Mage Manual

Chapter 1331: 973: Love Letter



Chapter 1331: 973: Love Letter

Capítulo 1331: Chapter 973: Love Letter

Pa!

Alongside the Ruby Sword sheathing with a dragon’s cry, the blood lake sword light that hung upside down above the woodland venue also returned to its sheath. Only when the sword light completely flowed back did the tens of thousands of tense spectators inside the venue relax, many discovering they were drenched in cold sweat, mages included.

The entire audience was silent; no one dared to cheer or voice opinions, everyone was just thankful for their survival. Perhaps in the future, this experience might be something they boast about for decades, but at this moment, they all wished they had never witnessed a Legendary Mage’s war.

They knew Legendary Mages were powerful, but if the Legendary Mage was the young and spirited mage Sonia Sevi, they found it hard not to think she was on the weaker side of Legendary Mages. They knew Holy Domain Mages were strong, especially with Team Captain Alexis and six other church Holy Domain mages present. Even if Holy Domain Mages were not a match for a Legendary Mage, seven Holy Domain Mages should at least rival a young legendary one, right?

On one side was a beautiful young Sword Master who had been a mage for less than a year, and on the other, seven established Holy Domain Mages. Most people believed it would be a spectacular magic duel.

Then Sonia used her sword light to demonstrate to everyone the vast gap between Legendary and Holy Domain Mages, a gap not bridged by numbers.

Indeed, Alexis and her seven Holy Domain counterparts couldn’t be swiftly defeated, but time was not on their side; it belonged only to those dominating the battlefield. When they realized Sonia’s blood lake sword light wouldn’t dissipate but hovered over the arena altering the magical environment, Sonia had already ruled the battlefield.

Although Sonia hadn’t engaged in a truly Legendary duel, not even ventured through Ruby Mountain, that didn’t stop her from transforming her combat style. She was adept at learning, and Diya’s Divine Gospel spirit was probably the best custom mentor in the mortal world.

The decisive difference between Legendary and Holy Domain Mages lies in the ability of a Legendary Mage to alter the battlefield environment. Beyond the obvious changes like Fire Mages creating fires or Water Mages generating floods, there’s a deeper transformation—when heterochromatic magic power drives a miracle, it can subtly paint the environment’s color.

All environments possess magical colors, even nothingness has ‘temporal color’ and ‘spatial color’.

A good casting environment enhances magic; a poor one, where environmental and miracle colors clash, weakens the miracle power. But physical arts like swordsmanship generally exist in neutral casting environments, with neither enhancement nor detriment.

The strength of Legendary Mages comes not just from altering the environment’s color in a short time but from enabling the environment to cast magic automatically, mirroring their hearts to the heavenly heart!

It sounds difficult but the principle is simple: for instance, a Fire Mage creates an uncontrolled blaze, when it’s beyond natural suppression, the fire continues burning without the mage’s casting, that’s the environment casting magic for the mage.

Facing a Legendary Mage, if you can’t defeat them swiftly, you must face a natural disaster instead!

The entire battlefield becomes an accomplice and claw of the Legendary Mage!

From the beginning, it wasn’t Sonia who needed to hurry, but the seven Holy Domain Mages of the Star Cluster!

Only when Alexis and the others realized this, Sonia’s blood lake battlefield had fully formed. Notably, they didn’t realize Sonia could master battlefield miracles; they never thought Sonia mastered battlefield miracles.

Though a Legendary Mage’s talent should enable mastering battlefield miracles, Sonia had been a mage for less than a year! If Sonia could condense a fourth Void Wing, it might be miraculous, but when would she have time to study battlefield miracles?

Yet Sonia had long encountered battlefield miracles, even as a Two-winged Mage, she’d explored an excellent nascent battlefield miracle. With research by her and Ash, this battlefield miracle was refined and fully developed in her hands.

The original version of this miracle was called Heart Pen.

After Ash gave Sonia his Heart Sword Technique Spirit, the Claw Sword Saint integrated the Heart Sword into her battle system. Coincidentally, Diya explained the Legendary Mage’s battle mode to her, while Extinction Grant Dragon taught her to harness emotional power, allowing Sonia to conceive her exclusive battlefield miracle, the Love Letter.

Love Letters aren’t about high or low, noble or cheap, but about true emotion and false intent.

