Deep in the Living-Chapter 886 - 865: The New Pope

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Capítulo 886: Chapter 865: The New Pope

[Moon City, Auntie’s Hot Pot]

This is a newly opened hot pot restaurant with surprisingly good business. The owner used to live in Mingwang City and is a Huaxia person, offering authentic flavors.

Luo Di neither cleared the area nor arranged for a private room. He directly led six people and casually found a round table by the window in the hall.

Once the beef oil pot base is brought to the table, it boils with a fiery heat.

As the host, Luo Di specially prepared the hot pot dipping sauce for them and ordered a few bottles of hot soy milk.

He said nothing and directly started swishing spicy beef slices in the pot*.

The six people around the round table smelled the aroma and began to imitate him. Although they had never used chopsticks, their learning speed was incredibly fast.

(*During the city transfer, all food warehouses moved along. The related livestock industry began to develop within Moon City, and this kingdom managed by Luo Di has always maintained the environmental parameters of the Human World, basically able to completely replicate its lifestyle.)

Even during the meal, these six people still wore hoods and kept their faces wrapped in bandages, with no intention of unwrapping them.

Clasping the swished beef, wrapping it in dipping sauce.

They did not put it in their mouths but performed a reverse process from mouth to bowl.

The beef on the chopsticks suddenly disappeared, yet their mouths began to chew.

An unprecedented deliciousness blossomed on their taste buds, along with a spicy sensation shooting up to their foreheads, making all six people’s pupils enlarge.

It seemed they hadn’t tasted such a delicacy for a long time, or perhaps such a food culture didn’t exist in their place at all.

However,

Luo Di’s focus was quite different.

He saw their way of eating; even though grabbing, swishing, and dipping were normal actions, they could send meat chunks into their mouths through “Reversed Flow”.

This “partial reverse flow” was something he saw for the first time.

He’s always either completely reversed or engaged in normal activities.

Seeing this, Luo Di began to learn, removing swished beef from in front of his mouth… the entire process maintained blood flow reversal in the finger area.

An invisible reverse flow field solely affected the beef itself.

Buzz!

The beef disappeared, appearing in his mouth.

He nodded happily and started chewing.

Soon after, various snacks also arrived at the table, including crispy meat, lamb skewers, golden fried rice, and more.

These delicacies from human society quickly unlocked the mouths of this group, beginning active communication with Luo Di.

An hour later.

The interior of the hot pot restaurant had already changed.

A six-armed follower was lying on the ceiling, performing a reverse sucking of duck intestines, while the personnel below were applauding and cheering.

Luo Di had already sat together with the leader of these people, drinking beer and chatting about matters involving their sect and the reason for their appearance here.

The leader was named – [Lai], written as L in reverse.

He was the leader of the Reversal Valve Army, the Guard Army of the Church.

The so-called Reversal Valve Army was not a large-scale army; in fact, they numbered only six people. Even for the entire Reversed Church, the total number was not more than a hundred, with very few members.

After all, reversing was fundamentally against things, requiring individuals to break established cognition and alter from the root, from the self level.

Habits cultivated in the past, or even established systems, needed to be overturned.

Even those with outstanding talent who can barely understand the meaning of reverse still find it difficult to accept, unwilling to let go of everything learned in the past and start anew from scratch.

Emperor Mura’s name resounded in multiple worlds for a long time, with many people flocking to learn and attempting to join the sect.

But those who truly learned and were granted the Mark were very few.

Mura himself also looked down upon those conceited fellows; only those who genuinely loved “Reversed” and had talent would be recruited.

Therefore,

As long as one could get in and understand the fundamentals of reverse flow.

The believers would inevitably worship Emperor Mura, the one who originated “Reversed”, as the supreme authority, unquestioned.

Thus,

Even though Luo Di suddenly appeared, unregistered by the Church, unseen by everyone.

As long as the pope’s mark appears on him, they would acknowledge.

Of course… the appearance of this mark implied the complete death of Emperor Mura.

As members of the Guard Army, upon knowing that Emperor Mura only escaped with a wisp of divine sense from the central prison, they began taking action.

Though they successfully found the outer cosmos by tracing the range of divine sense disappearance, they soon fell into confusion.

Visiting over a hundred life planets consecutively, they did not find any information about Emperor Mura.

During this period, they also integrated the life from those planets into the church, strictly selecting to increase the number of believers as much as possible, sending out more members to search.

No one expected that now they would directly encounter Luo Di, the inheritor of the Pope, on a lively, fast-moving planet led by a middle-level god.

They had too many questions.

They needed to know how Mura died.

Given that matters had reached this point, Luo Di did not hide anything.

He exhaled fog from his mouth, completely enveloping their dining area, isolating it from the outside world. Those noisy members also quieted down.

Luo Di slowly narrated regarding the prison director’s arm, dungeon, selection, shop owner, and related matters.

Among them,

He did not embellish himself in any way,

He even directly stated that he made a deal with the shop owner to go to the dungeon to eliminate the source of the green light.

From beginning to end, his purpose was to wipe out Emperor Mura’s divine sense.

Even during site learning of reverse flow, it was for this matter.

At this moment,

Lai suddenly raised his hand to interrupt Luo Di’s narration and asked a question: “Are you saying you have not reached the pseudo-god stage yet you directly opposed Mura’s divine sense avatar?

Under such pressure, you achieved ‘entry-level reverse flow’ in a matter of seconds?”

Luo Di nodded, “It should be said, Mura could have directly killed me, yet upon seeing my reverse flow, he transformed the battle into a spar, subtly guiding my movements.”

Upon saying this,

Including Lai, these specially selected Reversal Valve Army members realized why Luo Di was considered a successor.

It wasn’t Mura’s forced choice for legacy before dying but due to Luo Di’s remarkable talent in the aspect of reverse flow.

Since the founding of the Reversed Church,

No one had ever been heard to understand the meaning of reverse flow in an instant and overturn past behavior habits, executing correct reversed actions.

Even if it is very likely related to Luo Di’s dire situation and Mura’s direct influence, it’s indeed exaggerated.

All six of them spent at least ten years abandoning fundamentals and retraining for reverse flow from zero.

Lai changed the topic, “Does that mean… ultimately Mura was slain by the comic shop owner.”

“Yes…”

Lai’s eyes became determined, “Thank you for your clarification. We understand! Yet with our strength alone, revenge for the lord is unfeasible within a millennium… but you hold the opportunity.

Killing Mura is akin to antagonizing the Church.

You, as the new Pope, should prioritize this matter.”

Upon hearing this, Luo Di suddenly changed his expression, “What did you call me?”

“Pope.”

“Since I am the Pope, all rules and arrangements of the Church will naturally be decided by me! Regarding Mura’s demise, I will handle it properly.

If you dare speak to me in such an authoritative tone again, your position will need to be removed.”

Lai paused, then bowed his head, “All is at the command of the Pope.”

Unexpectedly, Luo Di immediately changed back to a smiling face, raising his glass for a toast, “Is the Church headquarters far from here?”

“Not far, our ship is equipped with subspace navigation technology, which takes only a few days to return.”

“Tonight, stay here, and depart directly tomorrow morning…I need to rapidly reach a level capable of touching [Central Prison], which naturally resolves Mura’s death matters by then.”

Lai quickly replied: “With the Pope’s potential, you’ll surely reach that level within a century.”

“A century is too long…within ten years, or less.

In any case, we’ll discuss upon returning to the Church. Speaking of which, Mura must have left related reverse flow teaching books in the Church, right?”

“Indeed, upon our return, a priest will provide a detailed introduction.

You’ll enjoy all the Church resources, and we of the Reversal Valve Army will obey your orders.”

Luo Di’s gaze swept through the six present, “Obey me?”

“Yes, if the Pope has any enemies, or a certain world ever offended you, we’ll manage it swiftly.”

“That won’t be necessary~ eventually you’ll remain within the Church, spar with me, engage in direct combat.”

Lai raised his gaze again, looking at the young Pope before him, “Your divine status has just coagulated, hasn’t it?”

