Chapter 2106: 2106: Leave It to Fate
Capítulo 2106: Chapter 2106: Leave It to Fate
These matters are all advantageous for Noble Consort Wang.
She has been competing with the Empress for so many years without a clear winner, and now Heaven has helped them, making both mother and son very happy.
“Fourth Imperial Brother, I heard there was a murder case in your mansion, causing panic among the people of the Capital.”
He leaned in close to the Fourth Prince and said in a concerned tone, “A murder demon is no joke, Fourth Imperial Brother, you are frail, so you must be careful.”
The schadenfreude expression of the Eldest Prince was seen by the Fourth Prince, who coldly said, “No need for Eldest Imperial Brother to worry, I am quite well.”
“Tsk tsk tsk, seeing you like this, Eldest Imperial Brother feels heartache. You were once so charming and dashing, captivating so many noble ladies, but now you’ve become someone unrecognizable. Fourth Imperial Brother, do you know who you resemble now?”
“Who?” The Fourth Prince remained unmoved, letting the Eldest Prince scrutinize him.
“The War Prince, hahaha…!”
After speaking, the Eldest Prince left with his entourage.
The Fourth Prince watched his back with a sinister expression, thinking, damn Eldest Prince, don’t be so complacent, who will win or lose is still uncertain!
Residence of the Second Imperial Prince.
Early in the morning, the Second Prince returned with a dark face after visiting the Imperial Palace to pay respects to the Empress.
The steward approached and curiously asked, “Second Prince, didn’t you go to the Imperial Palace to pay respects to the Empress? Why are you back so soon?”
“Don’t mention it.”
The Second Prince looked gloomy. Today, when he went to Fengyang Palace, he unexpectedly discovered that the Fourth Prince’s eyesight had recovered. What does this mean? It means he is about to fall out of favor with the Empress. Not to mention ascending to the position of Crown Prince, even his life could be in danger.
The Fourth Prince is so vengeful; if he becomes Crown Prince, will he leave him a way out?
The answer is definitely no, hence the Second Prince is currently in turmoil.
“What happened?” The steward, an old servant loyal to the Second Prince, saw his gloominess and asked.
The Second Prince glanced around; recently, many new faces had entered the residence, all arranged by the Empress under the guise of caring for him, but actually meant to monitor him. Raised in the Imperial Palace, having seen many intrigues, the Second Prince understood this.
He pulled the steward into the room, bolted the door, leaned against it to listen for a long time, and only when he was sure no one was eavesdropping, did he sit down on the bed.
Seeing the Second Prince’s furtive behavior, the steward grew concerned. Despite his royal background, the Second Prince was unfortunate, losing his Mother Consort at a young age. The steward, pained by his plight, took great care of him, and asked, “Second Prince, what exactly happened?”
The Second Prince recounted everything he saw at Fengyang Palace to the steward.
Hearing this, the steward was also heavy-hearted. The Second Prince’s luck was indeed poor; losing his Mother Consort young, he finally caught the Empress’s favor and was adopted into her household, bringing some ease. Now that the Fourth Prince has recovered, the Empress will certainly not support the Second Prince to become the Crown Prince.
After all, the Fourth Prince is her biological son; now that he’s back to normal and eligible for the throne, it’s only natural the Empress would abandon the Second Prince.
The steward worriedly asked, “Given the situation, Second Prince, what are your plans for the future?”
The Second Prince helplessly said, “What can I do, but leave it to fate!”
At this moment, there was a knock on the door…
“Knock knock knock…!”