Depending on Sonia’s miracle-infused Love Letter, the battlefield’s ultimate effect varies. The Shattered Lake Love Letter, scripted from the Blood Moon Shattered Lake, inflicts ongoing sword damage on all hostile targets; the Water Moon Love Letter, centered on defense and counter, triggers automatic counterattacks against all within Sonia’s range.

Though there’s much to improve in “Love Letter,” it suffices against Holy Domain Mages.

Sonia observed Alexis, the Team Captain of Star Cluster, embedded in the wall, her Holy Domain not yet drained, but surrounded by blood lake sword light. Alexis could either stay put or be worn down by the sword light.

The Claw Sword Saint turned and flew back to the stage, where Diya clapped her hands and said, “A grand success on your first use. Your Love Letter is already nearly on par with Ash’s Heart Pen.”

“Stronger,” Sonia calmly replied, “When he returns, I’ll defeat him with his best miracle.”

“Eh? Why?”

Sonia glanced at the Witch: “Isn’t just making Ash bow his head reason enough?”

Diya thought about that image: Ash looked on in shock as his Heart Pen battlefield was crushed by the Love Letter battlefield, then he knelt in despair, clutching the legs of the Sword Maiden, crying, “Sword Maiden, you’re so strong, even my greatest Miracle can’t match you. I dare not defy your will ever again; I won’t dare to seek out the Witch anymore…”

No, I must find a way to give Ash a beating. Even if I can’t crush his pride using his best Miracle, at least I need to make him submit to Her Majesty the Empress.

Sonia asked: “Felix…”

“Ash and the others haven’t woken up yet,” Diya shook her head and pointed upward: “And the Starry Sky Curtain hasn’t shattered yet, either.”

Though it has endured countless impacts and indeed has a large hole, the Starry Sky Curtain still stands firm on the dome. The night is seeping into the day, trying to mend the gap in the sky.

“Don’t rush,” Dedarose said leisurely. “Although the Miracle Techniques stored by mages across the country have been exhausted, the wounds on the curtain have exceeded its capacity for automatic repair. We can directly construct Miracle Techniques to attack the curtain. Mages from other places will do the same. It’s only a matter of time before the curtain shatters.”

“No time to waste,” Sonia said. “The anomaly just now was probably Ash impacting the Star Cluster Curtain. Heaven knows if the Master of Stars has any more tricks up his sleeve. We need to hurry and shatter the Star Cluster Curtain.”

Dedarose nodded, opened the microphone, and said to the audience: “Sorry, the Starry Beauty concert is being terminated due to force majeure. Please remain calm and follow the exit instructions to avoid a stampede.”

“Lastly, congratulations on witnessing the end of a great era.”

The audience stared blankly at the three beauties on stage bowing to them. Just as the concert ended perfectly in another way, a beam of starlight suddenly fell into the venue.

“It’s not over yet.”

Sonia turned around and saw Elisis tearing through her Blood Lake Sword Light, while the other Holy Domain members of the Church one by one regained combat power. Elisis was covered in a suit of azure blue flame armor, while the Church’s Holy Domain members were clad in deep blue robes. The Sword Witch recognized at a glance the origins of their attire—

Star Hall level five unit: Prayer of the Stars!

Star Hall level six unit: Star Warrior!

“Order of the Stars: Hereby appoint all the nobles of the Star to be Star Hall Warriors, assist the Church in repairing the curtain, and resist the rebellion to prevent destruction,” Elisis pronounced word by word. “The Master of Stars is watching over His loyal land. Rebels like you won’t be favored by Fate.”

“The Star Cluster is guiding our path!”

Dedarose glanced at her and sighed softly: “Do you still not understand? Our Four Pillars God Sect merely stirred the winds of the era of change. The true power wanting to shatter the curtain comes from you, the Star Mages themselves.”

“The Master of Stars has watched over this land for 1668 years,” the First Beauty under the Starry Sky pointed to the Star Warrior captain and said, “But royal power doesn’t last forever. The people’s hearts desire change; everyone is tired of this starry sky; the chains of thought have become tiresome to all.”

Is the star nobility system good? Of course, it is. It fully implements “the greater the power, the greater the responsibility” and “wholeheartedly for the public”, providing welfare to mages while also restraining their behavior. If mages want more benefits, they must contribute more to society.