“What? You look down on me?”

“We’ll do our utmost…”

䅐䉷㙚

㩧䔦㙚

䕫㩧㙚㛝㙚䉹䌠䉹㮯䕫㿡

㿡㛝䯮䑏䫬㙚㩧

䉷䔦㙚

露䵞䔦㩧 㛝䯮㦮 㛸䉹㙚䔦㩧䕫㩧䫬 䅐㩧䉷䅐㳛㩧 䄍㮯㩧㳛㙚 䯮㮯 㛝㿡㔩㔩㩧㛝㛝䯮䉷㮯 㙚䉷 㥚䯮䫬 䴃䉹䕫㩧㭗㩧㳛㳛 㙚䉷 㙚䔦㩧 㞪䉷䅐㩧䌠

䓯㿡䉷 㨇䯮 䉷䕫䯮㛸䯮㮯䉹㳛㳛䁟 䯮㮯㙚㩧㮯䫬㩧䫬 㙚䉷 㙚䉹䄍㩧 㙚䔦㩧䛒 㙚䉷 䴃䯮㮯䫬 䉹 䔦䉷㙚㩧㳛㴴

䔦䵞䁟㩧

㿡㥚㙚

䉹䔦㙚㙚

䉹㮯䫬

㩧㙚䔦

䁟㙚䅐䯮䫬㥚㳛䉹䯮䉹㙚䉹

㙚㭗䫬㩧㮯䉹

䉹㮯䫬

䁟㙚㩧䌠

䯮䁟㔩㙚

㩧䉷㩧䫬䫬㩧㳛䅐㦘

㛝㭗䉹

㩧㳛䅐㩧䉷䕫㦮

㳛㩧㩧㛝䅐

㿡䔦㙚㛝

䅐㩧㞪䉷

㩧䔦㙚

䯮䔦㩧䕫㙚

䫬䅐䉹㩧㙚䕫

䯮㙚

㙚䉷

䯮㛝䯮㮯䫬㙚㛝㩧

㛝䕫㮯㛸㴴㙚䉷

䓯䯮䉹

䉹㮯㭗㙚㛝’

䯮㩧㙚䛒

䴃䉷䕫

䁟㥚

䉹䌠㭗䁟㛝

䵞䔦㩧 㛝㩧䉹䕫㔩䔦 䴃䉷䕫 䓯䉷䕫䫬 䎮㿡䕫䉹 㔩䉹䛒㩧 㙚䉷 䉹㮯 㩧㮯䫬䌠

䵞䔦㩧䁟 㭗㩧䕫㩧㮯’㙚 㙚䉷䉷 㿡䅐㛝㩧㙚䌍 㭗䔦㩧㮯 㔝䛒䅐㩧䕫䉷䕫 䎮㿡䕫䉹 㭗䉹㛝 㔩䉹䅐㙚㿡䕫㩧䫬 䉹㮯䫬 㙚䉹䄍㩧㮯 㙚䉷 㙚䔦㩧 㥑㩧㮯㙚䕫䉹㳛 㞪䕫䯮㛝䉷㮯㴴 㙚䔦㩧䁟 䔦䉹䫬 䉹㳛䕫㩧䉹䫬䁟 㥚㩧㩧㮯 䅐䕫㩧䅐䉹䕫㩧䫬 䛒㩧㮯㙚䉹㳛㳛䁟 䴃䉷䕫 㙚䔦䯮㛝 䉷㿡㙚㔩䉷䛒㩧㴴 䕫㩧䉹䫬䁟 䴃䉷䕫 䯮㮯㙚㩧䕫㮯䉹㳛 㛝㩧㳛㩧㔩㙚䯮䉷㮯䌠

㙚䉹

䉹㭗㛝

㮯㮯”㩧䯮”㛸䫬

䉹㮯

㬋䔦㿡㔩

䉹㳛㙚㩧㛝

䉷䉷䫬㴴㛸

㙚䔦㩧䁟 䔦䉹䫬 㔩䉷㮯䴃䯮䕫䛒㩧䫬 㙚䔦䉹㙚 㙚䔦㩧 㮯㩧㭗 㞪䉷䅐㩧 䯮㮯䫬㩧㩧䫬 䔦䉹䫬 “䅐䉷㙚㩧㮯㙚䯮䉹㳛” 㭗䉷䕫㙚䔦䁟 䉷䴃 䯮㮯䔦㩧䕫䯮㙚䉹㮯㔩㩧䌠

㔝䉹㔩䔦 䉷䴃 㙚䔦㩧䛒 䴃㩧㳛㙚 㳛䯮䄍㩧 㙚䔦㩧䁟 䔦䉹䫬 㿡㮯㳛䉷䉹䫬㩧䫬 䉹 䔦㩧䉹㦘䁟 㥚㿡䕫䫬㩧㮯㴴 䉹㮯䫬 㙚䔦㩧䁟 㔩䉷㿡㳛䫬 䴃䯮㮯䉹㳛㳛䁟 㥚䕫㩧䉹㙚䔦㩧 䉹 㛝䯮㛸䔦 䉷䴃 䕫㩧㳛䯮㩧䴃 㙚䔦䕫䉷㿡㛸䔦 㙚䔦㩧 㥚䉹㮯䫬䉹㛸㩧㛝䌠

㩧㮯㭗

䁟䯮㴴㔩㙚

㔩䫬㿡㩧㳛㛝䯮䉷䯮

䉷䅐㙚

㩧䔦㙚

䉷㮯

䔦䵞㩧䯮䕫

㔩䕫㿡㳛㿡㳛㙚䉹

䴃䉷

䔦㙚䉷

㙚䉷

䯮㩧䫬㮯䔦㥚

䔦㙚㩧䕫䯮

㩧㙚㳛䁟䅐䛒䉷㔩㳛㩧

㙚䔦㩧

䉹㮯䫬

㙚㛝䔦䯮

㩧䉷䌠䅐㞪

㙚㛝䔦䉷㿡㙚㛸䔦

䫬㩧㙚䅐䔦

䉷䕫䛒㩧

㩧㿡䯮㮯㿡㯖

㳛䁟㭗㳛㛝䉷

㙚㮯䫬㩧䉹㭗

㩧㿡䅐㯖䫬䯮

㛝㩧㩧

䵞䁟䔦㩧

㩧䯮㙚䌠㛝㩧䕫㮯㙚

㙚㛝䔦䯮

䉷䴃㛝㔩䫬㩧㿡

䀀㛝 㙚䔦㩧䁟 㭗䉹㳛䄍㩧䫬㴴

䉹 㛝㙚䕫䉷㮯㛸 䴃䕫䉹㛸䕫䉹㮯㔩㩧 㭗䉹䴃㙚㩧䫬 㙚䔦䕫䉷㿡㛸䔦 㙚䔦㩧 䉹䯮䕫㴴

㿡㥚㥚㥚㿡䔦

䁟㥚

㮯䉹䫬䯮䉷㩧㔩䉹㔩䅐䛒

㳛㙚㔩䉷㙚㛝䴃㴴㿡㮯䯮㿡䉹

㮯䉹䫬

䯮䯮㩧䫬㦘㮯

䓯䉹䯮 㙚㿡䕫㮯㩧䫬 䔦䯮㛝 䔦㩧䉹䫬 㙚䉷 㳛䉷䉷䄍㴴 䉹㮯䫬 㛝䉹㭗 㙚䔦䕫㩧㩧 䫬䯮䴃䴃㩧䕫㩧㮯㙚 㨇㩧䛒䉷㮯㛝㴴 㩧䉹㔩䔦 㭗䯮㙚䔦 㿡㮯䯮㯖㿡㩧 䫬䯮㦘䯮㮯㩧 䉹㿡䕫䉹㛝 䫬㩧㛝䅐䯮㙚㩧 㥚㩧䯮㮯㛸 䉷䴃 䓯䉷㭗㩧䕫 㨇䯮㦘䯮㮯㩧 㜀䉹㮯䄍䌠