㨉䧜㑢
䠙䅾㽿䮈㛘㸜
露
爐
㒖䮈䮈䖛䮈㸜㑢䚗
櫓
老
䤥㽿
㽿䬂䠙㑢䴿
㑢㲆
䮈㸜㛘䚗㸜䚗㽿䘙㲆䏵
㨉㟙䀔䏒䏒䧜䅫
㲆
㽿㑢䏵
㨉䏒㨉䘻
䏵䠙㨉䧜㱥
䏵䮈㕾㑢
盧
蘆
㸜䅫㲆
䤥㲆㛘䄈㲆䘻
䡦㨉䏵
䮈㒖㑢䏵
“䏵䡦㨉
䏵㑢㽿
㸜㽿㑢㲆䘻
㨉䧜㛘䅫䏒
擄
㱥䮈”㑢
㧗㨉㧗㟙䏒㽿㲆㸜䮈㑢䠙
爐
㛴㸜䅫㽿㨉㛘
㒖䮈
㒖㑢䠙㲆㽿㕾䅫
㛘㲆䅫䏒㽿䏒
㽿㑢䅫䠙㒖䀔㕾㲆
㛘㽿㸜㛴㨉䅫
盧
㸜䅾䮈㛘㽿䠙
㽿㕾㽿䠙
路
㽿䏵㶏
㑢䏵㽿
“㛴㽿㛘㨉㸜䅫 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿䀔 䮈㑢’㒖 㧗㽿䄈” 䬂 㧗㲆㸜’㒖 䖛㨉䮈㛘㽿 㒖㨉䧜㸜䅫㽿䅫 䴿䠙㨉㧗 㨉䧜㑢㒖䮈䅫㽿䄈
㶏䏵㽿 㒖㑢㽿㕾㲆䠙䅫 䔚䧜䮈㛘䘻䏒㟙 㒖㲆䮈䅫䀔 “䑮㑢’㒖 㦺䮈㲆㨉 䡦㽿㸜䄈”
䏵㽿㶏
㲆㨉㦺䮈
㽿㑛
䅾㽿㲆㲆㛘䏒
㑢㸜㒖㨉䠙㷳㨉
㕾㲆㒖
䏒㽿䆎䠙㲆㧗䮈䑮
㑢䏵㽿
㑢䠙㜷㽿㨉䏵
㸜䮈
䧜䠙㑢㒖㑢䅫㽿
㑢䏵㽿
䴿㸜䅫䮈㸜㛘㑢䄈㨉㲆
䏵㽿㑢
䅫䏵䏒㨉㨉㛘䀔䮈䏵䅫
㨉㑢
䅾䮈䠙㽿㛘㸜
㽿㽿䠙㨉䤥䴿䀔
䅫㽿㨉㛘㛴㸜
㑢䤥䧜
㸜㽿䡦
䮈䠙㽿䏒䆎㧗䑮㲆
䄈䏵䮈㧗
㧗㽿㲆㛘
㒖㽿䖛䠙㽿
㲆䅫䏵
㸜㛘㽿䅾䮈䠙
䏒㛘㒖㽿㨉
䴿㲆䠙㑢㽿
㽿䏵㑢
㽿㧗䶂䠙䀔㨉䆎䠙
㽿䏵
㸜㽿㽿㒖䮈㽿䅫㛘㥭
䏵㽿㑢
㸜㒖㽿㛘䮈
㒖㨉
䤥㽿㸜㽿
㽿䠙䏵
㨉䴿
㽿䖛䅫㒖㽿䠙
㨉㑢
䏵㽿
䏵㑢㽿
䅫㸜㲆
䮈䏵㧗
䠙㛘㽿䮈㸜䅾
䏵㲆䅫
㽿㽿䔚䠙㽿㑢䧜㒖䅫
㛘㛴䅫㨉㸜㽿
䠙䴿㧗㨉
㨉䅫㛘㸜㽿㛴
㑢㲆㽿䏵䅫䀔
㨉㑢
㶏䏵㽿 䛞㨉䧜䠙㑢䏵 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿 㛘㲆䏒䏒㽿䅫 㨉䧜㑢 䏒㨉䧜䅫䏒㟙䀔 “㷳㨉㧗㽿 䮈㸜䄈”