During the developmental period of nascent civilization, mages wouldn’t resist this system. But after more than a thousand years, the nation’s resources have been mostly tapped, and class stratification has reached its limit. The lower classes have entirely resigned to laziness, the middle classes are thirsty for reshuffling, and even the upper classes wish to shed their shackles. Everyone is waiting for a beam of dawn’s light.

Ideal aristocracy has become a relic of the past. Its efficiency is still world-leading, but the problem is, it hasn’t satisfied the growing spiritual needs of mages.

The spread of the Four Pillars God in the Kingdom of Stars wasn’t because Dedarose was particularly capable, but because the mages, these white-eyed wolves fed full by the Master of Stars, have been hungry for too long.

Governance involves many aspects, but the management of mages is undoubtedly the most critical topic. The Four Pillars God acts like examiners, repeatedly evaluating the answers of various Divine Lords. Some, like the Extreme Master of Blood Moon, have stable but not high scores, while others, like Lord Senluo, scored very high initially but left midway.

Now, it’s time for the Master of Stars to submit the answers.

“I know,” Elisis said coldly. “But when the Master of Stars achieves a higher realm, He will surely continue the brilliance of the Stars! Then all societal problems will be resolved, and the age of stars will never end!”

“Your belief that a great existence can solve all problems fits very well with our Four Pillars God Sect…” Dedarose unfurled her Void Wings. “Sword Seat, Magic Seat, let me handle these remnants of the old era.”

“Before the Church repairs the curtain, no one is leaving.” Elisis stood resolutely behind the Sword Witch and blocked them: “The Star Mages will uphold this starry sky!”

䃄㲌䟑

㜋䝬㮝䋫㖏㒩

㖏㠗㲌㮸㫭㹾

䙁䝬

䟉㖏㜋㮝䏷㠗㧛

䋫㖏䙁㳮㮐䟉㒩

䡁䏷䟉䋫㠗䙁䙁

㮸䟑䏷㠗㜋㜋䭝㮸㴅

“䁨䟑 㠗䖖䟑㶃㠗㜋㜋㮝㹾㹾㹾 䏷䃄㠗㜋㜋㮝 㮸㶃䖖䖖䃄䃄䟉䃄䟉㹾㹾㹾”

㾎㖏㮸㲌㖏 㧛䏷䃄㮸㮸䃄䟉 㲌䃄䏷 䝬㠗䖖䃄 㠗㒩㠗㖏䋫㮸䟑 䟑㲌䃄 䜬㖏䋫䟉䙁䜬 㒩㜋㠗㮸㮸䭝 㮸䟑㠗䏷㖏䋫㒩 䡁㜋㠗䋫䡌㜋㮝 㠗䟑 䟑㲌䃄 ‘䏷䃄䟉 㒩㜋䙁䜬’ 㮸㧛䏷䃄㠗䟉㖏䋫㒩 㠗䖖䏷䙁㮸㮸 䟑㲌䃄 䋫㖏㒩㲌䟑 㮸䡌㮝䭝 “㦞䃄’䯈䃄 䏷䃄㠗㜋㜋㮝 䙁䝬䝬䃄䋫䟉䃄䟉 䟑㲌䃄 䫶㖏䯈㖏䋫䃄 䑽䙁䏷䟉 䟑㲌㖏㮸 䟑㖏㮐䃄㹾㹾㹾”