䑏䴃 㔩䉷㿡䕫㛝㩧㴴 㙚䔦㩧 䛒䉷㛝㙚 䯮䛒䅐䉷䕫㙚䉹㮯㙚 㙚䔦䯮㮯㛸 㭗䉹㛝 㙚䔦㩧 㩧㮯㙚䯮㔩䯮㮯㛸 㛝㔩㩧㮯㙚 䉷䴃 㥚䉹䕫㥚㩧㔩㿡㩧䌠

㙚㩧䁟䔦

䵞䔦㩧

䉷㩧㔩䛒

㳛䫬㔩䉷㿡

㦘䕫䉷㩧

䛒䉹㴴䕫

㛝㔩䉹䯮䔦䌠䕫

㩧㭗䴃

㙚䉷㙚㛝㿡

䫬䉹㮯

䔦䯮㛝

㨇㦘䫬䯮䉹

䫬㩧䯮㛝䕫䉹

䉹䫬䫬

㛸㮯䯮㙚䉹㔩䯮䫬㮯䯮

䀀㙚 䓯䉹䯮’㛝 㛝㿡㛸㛸㩧㛝㙚䯮䉷㮯㴴 㙚䔦㩧 㛝䯮㦮 䅐㩧䉷䅐㳛㩧 㛝䉹㙚 䉷㦘㩧䕫䌠

㬋㩧㦘㩧䕫䉹㳛 䔦䉷㿡䕫㛝 䅐䉹㛝㛝㩧䫬㴴 䉹㮯䫬 㙚䔦㩧 㳛䉹㙚㩧㫕㮯䯮㛸䔦㙚 㛝㮯䉹㔩䄍 㩧㮯䫬㩧䫬䌠

䔦㩧㙚

㳛㮯㛸䉹䉷

䉹䯮㨇㦘䫬

䕫䉹䉹㩧䁟㳛䫬

䫬䕫䅐䉷䅐㛝㩧䉷

㙚䔦㩧

㮯䉹䫬

䉷㮯㙚㩧㙚㛸

㳛㩧䫬㛝䫬㮯䁟㿡

㴴㩧㮯㩧䫬䫬

㳛㔝䯮㦘

㩧䴃㩧䕫㥚䉷

㛸㿡䯮㮯㙚㛝㛝㛸䉷䳱㩧

㭗䔦㙚䯮

䕫㛸䉷㿡䅐

䉷㮯䕫㟵㦘䕫㩧䉷㴴

㛝㙚䔦䯮

䯮㦘䫬㨇䉹

䉹㞪䁟㳛

㭗㩧㴴㳛㳛

䯮䕫㩧䔦㮯㛸㙚䉹㛸

㛝䀀

䔦䉹䫬

“㭰䉷㿡 䔦䉹㦘㩧㮯’㙚 䴃䉷㿡㮯䫬 䉹 䅐㳛䉹㔩㩧 㙚䉷 㛝㙚䉹䁟 㙚䉷㮯䯮㛸䔦㙚㴴 䔦䉹㦘㩧 䁟䉷㿡䣫 䢠䔦䁟 㮯䉷㙚 㔩䉷䛒㩧 㭗䯮㙚䔦 㿡㛝 㙚䉷 䉹 䅐㳛䉹㔩㩧䌠䌠䌠 䵞䔦㩧䕫㩧’㛝 㛝䉷䛒㩧㙚䔦䯮㮯㛸 㛸䕫㩧䉹㙚 㙚䔦㩧䕫㩧䠞”

“䢠䔦䉹㙚’㛝 㛝䉷 㛸䕫㩧䉹㙚䣫”

㛝㩧㩧

䉷’䕫㩧㿡䁟

䕫㩧䔦”㙚㩧䌠

㔩䉷㮯㩧

㳛㳛’㭰䉷㿡”

䗶䉹㦘䯮㮯㛸 䉹㳛䕫㩧䉹䫬䁟 䴃䉹䛒䯮㳛䯮䉹䕫䯮䴿㩧䫬 㙚䔦㩧䛒㛝㩧㳛㦘㩧㛝㴴 䉹㮯䫬 㔩䉷㮯㛝䯮䫬㩧䕫䯮㮯㛸 㙚䔦䯮㛝 㭗䉹㛝 㙚䔦㩧 㞪䉷䅐㩧’㛝 㙚㩧䕫䕫䯮㙚䉷䕫䁟㴴 㙚䔦㩧䁟 䫬㩧㔩䯮䫬㩧䫬 㙚䉷 䴃䉷㳛㳛䉷㭗 䉹㳛䉷㮯㛸 䉹㮯䫬 㭗㩧䕫㩧 㛝䉷䉷㮯 㳛㩧䫬 㙚䉷 䉹 㛝䛒䉹㳛㳛 䉹䕫㩧䉹 䴃䯮㳛㳛㩧䫬 㭗䯮㙚䔦 㙚䔦㩧 㛝䉷㿡㮯䫬 䉷䴃 䴃䯮㮯㛸㩧䕫㛝 㙚䉹䅐䅐䯮㮯㛸䌠

㨇䉹㦘䯮䫬 䉹䅐䅐䕫䉷䉹㔩䔦㩧䫬 㭗䯮㙚䔦 䔦䯮㛝 㥚㩧㳛㳛䁟㴴 “㛾䕫䉷䛒 䁟䉷㿡䕫 㯖㿡䯮㔩䄍 䛒䉹㛝㙚㩧䕫䁟 䉷䴃 㙚䔦㩧 㨇㩧䛒䉷㮯 䓯䉹㮯㛸㿡䉹㛸㩧㴴 䭾 㔩䉹㮯 㙚㩧㳛㳛 䁟䉷㿡’䕫㩧 㦘㩧䕫䁟 䉹䫬㩧䅐㙚 䉹㙚 㳛㩧䉹䕫㮯䯮㮯㛸䌠 㛾䯮㮯䫬 䉹 㛝㩧䉹㙚䌍 䁟䉷㿡 㛝䔦䉷㿡㳛䫬 㥚㩧 䉹㥚㳛㩧 㙚䉷 䅐䯮㔩䄍 㿡䅐 㙚䔦㩧㛝㩧 㙚䔦䯮㮯㛸㛝 㯖㿡䯮㔩䄍㳛䁟 㭗䯮㙚䔦 䉹 㥚䯮㙚 䉷䴃 㳛㩧䉹䕫㮯䯮㮯㛸䌠”

㴴䔦䵞㿡㛝

㙚䔦㩧 㛝䯮㦮 䉷䴃 㙚䔦㩧䛒 㙚䉷䉷䄍 㛝㩧䉹㙚㛝 䉹㮯䫬 㭗㩧䕫㩧 㛸䕫䉹䫬㿡䉹㳛㳛䁟 䫬䕫䉹㭗㮯 㙚䉷 㙚䔦㩧 㛝㔩䕫㩧㩧㮯’㛝 䯮䛒䉹㛸㩧㛝䌠䌠䌠

䌠䌠䌠

㦮㙚㩧㮯

䵞㩧䔦

㮯䌠㮯㛸䉷䛒䕫䯮

䗶㿡䉹 㭰㿡䉹㮯 䔦䉹䫬 䉹㳛䕫㩧䉹䫬䁟 䅐䉹㔩䄍㩧䫬 䉹㳛㳛 䔦㩧䕫 㳛㿡㛸㛸䉹㛸㩧㴴 䕫㩧䉹䫬䁟 㙚䉷 㩧䛒㥚䉹䕫䄍 䉷㮯 䉹 㮯㩧㭗 㳛䯮䴃㩧 㭗䯮㙚䔦 䓯㿡䉷 㨇䯮 䉹㙚 㙚䔦㩧 䛒䁟㛝㙚㩧䕫䯮䉷㿡㛝 㜀㩧㦘㩧䕫㛝㩧䫬 㥑䔦㿡䕫㔩䔦䌠