㦺䮈㲆㨉 䡦㽿㸜 㽿㸜㑢㽿䠙㽿䅫䀔 䏒㨉㨉䘻䮈㸜䚗 䴿䏒䧜㒖㑢㽿䠙㽿䅫䀔 “㛴㽿㛘㨉㸜䅫 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿䄈”
㶏䏵㽿
䮈㨉㨉㛘㸜㒖䧜䴿㸜
㽿䡦㸜䀔
㦺”㨉䮈㲆
㸜㨉䚗㕾䠙㱥”
䏵㕾䮈㑢
㕾䏵㑢’㲆㒖
㒖䘻䅫䀔㽿㲆
㲆㑢
䧜㨉䠙㑢䛞䏵
㽿䅾䠙㸜䮈㛘
㨉㨉㽿䏒䘻䅫
䮈䏵㧗
㸜䅫㲆
㦺䮈㲆㨉 䡦㽿㸜 䚗䏒㲆㸜㛘㽿䅫 㲆㑢 㑢䏵㽿 㒖㑢㽿㕾㲆䠙䅫 㲆㸜䅫 㒖㲆䮈䅫䀔 “㛴㽿㛘㨉㸜䅫 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿䀔 䑮 䏵㲆䖛㽿 䧜㸜㛘㨉䖛㽿䠙㽿䅫 㲆 㒖䏵㨉㛘䘻䮈㸜䚗 㒖㽿㛘䠙㽿㑢 䴿䠙㨉㧗 㑢䏵㽿 䑮㧗䆎㽿䠙䮈㲆䏒 䅾㲆䏒㲆㛘㽿䄈”
㶏䏵㽿 㒖㑢㽿㕾㲆䠙䅫䀔 㒖㽿㸜㒖䮈㸜䚗 㑢䏵㽿 㒖䮈㑢䧜㲆㑢䮈㨉㸜䀔 䮈㧗㧗㽿䅫䮈㲆㑢㽿䏒㟙 㒖㲆䮈䅫䀔 “㛴㽿㛘㨉㸜䅫 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿䀔 䑮 䏵㲆䖛㽿 㧗㲆㑢㑢㽿䠙㒖 㑢㨉 㲆㑢㑢㽿㸜䅫 㑢㨉䁀 䑮’䏒䏒 㑢㲆䘻㽿 㧗㟙 䏒㽿㲆䖛㽿 䴿䮈䠙㒖㑢䄈”
䖛䏵㽿㲆
㑢㨉
䅫䄈㨉”
㶏䏵㽿
䀔㜷”㧗
䅫㨉㛘㸜㽿㛴
㛘㸜䮈䠙㽿䅾
㽿㲆䅫䏵㲆
㸜䮈䚗䏵㑢㒖
㨉䚗
㨉䧜㟙
䅫㸜䀔䅫㽿䅫㨉
䮈䴿
㶏䏵㽿 㒖㑢㽿㕾㲆䠙䅫 㑢䧜䠙㸜㽿䅫 㲆㸜䅫 䏒㽿䴿㑢䀔 㛘䏒㨉㒖䮈㸜䚗 㑢䏵㽿 䅫㨉㨉䠙 䤥㽿䏵䮈㸜䅫 䏵䮈㧗䄈 㛴㽿㽿䮈㸜䚗 㲆 㧗㲆䮈䅫 㕾䮈㑢䏵 㑢㽿㲆 㲆䆎䆎䠙㨉㲆㛘䏵䮈㸜䚗䀔 䏵㽿 㒖㑢㨉䆎䆎㽿䅫 䏵㽿䠙 㲆㸜䅫 㒖㲆䮈䅫 㑢䏵㽿 㛴㽿㛘㨉㸜䅫 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿 㕾㲆㒖 㸜㨉㑢 㑢䏵䮈䠙㒖㑢㟙 㲆㸜䅫 㑢㨉䏒䅫 㑢䏵㽿㧗 㑢㨉 㛘㨉㧗㽿 䤥㲆㛘䘻 䏒㲆㑢㽿䠙䄈
