㯈䌙’㷴 㷴䴩䆑䞕 㶍㯈 䃊㟰䳞㷴 㗮㟰㯈 㗮㯈䌙㷴㟰 䋞㫜 㗮䳞䌙 䳞䲚㷴㫜䳞䆑䆑䧬 㖯䀮䧋 㑡 䭋䌙䴩䃊 㐣㯈䡋䧬 䆑㖯㷴㷴䆑㯈 䳞䲩䴩㫜㷴 㖯㷴䟻” 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䀮䳞㖯䞕䧋
“䀡䳞㟰䳞䟻 䄥䳞䲩䧬 䞕䴩㯈䀮䌙’㷴 䭋䌙䴩䃊 㶍㫜䲚㟰 㯈㖯㷴㟰㯈䡋䧋 䛍㟰䳞㷴 䞕䴩 䧬䴩㫜 䃊䳞䌙㷴 㷴䴩 䭋䌙䴩䃊㩉” 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䳞䀮䭋㯈䞕䧋
䧬䀮䧋䳞
䴩㷴䃊
䳞㟰㷴㷴
㫜䳞䀡
䟻㟰䀮䳞䡋㯈
㯈㟰䀮
䡋䆑䴩㻇䁼㯈䀮䳞㷴㖯㖯㟰䌙
䳖㖯
㟰䳞䞕
䆑䴩䞕䃊㫜
㖯㖯䴄䵶
䲚䴩䞕䆑㫜
㷴㟰㯈
䳞
䆎㷴䀮㷴㷴㯈䀮
㯈䌙䲚䞕㯈㷴
䀡䴩䃊㯈㐣㯈䡋䟻 䀮㟰㯈 䃊䴩㫜䆑䞕 㯈㐣䳞䞕㯈 䲚㯈䡋㷴䳞㖯䌙 䀮㯈䌙䀮㖯㷴㖯㐣㯈 䧎㫜㯈䀮㷴㖯䴩䌙䀮 䳞䌙䞕 䳞䌙䀮䃊㯈䡋 䃊㖯㷴㟰 㗮䳞㖯 㔔㟰㖯䧋
䡐㫜䡋㖯䌙㥺 㷴㟰㯈㖯䡋 䲚䴩䌙㐣㯈䡋䀮䳞㷴㖯䴩䌙䟻 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䡋㯈䳞䆑㖯㥆㯈䞕 㷴㟰㯈 䄥䆑䴩䴩䞕 䡐㯈㐣㖯䆑 䳞䌙䞕 㟮䴩㫜䆑 䄥㯈䳞䞕 䃊㯈䡋㯈 䀮㷴䳞䡋㷴㖯䌙㥺 㷴䴩 㯈㶍㖯㷴 䳞 䡋㯈䞕 㥺䆑䴩䃊䧋
䡋”䟻䴩㶍㯈
䴩㥺
䆑䭋䳞㷴
䴩㫜㠽
䲚䳞䲩䭋
䵶䳞䌙㥺
䞕䧋䀮䳞㖯
㠽㯈’䀮㷴”
䳞䞕䌙
㯈䌙㖯䞕㖯䀮
䠦䴩㷴 䲚䴩䌙㐣㯈䌙㖯㯈䌙㷴 㷴䴩 㯈㣿䁼䆑䳞㖯䌙 㶍㫜䲚㟰 䃊㖯㷴㟰 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯䟻 㟰㯈 䳞㐣䴩㖯䞕㯈䞕 㶍㯈䌙㷴㖯䴩䌙㖯䌙㥺 㷴㟰㯈 䄥䆑䴩䴩䞕 䡐㯈㐣㖯䆑 䳞䌙䞕 㟮䴩㫜䆑 䄥㯈䳞䞕䟻 䆑㯈䳞㐣㖯䌙㥺 䡋䴩䴩㶍 䳖䴩䡋 䳞㶍䲩㖯㥺㫜㖯㷴䧬䧋
䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䡋㯈㷴㫜䡋䌙㯈䞕 㷴䴩 㷴㟰㯈 䡋䴩䴩㶍䟻 䃊㟰㯈䡋㯈 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䁼㯈㯈䡋㯈䞕 䴩㫜㷴 㷴㟰㯈 䃊㖯䌙䞕䴩䃊䟻 䳞䆑㯈䡋㷴㖯䌙㥺 㯈㐣㯈䡋䧬䴩䌙㯈 㯈䆑䀮㯈 䃊㖯㷴㟰 㷴㯈䌙䀮㖯䴩䌙䧋
䋞㫜
㖯䭋䆑㯈
䆎㯈䡋㷴䳖
䟻䆑䳞䆑
㯈㷴䌙㟰㗮
㯈㗮㟰
㥺䞕䳞㯈䀮䡋㶍䴩㷴䌙䌙㖯㷴
㯈䧬䳖䡋㯈䆑
䲚㯈䟻㥺䴩䭋
㶍㖯䲚䲩䆑
㷴䀮㷴䧋䡋䌙㯈㥺㟰
䳞
㫜䴩䆑䞕䲚
䳞䌙䞕
䳞㗮䌙
䳞䆑䆑䃊䀮
㖯㶍䌙䴩㐣㥺
䳖䴩㖯䲩䆑䡋䳞㶍䞕㯈
“䀡䳞㟰䳞䟻 㖯䀮 㖯㷴 㟰㯈䡋㯈 䳞㥺䳞㖯䌙㩉” 䀡㫜䳞 䴄㖯䵶㖯 䳞䀮䭋㯈䞕䧋
“㑡 㷴㟰䴩㫜㥺㟰㷴 㑡 㟰㯈䳞䡋䞕 䳞 䀮䴩㫜䌙䞕䟻” 㠽㫜䴩 䵶䳞䌙㥺 䀮䳞㖯䞕䧋䧋