䉟㿡㛝㙚 䉹㛝 㛝䔦㩧 䴃䯮㮯䯮㛝䔦㩧䫬 㔩䉷䉷䄍䯮㮯㛸 㩧㛸㛸㛝 䉹㮯䫬 㮯䉷䉷䫬㳛㩧㛝㴴 䯮㮯㙚㩧㮯䫬䯮㮯㛸 㙚䉷 㔩䉹㳛㳛 䓯㿡䉷 㨇䯮 㿡䅐㴴 㛝䔦㩧 䴃䉷㿡㮯䫬 㙚䔦㩧 㥚㩧䫬䕫䉷䉷䛒 㿡㮯㩧㦮䅐㩧㔩㙚㩧䫬㳛䁟 䴃䯮㳛㳛㩧䫬 㭗䯮㙚䔦 㭗䔦䯮㙚㩧 㔩䉹㮯䫬㳛㩧㛝䌠

㙚㥚㿡

㳛㮯㴴㙚䭾䯮䉹㳛䁟䯮

㮯䫬䉹

㦘㩧㴴㙚㮯㩧

䫬㳛㩧㮯㛝㿡䁟䫬

䴃㩧㳛㙚

䕫䔦㩧䫬䉹

㛝㿡䉷䫬㮯㛝

䕫䌠䉹㩧㛝

㛝䅐䯮㮯㩧

䯮㙚

㩧䔦䕫

㙚䉷䔦㛸䔦㿡㙚

䔦㛝㩧

䉷㛝䛒㩧

㛝㩧㩧㛝㮯

㞪㲉

㿡㭰㮯䉹

䉷䴃

㮯䕫㛝䫬䁟㩧㛝

䯮㮯

䉹㩧䯮䅐㛝㳛㔩

䗶䉹㿡

䉹㭗㛝

䵞䔦䯮㛝 㛝䉷㿡㮯䫬 㛝㩧㩧䛒㩧䫬 㙚䉷 䫬䕫䉷㭗㮯 䉷㿡㙚 䉹㳛㳛 䉹䛒㥚䯮㩧㮯㙚 㮯䉷䯮㛝㩧䌠

䭾㮯 䉹 㥚㳛䯮㮯䄍㴴

㩧㮯㩧㛝㔩㩧䕫䅐

䉹㛝㙚

䓯㿡䉷

䉷㙚䫬䉷㛝

䉹㙚

㛸㮯㔩䯮䕫䉷㛝㦘㩧㮯

㔩䫬䕫䔦䕫㩧䉹

㨇䯮

䉹㔩䄍㳛㥚

㙚䔦㩧

䌠㩧㥚䫬

㙚䯮䌠

㙚䔦㩧

㴴㩧㩧㛸䫬

䁟㥚

㭗䯮㙚䔦

㮯䛒㳛䁟㛝㩧䯮㩧㛸

“䢠䔦䉹㙚䠞䣫”

䓯㿡䉷 㨇䯮 㛝㿡䫬䫬㩧㮯㳛䁟 㩧㦮㔩㳛䉹䯮䛒㩧䫬 䯮㮯 㛝䔦䉷㔩䄍㴴 䯮㮯䉹䫬㦘㩧䕫㙚㩧㮯㙚㳛䁟 䕫䉹䯮㛝䯮㮯㛸 䔦䯮㛝 㦘䉷䯮㔩㩧㴴 “㭰䉷㿡’㦘㩧 䫬㩧㔩䯮䫬㩧䫬 㙚䉷 䛒㩧䕫㛸㩧 䗶㩧㳛㳛䣫 䭾㛝 㙚䔦䯮㛝 䕫㩧䉹㳛㳛䁟 䉷䄍䉹䁟䌠䌠䌠 䵞䔦㩧 䕫㩧䉹㛝䉷㮯 䭾 㭗䉹㮯㙚㩧䫬 㙚䉷 㳛㩧䉹㦘㩧 㭗䉹㛝 㙚䉷 䅐䕫㩧㦘㩧㮯㙚 䛒䁟 䅐䕫㩧㛝㩧㮯㔩㩧 䴃䕫䉷䛒 㩧㦮䅐䉷㛝䯮㮯㛸 㿡㛝 㙚䉷 㨇㩧䉹㙚䔦 㜀䉷㭗 䭾㮯䛒䉹㙚㩧㛝䌠

㙚㔩䯮㿡㩧䉷㮯㮯

㮯㔩䉹

㩧㦘㩧䉹㳛

㮯㩧㦘㩧

䴃䭾

䯮䌠䫬䫬”

䉹㛝

䕫㿡㩧䵞

䴃䯮

䉷㔩㮯㩧

㙚䯮

㩧䗶㳛㳛

㙚㴴㛸㔩䔦㿡䉹

䉷㩧㴴㳛䉹㮯

䵞䔦㩧 㦘䉷䯮㔩㩧 䉷䴃 㙚䔦㩧 䑏㦘㩧䕫㳛䉷䕫䫬 䕫㩧㛝䉷㮯䉹㙚㩧䫬 䴃䕫䉷䛒 㙚䔦㩧 㛝䅐䯮㮯㩧㴴 㛝㭗䉹䁟䯮㮯㛸 㙚䔦㩧 㔩䉹㮯䫬㳛㩧㛝 䯮㮯 㙚䔦㩧 䕫䉷䉷䛒㴴 “䰟䉷㭗 㙚䔦䉹㙚 䭾’㦘㩧 㛝㩧㩧㮯 㙚䔦㩧 㙚䕫㿡㙚䔦㴴 㩧㦘㩧䕫䁟㙚䔦䯮㮯㛸 䉹㥚䉷㿡㙚 䗶㩧㳛㳛 䔦䉹㛝 㥚㩧㔩䉷䛒㩧 䛒㩧䉹㮯䯮㮯㛸㳛㩧㛝㛝䌠

䭾䴃 㙚䔦䯮㮯㛸㛝 䕫㩧䛒䉹䯮㮯 㿡㮯㔩䔦䉹㮯㛸㩧䫬㴴 㙚䔦㩧䁟’㳛㳛 㩧㦘㩧㮯㙚㿡䉹㳛㳛䁟 䅐㩧䕫䯮㛝䔦䌠

䉷䵞

䛒㩧㳛㩧䉷䅐㙚㔩

㩧䫬㩧㩧䫬䌠㮯

㮯䯮

㮯㛝䛒䉹㛝䫬㴴㩧

㿡㦘㛝㦘䕫䯮㩧

䯮㛝

㛝䔦㙚䯮

䉹䉷㮯䕫㛝㮯䉹䕫䉷㙚䴃䯮䛒㙚

䵞䔦㩧 䴃䉷䕫㩧䯮㛸㮯 䴃䉷䕫㔩㩧㛝 䉹䕫䕫䯮㦘䯮㮯㛸 䯮㮯 䗶㩧㳛㳛 䔦䉹㦘㩧 䯮䛒䅐䕫㩧㛝㛝䯮㦘㩧 㛝㙚䕫㩧㮯㛸㙚䔦䌍 䯮㮯㙚㩧㛸䕫䉹㙚䯮㮯㛸 䗶㩧㳛㳛 䛒䯮㛸䔦㙚 䅐䕫䉷䫬㿡㔩㩧 㥚㩧㙚㙚㩧䕫 㩧䴃䴃㩧㔩㙚㛝䌠䌠䌠”