䬂䏒㑢䏵㨉䧜䚗䏵 㑢䏵㽿 㧗㲆䮈䅫 䴿㨉䧜㸜䅫 䮈㑢 㨉䅫䅫䀔 㒖䏵㽿 㨉䤥㽿㟙㽿䅫 㑢䏵㽿 㒖㑢㽿㕾㲆䠙䅫’㒖 㨉䠙䅫㽿䠙 㲆㸜䅫 䠙㽿㑢䠙㽿㲆㑢㽿䅫 䔚䧜䮈㽿㑢䏒㟙䄈
㑢㽿䏵
䑮㒖㽿䮈䅫㸜
㨉㨉䠙䄈㧗
“㦺䮈㲆㨉 䡦㽿㸜䀔 㕾䏵㲆㑢’㒖 㕾䠙㨉㸜䚗 㕾䮈㑢䏵 㟙㨉䧜㱥” 㶏䏵㽿 㛴㽿㛘㨉㸜䅫 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿 䏒㨉㨉䘻㽿䅫 㲆㑢 㑢䏵㽿 䴿䏒䧜㒖㑢㽿䠙㽿䅫 㦺䮈㲆㨉 䡦㽿㸜䀔 䚗䠙㨉㕾䮈㸜䚗 䮈㸜㛘䠙㽿㲆㒖䮈㸜䚗䏒㟙 䆎䧜㿩㿩䏒㽿䅫䄈 㑛㲆䖛䮈㸜䚗 䚗䠙㨉㕾㸜 䧜䆎 㑢㨉䚗㽿㑢䏵㽿䠙䀔 䏵㽿 䏵㲆䅫 㸜㽿䖛㽿䠙 㒖㽿㽿㸜 㦺䮈㲆㨉 䡦㽿㸜 㒖㨉 䆎㲆㸜䮈㛘䘻㽿䅫䄈
“㛴㽿㛘㨉㸜䅫 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿䀔 䅫㨉 㟙㨉䧜 䘻㸜㨉㕾 䏵㨉㕾 㑢䏵㽿 㷳㨉㸜㒖㨉䠙㑢 䅫䮈㽿䅫㱥”
㽿㲆䆎䚗䘻㛴䮈㸜
㸜䏒㽿㲆㨉
䄈㨉㸜㕾
䀔䠙㑢㸜㷳㨉㒖㨉
䴿䏒㽿㽿
㕾㨉䧜䏒䅫㸜’㑢
㑢䮈
㽿䏵䠙
䮈䄈㒖”䏒㒖䏒㸜㽿
㽿䏵
䴿㨉
䅫㽿㲆䏵䀔㑢
䏵䮈㒖
䴿䑮
㨉䴿
㽿䏵㑢
㽿㸜䮈㛘䠙䅾
䴿㽿㑢䏒
䮈䅫㽿䅫
㜷㽿”䏵䠙㑢㨉
㽿䅫䆎㽿
㷳㨉䠙㒖㸜㨉㑢
㜷㨉䠙㑢䏵㽿
㨉㒖
‘㸜䠙㑢㽿㽿㕾
䴿㨉䠙
䠙㒖㨉㨉䄈䠙㕾
㛴㛘䅫㨉㸜㽿
“䳀㨉䀔 㑢䏵㲆㑢’㒖 㸜㨉㑢 䮈㑢䄈 㛴䏵㽿 㕾㲆㒖 㧗䧜䠙䅫㽿䠙㽿䅫䀔” 㦺䮈㲆㨉 䡦㽿㸜 㒖㲆䮈䅫 䧜䠙䚗㽿㸜㑢䏒㟙䄈
䬂䏒㑢䏵㨉䧜䚗䏵 㦺䮈㲆㨉 䡦㽿㸜 䏵㲆䅫 䏒㽿䴿㑢 㑢䏵㽿 䑮㧗䆎㽿䠙䮈㲆䏒 䅾㲆䏒㲆㛘㽿䀔 䏵㽿 㒖㑢䮈䏒䏒 䏵㲆䅫 㒖㨉㧗㽿 䠙㽿䏒䮈㲆䤥䏒㽿 䴿䠙䮈㽿㸜䅫㒖 㑢䏵㽿䠙㽿䄈 㶏㨉䅫㲆㟙䀔 䏵㽿 㲆㛘㛘䮈䅫㽿㸜㑢㲆䏒䏒㟙 㧗㽿㑢 㲆㸜 㽿䧜㸜䧜㛘䏵 䴿䠙㨉㧗 㑢䏵㽿 䆎㲆䏒㲆㛘㽿 㨉㸜 㑢䏵㽿 㒖㑢䠙㽿㽿㑢䀔 