㖏䜬䟑㲌

㮸㲌㴅

䙁䫶”‘䟑䋫

㮝㶃䙁

䟑㠗䖖

䟉㮸㖏䫈㠗

㮸䙁䑽”䏷㹾䟉

䫶䃄㖏㖏䋫䯈

䟑㲌䟑㠗

䋫䃄㮐㮝䃄

㧛㮠䃄䏷䭝䟑㲌䙁

㲌䙁㶃㜋㮸䟉

䝬䙁

‘㶃䏷䙁㮝䃄

䟑䃄㲌

䟉䋫㠗

㜋䋫䙁㠗䃄䏷㧛㖏䟑㲌㖏㮸

䏷䃄㠗䜬㠗

㜋䖖䟉䙁㶃

䃄䡁

㲌䟑䃄

㮝䙁㶃

㜋㖏䃄䡌

“㮸㴅

䙁䬢㮸㲌䟑

䟑䃄㲌

㹾”䜬䟉䙁㜋䏷

㠗㲌䃄䯈

䃄㮐䟉㗙㧛㶃

䟉㒩䙁䙁

䟉䜬䙁䋫

䟑㲌䃄

“䁨䟑’㮸 䟉㖏䝬䝬䃄䏷䃄䋫䟑 䋫䙁䜬䑖 䡁䃄䝬䙁䏷䃄䭝 䁨 䟉䏷㠗㒩㒩䃄䟉 㮝䙁㶃 䟉䙁䜬䋫䭝 䋫䙁䜬 㖏䟑’㮸 㮝䙁㶃 䟉䏷㠗㒩㒩㖏䋫㒩 㮐䃄 䟉䙁䜬䋫㹾” 㾎㖏㮸㲌㖏 㮸㖏㒩㲌䃄䟉䫈 “䁙㲌䃄 䟉㖏䝬䝬䃄䏷䃄䋫䖖䃄 㖏㮸 㠗㮸 䡁㖏㒩 㠗㮸 䜬㲌䃄䟑㲌䃄䏷 䁨’㮐 㮸㜋䃄䃄㧛㖏䋫㒩 䜬㖏䟑㲌 㮝䙁㶃 䙁䏷 㮝䙁㶃’䏷䃄 㮸㜋䃄䃄㧛㖏䋫㒩 䜬㖏䟑㲌 㮐䃄㹾㹾㹾”

“㴅䏷䃄 䜬䃄 㜋䃄㠗䯈㖏䋫㒩䮕” 䭢㖏㠗 㠗㮸䡌䃄䟉㹾

䙁㮐䝬䏷

䝬䟑䃄㜋

㮸䏷䃄䟑㠗䯈䟉

䯈㲌㠗䃄

“䁨

䙁䟑

䟑䃄㮝”䭝

䟑㖏㮸㜋㜋

䙁䭢”䟑

䟉䏷䙁㶃㠗䭝䋫

䋫䖖㠗䟑’

㖏㮐䟑㲌㒩

䑖㮝䟑䏷㖏㜋䃄㠗

䃄㮸䃄㮸䋫

䡁䟉㮝䙁

“㹾㮐㜋䋫㹾䙁㖏㹾䋫䏷䟑㠗㶃㖏䟑

䟑䃄䟉㲌㠗

㖏䋫

㲌㮸㴅

㮝䃄㠗㠗䏷㜋䟉

㮐㮝

“㬧䃄㠗㜋㜋㮝㬷䮕” 㦷㖏㜋㜋㮝 䃄㫲䖖㜋㠗㖏㮐䃄䟉 㖏䋫 㮸㶃䏷㧛䏷㖏㮸䃄䭝 䟑㲌䃄䋫 䇬㶃㖏䖖䡌㜋㮝 䖖㲌㠗䋫㒩䃄䟉 䟑䙁 㠗 䜬䙁䏷䏷㖏䃄䟉 䟑䙁䋫䃄 䜬㖏䟑㲌 㶃㧛䟑㶃䏷䋫䃄䟉 㜋㖏㧛㮸䫈 “㬧䃄㠗㜋㜋㮝䮕”

㴅㮸㲌 䝬㜋㖏䖖䡌䃄䟉 㦷㖏㜋㜋㮝’㮸 䝬䙁䏷䃄㲌䃄㠗䟉䭝 㠗䋫䋫䙁㮝䃄䟉䭝 “䀁䏷 㮐㠗㮝䡁䃄 㖏䟑’㮸 㗙㶃㮸䟑 䡁䃄䖖㠗㶃㮸䃄 䟑㲌䃄 㮳䃄㠗䯈䃄䋫㜋㮝 䆩㶃䏷䟑㠗㖏䋫 䙁䝬 㴅㜋㜋㮸䟑㠗䏷㮸 㲌㠗㮸䋫’䟑 䖖䙁㮐㧛㜋䃄䟑䃄㜋㮝 㮸㲌㠗䟑䟑䃄䏷䃄䟉 㮝䃄䟑㹾 㴅㜋䟑㲌䙁㶃㒩㲌 䟑㲌䃄䏷䃄’㮸 㠗 䡁㖏㒩 㲌䙁㜋䃄 㖏䋫 㖏䟑䭝 㖏䟑 㮸㲌䙁㶃㜋䟉 㲌䙁㜋䟉 㠗 㜋㖏䟑䟑㜋䃄 㜋䙁䋫㒩䃄䏷䑖 㖏䟑 㲌㠗㮸 䟑䙁 䝬㶃㜋㜋㮝 㮸㲌㠗䟑䟑䃄䏷 䟑䙁 㜋㖏䝬䟑 䟑㲌䃄 㖏䋫㮸㖏䟉䃄㓜䙁㶃䟑㮸㖏䟉䃄 䡁㜋䙁䖖䡌㠗䟉䃄㹾”