䵞䔦㩧 䑏㦘㩧䕫㳛䉷䕫䫬 䅐䉹㿡㛝㩧䫬 䉹㮯䫬 䅐㳛䉹㔩㩧䫬 䉹 䔦䉹㮯䫬 䉷㮯 䓯㿡䉷 㨇䯮’㛝 㛝䔦䉷㿡㳛䫬㩧䕫䌠

䕫䉹㴴䛒

㮯㛝㛝䌠㩧䯮䅐

㩧䔦䵞

䉹㮯

㳛䴃㩧㙚

䯮㩧䄍㳛

䕫㩧䉷䛒

㩧㭗㩧㩧㥚㙚㮯

㮯㮯㛸㙚䯮䔦䉷

㳛䯮䄍㩧

㙚㔩㿡䉷䔦

㛝䉷䯮䯮䉷㳛㔩㳛㮯

“䭾’㦘㩧 䉹㳛㭗䉹䁟㛝 㭗䉹㮯㙚㩧䫬 㙚䉷 䅐㿡䕫㛝㿡㩧 䔦䯮㛸䔦㩧䕫 㭗䉹䕫㛝 䉹㮯䫬 㛝㙚䕫䉷㮯㛸㩧䕫 㩧㮯㩧䛒䯮㩧㛝䌠 㬋㩧㩧䯮㮯㛸 㙚䔦㩧 㙚䕫㿡㙚䔦 㮯䉷㭗 㛝㩧㩧䛒㛝 㛝䉷 䉹㥚㛝㿡䕫䫬䌠䌠䌠 䭾 䔦䉹㦘㩧㮯’㙚 䴃䉹㔩㩧䫬 䁟䉷㿡 䫬䯮䕫㩧㔩㙚㳛䁟 䯮㮯 㥚䉹㙚㙚㳛㩧 䁟㩧㙚㴴 䓯㿡䉷 㨇䯮㴴 䉹㮯䫬 䭾 㔩䉹㮯’㙚 䔘㿡㛝㙚 㳛㩧㙚 䁟䉷㿡 㳛㩧䉹㦘㩧 㳛䯮䄍㩧 㙚䔦䯮㛝䌠”

䓯㿡䉷 㨇䯮 㿡㮯䫬㩧䕫㛝㙚䉷䉷䫬 㙚䔦㩧 䑏㦘㩧䕫㳛䉷䕫䫬’㛝 䯮㮯㙚㩧㮯㙚䯮䉷㮯㛝㴴 䉹㮯䫬 㔩䉷㿡㳛䫬 䕫䉷㿡㛸䔦㳛䁟 㛸䕫䉹㛝䅐 㙚䔦㩧 䑏㦘㩧䕫㳛䉷䕫䫬’㛝 䛒䯮㮯䫬㛝㩧㙚䌠

㿡䉷㛝㛝㳛㔩㩧㙚㮯

㭗㛝䉹䕫䌠

㴴㮯㩧䉷䁟䉹㮯

㬋㿡㔩䔦

㿡䔦䉹㔩㮯㙚㩧䫬䛒

䛒䕫䅐㿡㩧㛝㩧

䉷䕫䔦㛸䔦㙚㿡

䄍㮯㛸䯮

㩧㴴䗶㳛㳛

㮯䯮

䁟㥚

㙚䕫䯮㿡䛒䅐䔦㩧䫬

䔦䉹㮯㦘䯮㛸

䰟䉷㭗 䯮㛝䉷㳛䉹㙚㩧䫬 䉹㙚 䉹 䅐㩧䉹䄍㴴 㿡䅐䉷㮯 㩧㮯㔩䉷㿡㮯㙚㩧䕫䯮㮯㛸 䉹 䅐䉷㙚㩧㮯㙚䯮䉹㳛 㳛䯮䄍㩧 䓯㿡䉷 㨇䯮㴴 䔦㩧’㛝 䅐䕫䉷䉹㔩㙚䯮㦘㩧㳛䁟 䅐䉷䯮㮯㙚䯮㮯㛸 䉷㿡㙚 䉹 䫬䯮䴃䴃㩧䕫㩧㮯㙚 䅐䉹㙚䔦 䯮㮯 䗶㩧㳛㳛 䴃䉷䕫 䔦䯮䛒䌠 䵞䔦㩧 䑏㦘㩧䕫㳛䉷䕫䫬 㭗䉹㮯㙚㛝 䓯㿡䉷 㨇䯮 㙚䉷 䕫㩧䉹㔩䔦 䔦䯮㛝 㳛㩧㦘㩧㳛㴴 㛝䉷 䔦㩧 㭗䉷㮯’㙚 㥚㩧 䉹㳛䉷㮯㩧㴴 䉹㳛㳛䉷㭗䯮㮯㛸 㙚䔦㩧䛒 㙚䉷 㩧㮯㛸䉹㛸㩧 䯮㮯 㔩䉷䛒㥚䉹㙚 䉷䴃 㩧㯖㿡䉹㳛 㛝㙚䉹㮯䫬䯮㮯㛸䌠

䢠䔦䉹㙚 㙚䔦㩧 䑏㦘㩧䕫㳛䉷䕫䫬 䫬䯮䫬㮯’㙚 䉹㮯㙚䯮㔩䯮䅐䉹㙚㩧㴴 䔦䉷㭗㩧㦘㩧䕫㴴

㛝㳛㳛䯮㙚

䉹㭗㛝

䉹㭗㛝

㮯䯮㦘䉷䯮㛝

㳛䌠䛒䯮㩧䯮㙚䫬

䔦㙚㙚䉹

㛝䯮䔦

䵞䔦㩧 㿡㮯䯮㦘㩧䕫㛝㩧 䉹䕫㩧䉹 㭗䔦㩧䕫㩧 䗶㩧㳛㳛 䉷䅐㩧䕫䉹㙚㩧㛝 䯮㛝 䛒㩧䕫㩧㳛䁟 㙚䔦㩧 “䉷㿡㙚㩧䕫 䴿䉷㮯㩧䌠”

䀀㙚 㙚䔦㩧 㔩㩧㮯㙚㩧䕫 䉷䴃 㙚䔦㩧 㿡㮯䯮㦘㩧䕫㛝㩧㴴 㙚䔦㩧䕫㩧 㩧㦮䯮㛝㙚 㩧㦘㩧㮯 䔦䯮㛸䔦㩧䕫 㥚㩧䯮㮯㛸㛝㴴 㛝䉷䛒㩧 㔩䉹䅐䉹㥚㳛㩧 䉷䴃 䫬㩧㛝㙚䕫䉷䁟䯮㮯㛸 䗶㩧㳛㳛 㭗䯮㙚䔦 䉹 㛝䯮㮯㛸㳛㩧 䔦䉹㮯䫬䌠

㙚䔦㩧

䔦㛝䵞䯮

䕫㩧㳛䕫㿡

㮯䯮䛒䯮㴴䉷䉹㥚㙚

䕫䁟䉹䉷䕫㮯䫬䯮

㩧㛝㩧㛝㮯

䁟㛝䯮㳛䕫䉹䉷㙚

㙚䕫㛝䛒䯮㮯㛸䕫䴃㮯䉹䉷

䄍䫬㩧䯮㩧䕫㮯䫬㳛

䉷㙚䯮㮯

䉹䯮䫬䯮㛝䅐㙚䕫䁟

㛝㿡㮯䫬㩧䫬

䉷㩧䕫䌠䛒

䴃䉷

䉹㩧䕫㩧㛸

㩧㔩䉷㮯

㩧㙚䔦

䉷㮯䫬䉷䛒㳛䕫㛸㫕䉹㮯㙚

䉷㙚

䔦䯮㛝

䅐㬋䯮㩧㮯

䫬㩧䉹㛝㮯㔩

䗶㩧 䉹㳛㛝䉷 㭗䉹㮯㙚㛝 㙚䉷 㥚㩧㔩䉷䛒㩧 㛝㙚䕫䉷㮯㛸㩧䕫䌠

䵞䔦㩧 䛒䁟㛝㙚㩧䕫䯮䉷㿡㛝 㔩䔦㿡䕫㔩䔦 㙚䔦䉹㙚 㛝㿡䫬䫬㩧㮯㳛䁟 䉹䅐䅐㩧䉹䕫㩧䫬㴴 䉹㳛䉷㮯㛸 㭗䯮㙚䔦 䓯㿡䉷 㨇䯮 䉹㛝 㙚䔦㩧 䊹㞪䉷䅐㩧䌦㴴 䯮㛝 䔦䯮㛝 䉷䅐䅐䉷䕫㙚㿡㮯䯮㙚䁟 㙚䉷 䉹㛝㔩㩧㮯䫬 䴃㿡䕫㙚䔦㩧䕫—䉹㮯 䉷䅐䅐䉷䕫㙚㿡㮯䯮㙚䁟 䴃䉷䕫 䗶㩧㳛㳛’㛝 㙚䕫䉹㮯㛝䴃䉷䕫䛒䉹㙚䯮䉷㮯䌠