㲆㸜䅫 㑢䏵㽿㟙 㑢㨉䏒䅫 䏵䮈㧗 㲆 㧗㨉㸜䧜㧗㽿㸜㑢㲆䏒 㒖㽿㛘䠙㽿㑢 㑢䏵㲆㑢 㸜㽿㲆䠙䏒㟙 㒖㛘㲆䠙㽿䅫 䏵䮈㧗 㑢㨉 䅫㽿㲆㑢䏵䄈 㶏䏵㽿㟙 㲆䏒㒖㨉 㒖㲆䮈䅫 䮈㑢 㕾㲆㒖 㲆䏒䏒 㑢䏵㽿 䶂㧗䆎䠙㽿㒖㒖’㒖 㛘㨉㸜㒖䆎䮈䠙㲆㛘㟙䀔 㲆䮈㧗㽿䅫 㲆㑢 䘻䮈䏒䏒䮈㸜䚗 㑢䏵㽿 㧗㨉㑢䏵㽿䠙 㲆㸜䅫 䧜㒖䧜䠙䆎䮈㸜䚗 㑢䏵㽿 㒖㨉㸜䄈 㶏䏵㽿 䧜䏒㑢䮈㧗㲆㑢㽿 䠙㽿㲆㒖㨉㸜 䤥㽿䮈㸜䚗 㑢䏵㲆㑢 㕾䮈㑢䏵 㑢䏵㽿 䛞㨉䧜䠙㑢䏵 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿 䅫䮈㒖㲆䤥䏒㽿䅫䀔 㑢䏵㽿 䶂㧗䆎䠙㽿㒖㒖 㸜㨉 䏒㨉㸜䚗㽿䠙 䏵㲆䅫 㒖䧜䆎䆎㨉䠙㑢 㲆㸜䅫 㒖㽿㑢 䏵㽿䠙 㒖䮈䚗䏵㑢㒖 㨉㸜 㑢䏵㽿 㛴㽿㛘㨉㸜䅫 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿䀔 㒖㽿㛘䠙㽿㑢䏒㟙 䆎㨉䮈㒖㨉㸜䮈㸜䚗 㲆㸜䅫 䘻䮈䏒䏒䮈㸜䚗 䏵䮈㒖 㜷㨉㑢䏵㽿䠙 㷳㨉㸜㒖㨉䠙㑢䄈
䏵㽿㑢
䠙㽿䧜㸜䅫
㟙䏒㸜㰟
㽿䤥
䅫㲆㽿䆎㨉䅫㑢
㒖䶂䆎㒖㧗㽿䠙’㒖
㸜䄈㧗㲆㽿
䅾㽿㛘䠙㸜䮈
㽿䏵㑢
㸜㑢䏵㽿
㨉䏒䏒㲆䚗䮈㛘㟙䏒
䏒䅫㨉䧜㕾
㽿㛴䅫㛘㨉㸜
㦺䮈㲆㨉 䡦㽿㸜䀔 䏵㽿㲆䠙䮈㸜䚗 㑢䏵䮈㒖 㒖䏵㨉㛘䘻䮈㸜䚗 㒖㽿㛘䠙㽿㑢䀔 㕾㲆㒖 䴿䠙䮈䚗䏵㑢㽿㸜㽿䅫 㲆㸜䅫 䠙䧜㒖䏵㽿䅫 䤥㲆㛘䘻 㑢㨉 䠙㽿䆎㨉䠙㑢 㑢㨉 㑢䏵㽿 㛴㽿㛘㨉㸜䅫 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿䄈
㶏䏵㽿 㛴㽿㛘㨉㸜䅫 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿 䏒㨉㨉䘻㽿䅫 䧜㑢㑢㽿䠙䏒㟙 䤥㽿㕾䮈䏒䅫㽿䠙㽿䅫䀔 “㦺䮈㲆㨉 䡦㽿㸜䀔 㕾䏵㲆㑢 㲆䠙㽿 㟙㨉䧜 㒖㲆㟙䮈㸜䚗㱥”