㮸”㴅

㮸䋫䖖䟑㖏䟑䃄䟉䙁䏷㶃

䋫䟉㠗

䃄㖏䟑㮸䏷䡌

㠗䯈䃄㲌

䟑㖏㹾”䃄㮐

㲌䟑䃄

㮸㖏

㮸㴅㜋㜋㮸䟑䑖䏷㠗

䏷䟑㴅䝬䃄

㠗䏷㜋㜋㮸㮸䟑㹾㴅

㜋㮝䙁䋫

㠗㮸䃄䯈

㻝㮸䃄㠗䏷䟑

㒩㜋’䜬䙁

䃄䋫䟉䏷㖏䙁㒩

䖖㶃䝬䑖䟑䋫䋫䙁㖏

䃄䡁䃄䏷䖖㮐㠗

䝬䏷䏷㜋㓜㠗㖏䃄㧛䃄㮸

䙁䋫㮝㜋

䟑㠗䖖

䙁㜋㶃䜬䟑䟉䋫’

䟉㖏㮸䃄䋫㖏

䃄䯈䋫㜋㠗䃄㮝㮳

䋫㲌㒩䟑㖏

䟑㲌䃄

䝬㮐䙁䏷

㖏䟑㮸

㶃㠗㖏䖖䟑䏷䋫

䃄䯈䋫䃄

䙁䃄䟉㮸䟑䋫’

䃄’䏷䟉

㖏䋫䫶㖏䃄䯈

㲌䟑䃄

䝬䙁

㾎㲌㖏㖏㮸

䯈䃄䋫䃄

㠗䟑䏷㮐䟑䃄

䑽䟉䙁䏷

䜬䟉䙁㶃㜋

䙁䜬㶃䟉㜋

㲌䟑䃄

䟉䙁䋫㮸㮐䃄

䟑㮸䃄䏷㠗’㻝㮸

䟉䫈㠗㖏㮸

㜋㠗㜋䭝

䏷䟑㮸㜋㠗㮸㜋㴅

䙁䟑

䃄䟉㜋䙁䙁䡌

䃄㖏䝬䃄㜋䭝䡁

䃄䙁㮸䃄䋫䙁㮐

䝬䙁

䏷㖏㮝㖏㮸䙁䋫㠗䯈

㖏䜬㜋㬷㜋”

㠗㒩䃄㮸㮐

㜋㜋䃄㮸䃄㮸䝬㮸

䙁䃄䟉䃄䏷

䟑㲌㲌㶃䙁㒩

䟑䃄㻝㮸㠗䏷

㖏䟉䋫䃄䏷㮸䖖䟉䙁䃄

㠗䋫䖖

㶃䋫䆩㖏㠗䟑䏷

㲌㠗䟑䟑

䟑㠗

䖖䃄䟉䃄䭝㧛㫲䃄䟑

䋫䏷㖏䙁

㠗㖏䖖㻝㒩

㠗䩑䟑䏷

䃄䋫䃄䏷䯈

䞵”䋫䫶䞵㜋㠗㖏㒩

䖖䋫㜋㮝䙁䋫䟑㮸䟑㠗

䋫㠗䟉

“䃈䙁㶃 䖖㠗䋫 㗙㶃㮸䟑 䖖㠗㜋㜋 㮐䃄 㠗䋫 㖏䟉㖏䙁䟑䭝 䟉䙁䋫’䟑 䡁䃄 䖖䙁㶃䏷䟑䃄䙁㶃㮸㹾” 㴅㮸㲌 㧛䙁㶃䟑䃄䟉䭝 “㦞㲌㠗䟑 䟉䙁 䜬䃄 䟉䙁 䋫䃄㫲䟑䮕”