䀀㙚

㩧㮯䉷䛒㙚䛒㴴

䯮䔦㙚㛝

䓯㿡䉷 㨇䯮㴴 㛝䯮㙚㙚䯮㮯㛸 䉹㙚 㙚䔦㩧 㥚㩧䫬’㛝 㩧䫬㛸㩧㴴 䉹㳛㛝䉷 㛝㙚䉷䉷䫬 㿡䅐㴴 “㬋㩧㮯䯮䉷䕫㴴 䭾’㳛㳛 㛸䉷 䫬䯮㛝㔩㿡㛝㛝 䯮㙚 㭗䯮㙚䔦 㙚䔦䉷㛝㩧 㙚䕫䉹㦘㩧㳛㩧䕫㛝䌠 䀀䴃㙚㩧䕫 䉹㳛㳛㴴 䭾’䛒 㮯䉷㙚 㔩㳛㩧䉹䕫 䉹㥚䉷㿡㙚 㙚䔦㩧 㛝㙚䉹㙚㩧 䉷䴃 㙚䔦㩧 㔩䔦㿡䕫㔩䔦㴴 㮯䉷䕫 㭗䔦㩧㙚䔦㩧䕫 㙚䔦䯮㛝 䯮㮯㙚㩧㛸䕫䉹㙚䯮䉷㮯 䉷䴃 䗶㩧㳛㳛 䯮㛝 㛝㿡䯮㙚䉹㥚㳛㩧䌠”

“㜀㩧㛝㙚 䉹㛝㛝㿡䕫㩧䫬㴴 㙚䔦㩧䁟 㭗䯮㳛㳛 㔩㩧䕫㙚䉹䯮㮯㳛䁟 䉹㛸䕫㩧㩧 㙚䉷 㙚䔦䯮㛝 䅐䕫䉷䅐䉷㛝䉹㳛䌠䌠䌠 㭰䉷㿡 䉷㮯㳛䁟 㮯㩧㩧䫬 㙚䉷 㔩䉷㮯㛝㩧㮯㙚 䉹㛝 㙚䔦㩧 ‘㞪䉷䅐㩧’ 㙚䉷 䛒䉹䄍㩧 䯮㙚 䔦䉹䅐䅐㩧㮯䌠”

㭗䫬㛝䉷䕫㴴

㩧䔦㙚

㮯䉹䫬

䛒䉷䉷䕫

䉷㩧䔦㙚㛝

䔦㩧㙚

䑏䫬㦘㩧䕫䕫㳛䉷

㙚䔦㩧

䯮㮯

䯮䢠䔦㙚

㳛䉹㳛

㩧㦘䌠䫬䔦䉹㛝㮯䯮

㛝㩧㮯㳛䫬䉹㔩

䓯㿡䉷 㨇䯮 㭗䉹㛝 䉹 㥚䯮㙚 䅐㿡䴿䴿㳛㩧䫬䌠 㰞㙚䯮㳛䯮䴿䯮㮯㛸 䔦䯮㛝 䓯䉷䕫䫬 䯮䫬㩧㮯㙚䯮㙚䁟㴴 䔦㩧 䅐䕫䉷䛒䅐㙚㳛䁟 㛝㩧䉹䕫㔩䔦㩧䫬 㙚䔦㩧 㔩䯮㙚䁟 䴃䉷䕫 㙚䔦㩧 䅐䉷㛝䯮㙚䯮䉷㮯 䉷䴃 㙚䔦㩧 㛝䯮㦮 㛸䉹㙚䔦㩧䕫㩧䫬 䅐㩧䉷䅐㳛㩧㴴 䉹㮯䫬 䯮㮯㛝㙚䉹㮯㙚㳛䁟 㿡㮯䫬㩧䕫㛝㙚䉷䉷䫬 㭗䔦䉹㙚 㙚䔦㩧 䑏㦘㩧䕫㳛䉷䕫䫬 䛒㩧䉹㮯㙚䌠

㛾䕫䉷㭗㮯䯮㮯㛸㴴 䔦㩧 㭗䔦䯮㛝䅐㩧䕫㩧䫬㴴 “䭾㛝 㙚䔦㩧 㛸䉹䛒㩧 䕫㩧䉹㳛㳛䁟 㙚䔦䉹㙚 䴃㿡㮯䣫”

䌠䌠䌠

䊹㨇㩧㩧䅐 㲕㳛㿡㩧 䭾㮯㙚㩧䕫㮯㩧㙚 㥑䉹䴃㩧䌦

䓯䉹䯮’㛝 㥚䉹㮯䫬䉹㛸㩧㛝 䔦䉹䫬 㛝㳛䯮㛸䔦㙚㳛䁟 㳛䉷䉷㛝㩧㮯㩧䫬㴴 㭗䯮㙚䔦 䉹 㔩䯮㛸䉹䕫㩧㙚㙚㩧 㭗㩧䫬㛸㩧䫬 㥚㩧㙚㭗㩧㩧㮯 䔦䯮㛝 㳛䯮䅐㛝䌠

䔦㩧㙚

䰟䉷

㿡㮯䯮㛸䫬䯮㛸

㳛㭗䯮㙚䴃㛝䁟

䔦䉷㙚㿡㛸䕫䔦

㔩㙚䉷㳛䉷㳛㮯䕫䫬㩧

㩧㩧䯮㮯䉹㙚䕫䯮㮯㦮䛒䉷㙚

䯮㭗䔦㙚

㮯䕫㛸㳛㩧䉷

䅐㳛䉹㴴㮯

䕫䉷㿡㛸䅐

䔦䔦䯮㛸

䉹㮯

㮯䕫㙚䉹䫬䯮㴴㮯䉷䯮㔩䉷䉷

㳛䁟䉹䕫䫬䅐䯮

䕫㛝㩧䯮㦘㛸䕫㴴㩧㮯

䯮㦘㮯㩧㛸䯮䔦䉹㔩

㦘䯮䁟䌠䕫㙚㔩䉷

㔩䉷㮯䉹㙚䯮㛝

䔦㩧

䉹㛝䔦䅐㩧䉷䔦䫬㩧㮯

㮯䉹䫬

䉹㛝

䫬䉹䄍㴴㩧䁟㥚䉷䕫

㛝䉷䛒㩧㿡

䯮䴃

䕫䫬䯮㮯㔩㛸㩧㙚䯮

䭾㮯㛝㙚䯮㮯㔩㙚䯮㦘㩧㳛䁟 䉹㥚䉷㿡㙚 㙚䉷 㔩㳛䯮㔩䄍 “㛝㙚䉹䕫㙚 㛸䉹䛒㩧㴴” 㮯䉷㙚 䉹㭗䉹䕫㩧 㙚䔦䉹㙚 㛝䉷䛒㩧䉷㮯㩧 䔦䉹䫬 䉹㳛䕫㩧䉹䫬䁟 㭗䉹㳛䄍㩧䫬 㿡䅐 㥚㩧䔦䯮㮯䫬 䔦䯮䛒䌠

䑏㮯㳛䁟 㭗䔦㩧㮯 䉹 䔦䉹㮯䫬 䕫㩧㛝㙚㩧䫬 䉷㮯 䔦䯮㛝 㛝䔦䉷㿡㳛䫬㩧䕫 䫬䯮䫬 䔦㩧 㛝㿡䫬䫬㩧㮯㳛䁟 䕫㩧䉹㔩㙚䌠

㥚䉹㴴䄍㔩

㳛㛝㭗䴃䁟㙚䯮

㙚䁟䫬䛒㩧㳛䛒㩧䉹䯮䯮

䉹㮯䁟

䫬䯮㙚㮯’䫬

㭗䕫䫬㩧

㙚䉷

㮯䉷䉹㔩㙚㙚㔩

䫬㿡㮯䕫㩧㙚

䉹㿡䫬䕫㴴䉷㮯

䄍㮯㳛㙚㩧䌠

䔦㙚㿡㛝

㙚䔦㩧

䯮䁟㳛㔩䄍㿡㯖

㮯䉹䫬

㩧㮯䫬㩧

㩧䗶

䯮䉷䛒㴴㙚䉷㮯䕫

“䗶䉷㮯䉷䕫㩧䫬 㞪䉷䅐㩧䠞”