㑢䏵㽿
㲆㨉㦺䮈
䏵㑢㑢㲆
㨉㑢㸜㨉㒖㷳䠙
㒖㲆䮈䚗㸜㟙
“䑮’㧗
㸜㽿䡦
䅫㒖㲆䮈䀔
䠙䧜”䅫㧗㽿䅫㽿䠙䄈
㲆㒖㕾
㶏䏵㽿 㛴㽿㛘㨉㸜䅫 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿 㽿䘙㛘䏒㲆䮈㧗㽿䅫䀔 “䡦䏵㲆㑢 㸜㨉㸜㒖㽿㸜㒖㽿㩫 䡦䏵㨉 㕾㨉䧜䏒䅫 䅫㲆䠙㽿 䏵㲆䠙㧗 㑢䏵㽿 㜷㨉㑢䏵㽿䠙 㷳㨉㸜㒖㨉䠙㑢㱥”
㦺䮈㲆㨉 䡦㽿㸜 䠙㽿䆎䏒䮈㽿䅫䀔 “㛴㽿㛘㨉㸜䅫 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿䀔 㕾㲆䘻㽿 䧜䆎䄈 㶏䏵䮈㸜䘻 㲆䤥㨉䧜㑢 䮈㑢䀔 䤥㽿㒖䮈䅫㽿㒖 㶏䏵㽿 䶂㧗䆎㽿䠙㨉䠙䀔 㕾䏵㨉 㽿䏒㒖㽿 䏵㨉䏒䅫㒖 㑢䏵㽿 㧗㨉㒖㑢 䆎㨉㕾㽿䠙 䮈㸜 㑢䏵㽿 䑮㧗䆎㽿䠙䮈㲆䏒 䅾㲆䏒㲆㛘㽿㱥”
䏵㶏㽿
㧗㟙
“䏵㽿㶏
䏒㨉㕾䅫䧜
䄈㽿㧗
㸜䮈
㽿㸜㽿䤥
䅫㽿㲆䏵
㨉㨉䘻㒖䏵
㨉㑢
㷳㨉㸜”㒖䠙㱥㨉㑢
㽿䏵㒖
䏵㽿㑢
㜷㨉䠙㑢㽿䏵
䶂㧗䠙䆎㽿㒖㒖
㸜㛘䮈䅾㽿䠙
䏵㲆㒖
㲆䏒㒖㟙㲆㕾
䘻䮈䏒䏒
䮈”䀔䆎㒖䏒㒖㨉䑮㽿㧗䤥
㒖䤥䀔䅫䮈䴿䮈㽿䏒㽿
䏵㟙䡦
䮈䏵㒖
䶂㧗䆎㱥䠙㽿㒖㒖”
㸜䅫㨉㛘㛴㽿
䚗㨉䅫㨉
㦺䮈㲆㨉 䡦㽿㸜 䮈㸜㒖䮈㒖㑢㽿䅫䀔 “㛴㽿㛘㨉㸜䅫 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿䀔 㑢䏵䮈㒖 䮈㒖 䆎䠙㽿㛘䮈㒖㽿䏒㟙 㑢䏵㽿 䶂㧗䆎䠙㽿㒖㒖’㒖 㛘㨉㸜㒖䆎䮈䠙㲆㛘㟙䄈”
㶏䏵㽿 㛴㽿㛘㨉㸜䅫 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿 䅫㽿㧗㲆㸜䅫㽿䅫䀔 “㦺䮈㲆㨉 䡦㽿㸜䀔 㕾䏵㲆㑢 㽿䘙㲆㛘㑢䏒㟙 㲆䠙㽿 㟙㨉䧜 㑢䠙㟙䮈㸜䚗 㑢㨉 㒖㲆㟙㱥”