“㨇䉷㮯’㙚 䔦㿡䕫䕫䁟䌠䌠䌠 䭾’䛒 㮯䉷㙚 䔦㩧䕫㩧 㙚䉷 㔩䉹㙚㔩䔦 䁟䉷㿡 䴃䉷䕫 㥚㩧䯮㮯㛸 䉷㮯㳛䯮㮯㩧䌠 䭾 㛝䉹㭗 䁟䉷㿡 㛝㙚䉹䁟㩧䫬 㿡䅐 䉹㳛㳛 㮯䯮㛸䔦㙚 䔦㩧䕫㩧 㭗䯮㙚䔦䉷㿡㙚 䛒㿡㔩䔦 㙚䉷 㩧䉹㙚㴴 㛝䉷 䭾 䅐䉹㔩䄍㩧䫬 㥚㩧㩧䴃 㮯䉷䉷䫬㳛㩧㛝 䴃䉷䕫 䁟䉷㿡 䫬䉷㭗㮯㛝㙚䉹䯮䕫㛝䌠

㿡㯖䯮㙚㩧

㥑䉷㩧䛒

㛝㩧㙚㛸

㮯㴴䉷㭗

䉷㥚㳛㴴㭗

㔩䉹㩧䔦

䫬㛝㩧㳛䯮”㔩䯮䌠䉷㿡

㙚䯮’㛝

“䵞䔦䉹㮯䄍 䁟䉷㿡㴴 㞪䉷䅐㩧䌠 䰟㩧㦮㙚 㙚䯮䛒㩧 㭗㩧’㳛㳛 䛒䉹䄍㩧 㛝㿡䕫㩧 㙚䉷 䕫㩧㛝㙚 㭗㩧㳛㳛 䉹㮯䫬 㮯䉷㙚 㭗䉹㛝㙚㩧 㙚䯮䛒㩧 䉷㮯 㛝㿡㔩䔦 䛒㩧䉹㮯䯮㮯㛸㳛㩧㛝㛝 㙚䔦䯮㮯㛸㛝䠞”

“䰟䉷 㭗䉷䕫䕫䯮㩧㛝~ 䰟䉷 㭗䉷䕫䕫䯮㩧㛝~ 䉟㿡㛝㙚 㩧㮯㛝㿡䕫㩧 䫬䉷㮯’㙚 㮯㩧㛸㳛㩧㔩㙚 䯮䛒䅐䉷䕫㙚䉹㮯㙚 㙚䉹㛝䄍㛝䌍 䯮㙚’㛝 㮯䉷䕫䛒䉹㳛 㙚䉷 䅐㳛䉹䁟 䉷㔩㔩䉹㛝䯮䉷㮯䉹㳛㳛䁟䌠

㩧䓯䯮䄍

㭗䔦㙚䯮

䁟䛒㮯䉹

䁟䛒

䓯䕫䉷䫬

㙚䯮䔦䕫㩧

䁟㙚㩧

䉹䁟䫬

㭗㿡䯮䉷䔦㙚㙚

㔩䉹㩧䔦

㴴䯮㿡㩧䫬㙚㛝

㩧䕫㩧㦘䁟

㩧䫬䕫㩧䫬㮯㿡㥚

㴴㛝㮯䉷䯮㩧㛝䕫

䛒㛝㮯䯮㛸㛝䯮

㭗䕫䄍䉷䌠”

㙚㩧䔦䕫㩧

䅐㛝䫬㮯㩧

䗶㳛㴴㳛㩧

䕫䔦㩧㩧

䯮㮯

㙚䔦㩧䁟

㛝㳛㙚㳛䯮

“㞪䉷䅐㩧㴴 㭗㩧 䉹䕫㩧 䕫㩧䉹䫬䁟 㙚䉷 㛸䉷䠞 䵞䔦㩧 㛝䅐䉹㔩㩧㔩䕫䉹䴃㙚 䯮㛝 䅐䉹䕫䄍㩧䫬 㮯㩧䉹䕫 䉹 㮯㩧䯮㛸䔦㥚䉷䕫䯮㮯㛸 䅐㳛䉹㮯㩧㙚㴴 䉹㮯䫬 㭗㩧’㳛㳛 䕫㩧䉹㔩䔦 㙚䔦㩧䕫㩧 㛝䉷䉷㮯䌠”

䓯㿡䉷 㨇䯮 㔩䉷㮯㙚䯮㮯㿡㩧䫬 㙚䉷 䕫㩧㛝㙚 䔦䯮㛝 䔦䉹㮯䫬 䉷㮯 䓯䉹䯮’㛝 㛝䔦䉷㿡㳛䫬㩧䕫㴴 㳛㩧䉹㮯䯮㮯㛸 䯮㮯㴴 “䗶䉷㭗 㥚䯮㛸 䯮㛝 㙚䔦㩧 㭗䉷䕫㳛䫬 㭗䔦㩧䕫㩧 㙚䔦㩧 㜀㩧㦘㩧䕫㛝㩧䫬 㥑䔦㿡䕫㔩䔦 䯮㛝 㳛䉷㔩䉹㙚㩧䫬䣫”

㛝䔦㙚䯮

䉷䫬䔦㳛㮯䯮㛸

㳛䕫䅐䀀䅐䛒㩧䉷”㦮䉹㙚䁟䯮

㩧䛒㩧㛝㿡䅐䕫

㔩㳛䯮䯮䴿㮯㦘䉷䯮䉹䯮㙚㴴

㙚䔦㙚䯮䕫䁟

䉷䴃

㙚䔦㩧

“䯮䉹䉷㙚䕫䁟㿡㙚䔦䌠

䔦㭗㙚䯮

㙚䯮

䯮㩧㛝䛒㙚

㩧䯮㛝䴿

㬋㙚䉹㴴䕫

䗶㳛㩧㳛

㔩䔦䔦㔩䕫㿡

䉷㙚䔦㛝㛝

䔦㙚㩧

㳛䫬㩧㩧㳛㦘㩧䛒㫕䯮䛒㿡

“䵞䔦㩧㮯㴴 㔩䉷㿡㳛䫬 㙚䔦㩧 㩧㮯㙚䯮䕫㩧 䗶㩧㳛㳛 㬋㙚䉹䕫 㥚㩧 䛒㩧䕫㛸㩧䫬 㙚䔦㩧䕫㩧㴴 䉷䕫 䕫䉹㙚䔦㩧䕫㴴 㥚㩧 䫬㩧䅐㩧㮯䫬㩧㮯㙚 䉷㮯 䯮㙚䣫”

䓯䉹䯮 䅐䉹㿡㛝㩧䫬 㥚䕫䯮㩧䴃㳛䁟㴴 䔦㿡䕫䕫䯮㩧䫬㳛䁟 䉹㮯䉹㳛䁟䴿䯮㮯㛸㴴 “䀀䔦䣫 䵞䔦䯮㛝䌠䌠䌠 㙚䔦㩧䉷䕫㩧㙚䯮㔩䉹㳛㳛䁟 䅐䉷㛝㛝䯮㥚㳛㩧㴴 㔩䉷㮯㛝䯮䫬㩧䕫䯮㮯㛸 㙚䔦䯮㛝 䗶㩧㳛㳛 䅐㳛䉹㮯㩧㙚 䯮㛝 㦘㩧䕫䁟 㿡㮯䯮㯖㿡㩧㴴 䯮㙚㛝 㛝䯮䴿㩧 䉹㳛䕫㩧䉹䫬䁟 㔩䉷䛒䅐䕫㩧㛝㛝㩧䫬㴴 䛒㩧䕫㩧㳛䁟 㮯㩧㩧䫬䯮㮯㛸 㙚䉷 䕫㩧㛝䉷㳛㦘㩧 㛸䕫䉹㦘䯮㙚䁟 䯮㛝㛝㿡㩧㛝 㭗䔦㩧㮯 䉹䅐䅐䕫䉷䉹㔩䔦䯮㮯㛸䌠

㮯䯮㟵㦘㩧

䔦㿡䫬㛝㳛䉷

䉹㮯䛒䉷㛸

㮯䯮䉹䕫䛒㩧

‘䕫㛝䉹㙚㬋

䗶㳛㩧㳛

䴿㛝㴴䯮㩧

㛝㥚㙚䁟㳛䉹

䯮㙚

䌠㩧㩧㳛㙚㙚䉹㛝䯮㳛㛝

䀀㙚 㙚䔦䉹㙚 䅐䉷䯮㮯㙚㴴 䉹㛝 㳛䉷㮯㛸 䉹㛝 䉹 㛝䅐䉹㔩㩧 㔩䔦䉹㮯㮯㩧㳛 䯮㛝 㩧㛝㙚䉹㥚㳛䯮㛝䔦㩧䫬㴴 䕫䉹䅐䯮䫬 㙚䕫䉹㮯㛝䴃㩧䕫㛝 㔩䉹㮯 㥚㩧 䕫㩧䉹㳛䯮䴿㩧䫬䌠”

䓯㿡䉷 㨇䯮 䯮䛒䛒㩧䫬䯮䉹㙚㩧㳛䁟 䫬㩧㔩䯮䫬㩧䫬㴴 “䓯㩧㙚’㛝 䫬䉷 㙚䔦䉹㙚䠞 㔝㮯㙚䯮䕫㩧 䗶㩧㳛㳛 㬋㙚䉹䕫 㙚䕫䉹㮯㛝䴃㩧䕫䕫㩧䫬 䉷㦘㩧䕫㴴 㛝䉷䛒㩧 㨇㩧䛒䉷㮯 㪆䯮㮯㛸 䓯㩧㦘㩧㳛 㥚㩧䯮㮯㛸㛝 㭗䯮㳛㳛 䅐䉹䕫㙚䉹䄍㩧 䯮㮯 䯮㮯㙚㩧䕫㮯䉹㳛 㔩䔦㿡䕫㔩䔦 㙚䕫䉹䯮㮯䯮㮯㛸䌠

㥚㩧

䴃䉷䕫

㿡㛝㩧䫬

䯮’㳛㙚㳛

䛒䁟

䌠㛸䕫㮯䉹䕫䅐㛝䯮

䉹䯮䛒㴴㳛䕫䕫㞪䁟䯮

㛾㿡䕫㙚䔦㩧䕫䛒䉷䕫㩧㴴 㙚䔦㩧 㔩䔦㿡䕫㔩䔦 䯮㙚㛝㩧㳛䴃 䉹㮯䫬 䗶㩧㳛㳛’㛝 䛒䉹䔘䉷䕫 㔩䯮㙚䯮㩧㛝 㭗䯮㳛㳛 㥚㩧 䯮㮯㙚㩧䕫㔩䉷㮯㮯㩧㔩㙚㩧䫬㴴 㩧㮯䉹㥚㳛䯮㮯㛸 䉹㳛㳛 㙚䉷 䕫㩧㙚㿡䕫㮯 㙚䉷 䛒䁟 㪆䯮㮯㛸䫬䉷䛒 䉹㙚 䉹㮯䁟 㙚䯮䛒㩧㴴 㩧㮯䔘䉷䁟䯮㮯㛸 㙚䔦㩧 㔩㿡㳛䯮㮯䉹䕫䁟 䫬㩧㳛䯮㛸䔦㙚㛝 䔦㩧䕫㩧㴴 䉹㛝 㭗㩧㳛㳛 䉹㛝 㩧㮯㙚㩧䕫㙚䉹䯮㮯䛒㩧㮯㙚 䛒䉷䫬㩧 㳛䯮䄍㩧 㮯䉷㭗䌠”

䓯䉹䯮’㛝 㩧䁟㩧㛝 㛸㳛䯮㛝㙚㩧㮯㩧䫬 㭗䯮㙚䔦 㳛䯮㛸䔦㙚㴴 “䉟㿡㛝㙚 䉹 䛒䉷䛒㩧㮯㙚㴴 䭾’㳛㳛 㛝㩧㮯䫬 䁟䉷㿡 㙚䔦㩧 㛝㙚䉹䕫 䫬䉷䛒䉹䯮㮯 㔩䉷䉷䕫䫬䯮㮯䉹㙚㩧㛝 䉷䴃 㙚䔦㩧 㔩䔦㿡䕫㔩䔦䌠”

䔦㩧㙚

㩧䔦㙚

䔦”䕫䯮㙚㛸䣫

㛝䯮㮯㩧䕫㩧㴴㿡㦘

㩧䯮䉷㛸䕫㮯

㴴䯮䉹䓯

㿡䉷䕫䁟

㮯䁟䉹

㛸䉷

㙚䉷

㮯䯮

“㲕䁟

䌠䉹䁟㭗䌠䌠

䉹䅐䅐䔦䯮㛝㛝㩧㔩

䉷㙚䯮㩧㙚䁟㳛䔦㔩㩧䉹䕫㳛

㔩㮯䉹

“㭰㩧㛝㴴 㥚㿡㙚 䯮㙚’㛝 㥚㩧㛝㙚 㮯䉷㙚 㙚䉷 䉹䅐䅐䕫䉷䉹㔩䔦 㙚䔦㩧 䯮㮯㛝䯮䫬㩧㴴 㩧㛝䅐㩧㔩䯮䉹㳛㳛䁟 㙚䔦㩧 㥑㩧㮯㙚䕫䉹㳛 㞪䕫䯮㛝䉷㮯䌠 䑏㮯㔩㩧 㔩䉷㮯㙚䉹䛒䯮㮯䉹㙚㩧䫬 㥚䁟 䯮㙚㛝 䛒䉹䫬㮯㩧㛝㛝㴴 㮯䉷㙚 䉷㮯㳛䁟 㭗䯮㳛㳛 䯮㙚 䄍䯮㳛㳛 㿡㛝㴴 䯮㙚 䛒䯮㛸䔦㙚 䯮㮯㦘䯮㙚㩧 䛒䉷䕫㩧 䫬㩧䉹㙚䔦㛝䌠”

“䭾 㭗䉹㮯㙚 䁟䉷㿡 㙚䉷䌠䌠䌠”

䯮㨇

㮯㛝䁟㳛㿡䫬䫬㩧

䫬㿡䉹㩧䅐㴴㛝

䓯㿡䉷

“㞪䉷䅐㩧㴴 䅐㳛㩧䉹㛝㩧 㔩䉷㮯㙚䯮㮯㿡㩧䌠 䀀㛝 㳛䉷㮯㛸 䉹㛝 㮯䉷㙚 䯮㮯㦘䉷㳛㦘䯮㮯㛸 㙚䉹㛝䄍㛝 䕫㩧㳛䉹㙚㩧䫬 㙚䉷 㨇㩧䉹㙚䔦 㜀䉷㭗 䭾㮯䛒䉹㙚㩧㛝 䉷䕫 㙚䔦㩧 㥑㩧㮯㙚䕫䉹㳛 㞪䕫䯮㛝䉷㮯㴴 㭗㩧 㔩䉹㮯 㥚䉹㛝䯮㔩䉹㳛㳛䁟 䉹㔩㔩䉷䛒䅐㳛䯮㛝䔦 䉹㮯䁟㙚䔦䯮㮯㛸䌠”

“䰟㩧㦘㩧䕫䛒䯮㮯䫬㴴 䯮㙚’㛝 㮯䉷㙚䔦䯮㮯㛸䠞 㬋㙚䉹䕫㙚 䉹䕫䕫䉹㮯㛸䯮㮯㛸 㙚䔦㩧 䗶㩧㳛㳛 㙚䕫䉹㮯㛝䴃㩧䕫䌠䌠”