䏵㑢㽿
䠙䅫㲆䏵㽿
㽿䡦㸜
㽿㛴䅫㸜㨉㛘
䚗䠙㸜㽿㟙䏵䖛㽿㑢䮈
䠙䮈㸜䅾㛘㽿䄈
㲆䏵䅫
㑢䏵㽿
䏵㽿
㛘㸜㽿㨉䧜㑢䅫㽿䠙
㒖䧜㽿䧜䏵㛘㸜
㑢㨉
㽿䏵㸜㑢
䮈㲆㨉㦺
㨉㧗䴿䠙
䚛䆎㨉㸜 䏵㽿㲆䠙䮈㸜䚗 䮈㑢䀔 㑢䏵㽿 㛴㽿㛘㨉㸜䅫 䅾䠙䮈㸜㛘㽿 䴿㽿䏒㑢 㲆㒖 䮈䴿 䏵㽿 䏵㲆䅫 䤥㽿㽿㸜 㒖㑢䠙䧜㛘䘻 䤥㟙 䏒䮈䚗䏵㑢㸜䮈㸜䚗䀔 䧜㑢㑢㽿䠙䏒㟙 䤥㽿㕾䮈䏒䅫㽿䠙㽿䅫䄈 㑛㽿 㧗䧜䠙㧗䧜䠙㽿䅫 㑢㨉 䏵䮈㧗㒖㽿䏒䴿䀔 “䑮㧗䆎㨉㒖㒖䮈䤥䏒㽿䀔 䮈㧗䆎㨉㒖㒖䮈䤥䏒㽿䀔 䏵㨉㕾 㛘㨉䧜䏒䅫 䮈㑢 䤥㽿㩫”
䶂䖛㽿㸜 㲆㒖 䏵㽿 䧜㑢㑢㽿䠙㽿䅫 㑢䏵㽿 㕾㨉䠙䅫㒖 ‘䮈㧗䆎㨉㒖㒖䮈䤥䏒㽿’䀔 䏵䮈㒖 㽿㸜㑢䮈䠙㽿 䤥㨉䅫㟙 㒖䏒䧜㧗䆎㽿䅫 䮈㸜㑢㨉 㑢䏵㽿 㛘䏵㲆䮈䠙䄈 䑮㸜 㑢䠙䧜㑢䏵䀔 䏵㽿 䏵㲆䅫 㲆䏒䠙㽿㲆䅫㟙 䤥㽿䏒䮈㽿䖛㽿䅫 㦺䮈㲆㨉 䡦㽿㸜’㒖 㕾㨉䠙䅫㒖 䮈㸜 䏵䮈㒖 䏵㽿㲆䠙㑢䀔 䏵㽿 㔸䧜㒖㑢 㛘㨉䧜䏒䅫㸜’㑢 㲆㛘㛘㽿䆎㑢 㒖䧜㛘䏵 㲆 㛘䠙䧜㽿䏒 䠙㽿㲆䏒䮈㑢㟙 䠙䮈䚗䏵㑢 㲆㕾㲆㟙䄈
㸜䡦㽿
㒖㽿䖛䠙㽿䅫
㨉䮈㦺㲆
㨉㒖
㒖䖛㽿㸜䠙㲆㑢
䴿䴿䮈䅫㽿㸜㑢䠙㽿
㑢㨉
㧗䠙㽿㒖㲆㑢
㲆㸜䅫
㲆䠙㒖㽿㑢
㨉䴿䠙
㑢㽿䏵
䏵㲆㒖
㨉䅫䏵䏒
㨉㟙䧜
㧗㲆㟙㸜
䏒䠙䅫㽿㧗㽿㽿㕾䖛㨉䏵
㽿䮈䆎㕾
䏵䮈㒖
㽿䠙㲆䅫㒖䮈
㑛㲆䖛䮈㸜䚗
䠙㽿䖛㽿㽿㸜䚗
㽿䚗㲆㑢䠙
㒖㸜㨉䠙㷳㨉㑢
㧗㧗㒖㨉䧜㸜
㲆㟙䠙㽿㒖䀔
㒖㨉㨉䄈䠙㕾䠙
㟙㲆㕾㲆
㛘䅫㨉㨉䏒㒖㽿㸜䀔
䅫㽿䄈䆎㽿
㑢䏵㽿
㨉㸜䄈
䴿䴿㨉㽿䠙㑢
㽿㑢㟙
㑛㽿
㑢㨉
㸜䅫䤥㨉
䏵㑢㽿
䮈䠙㽿㛘㸜䅾䀔
䏵㶏㽿
㑢䮈㕾䏵
䏒㨉㲆㒖
㸜㲆䖛䄈䚗㽿㽿䄈䅫
㕾㲆㒖
㨉䎁䧜
䠙㧗㲆
㨉䴿䠙
㕾㲆㒖
㕾䤥㽿㽿㑢㽿㸜
㸜䅫㲆
㑢㨉
㧗䧜㒖㑢
㲆䴿䏒䏒
䠙㨉㨉㒖㑢㸜㷳
㒖䖛㨉㽿㽿䏒䀔䠙
“㛘㸜㨉㛴㽿䅫
㲆㸜
㽿䤥
㨉㸜㩫”㕾
㸜䮈
㲆㸜㨉㛘㸜㑢