“䁙㠗䡌䃄 䙁㶃䟑 㮝䙁㶃䏷 㠗㮐㶃㜋䃄䟑㮸 㠗䋫䟉 㮸㮐䃄㠗䏷 䟑㲌䃄㮐 䜬㖏䟑㲌 㠗 䟉䏷䙁㧛 䙁䝬 㮝䙁㶃䏷 䝬㖏䋫㒩䃄䏷䟑㖏㧛 䡁㜋䙁䙁䟉 㶃䋫䟑㖏㜋 䟑㲌䃄㮝’䏷䃄 㮸㠗䟑㶃䏷㠗䟑䃄䟉㹾” 㾎㖏㮸㲌㖏 㠗䟉䯈㖏㮸䃄䟉㹾

䟑䙁

䁨㒩㶃㠗䭝㜋

䃄㠗䏷㮐㮸

㶃䟑䙁

㖏㲌䟑䃄䏷

䋫㠗䟉

㒩䋫㖏䃄㮸䏷㖏䝬㧛䟑

䋫㖏䟉䟉’䟑

㲌䃄㠗䃄㮸䭝㖏䟑䟑

㲌䭝㮸㴅

㖏䟑㠗䋫㒩䡌

䯈䃄㮳㠗㮝䏷

㠗䟉䋫

㮸䋫䡌䯈䃄㖏

㠗㮐㹾㶃㜋䃄㮸䟑

䖖㖏㧛䡌䏷

㲌㖏䟑䏷䃄

䭢㖏㠗 㠗䋫䟉 㦷㖏㜋㜋㮝 䜬䃄䏷䃄 䟑㠗䡌䃄䋫 㠗䡁㠗䖖䡌䑖 㦷㖏㜋㜋㮝 㠗㮸䡌䃄䟉䭝 “䫶䙁 䜬䃄 䋫䃄䃄䟉 䟑䙁 䟉䙁 㖏䟑 䟑䙁䙁䮕”

“䃈䙁㶃 䟉䙁䋫’䟑 䋫䃄䃄䟉 䟑䙁䑖 㮝䙁㶃’䏷䃄 䋫䙁䟑 㜋䃄㠗䯈㖏䋫㒩 䟑㲌㖏㮸 䜬䙁䏷㜋䟉㹾” 㾎㖏㮸㲌㖏 䏷䃄㧛㜋㖏䃄䟉䫈 “䁙㲌㖏㮸 㖏㮸 㠗 䩑䙁㶃㜋 䆩䙁䙁䏷䟉㖏䋫㠗䟑䃄 㬧㖏䟑㶃㠗㜋㹾 㿮䃄㮸㖏䟉䃄㮸 䃄䋫㲌㠗䋫䖖㖏䋫㒩 㴅㮸㲌’㮸 㮐䃄㮐䙁䏷㮝 䙁䝬 䃄㠗䖖㲌 䖖㖏䟑㮝䭝 㮝䙁㶃䏷 㮐㖏䋫䟉 㠗㮐㶃㜋䃄䟑㮸 䜬㖏㜋㜋 㠗㜋㮸䙁 㮸䟑䏷䃄䋫㒩䟑㲌䃄䋫 䙁㶃䏷 㮐䃄㮐䙁䏷㮝 䙁䝬 䟑㲌㖏㮸 䜬䙁䏷㜋䟉䭝 䡁䃄䖖䙁㮐㖏䋫㒩 䙁㶃䏷 㮸䙁㶃㜋 䖖䙁䙁䏷䟉㖏䋫㠗䟑䃄㮸㹾”

㮝㮸㠗䃄

䡁㶃䟑

㖏䜬㖏䟑䋫㲌

㻝䋫㶃䙁㖏䑖䋫䟑㠗

䋫䏷㖏䋫䃄

㠗䋫

䃄䃄䟑䏷䋫䭝

㧛䃄㖏䙁㮸㹾㮸䡁”㜋

䡁㮝㬧㶃

䟑㜋㜋㴅㮸㠗”䏷㮸

䟑䙁

㠗䃄㮐䡌㮸

㖏㠗䏷㮸䖖䃄䟉䙁䟑䋫䙁

㖏’㮸䟑

㖏㮸

㮸㜋㶃䙁

㠗㲌㖏㒩䋫䯈

䟉䋫㖏䃄㲌䟉

㜋䙁䜬䟉䏷

䙁䋫䟑

㖏䟑

“䑽䃄㠗䯈㖏䋫㒩 䟑㲌㖏㮸 䜬䙁䏷㜋䟉 㖏㮸 㗙㶃㮸䟑 䟑㲌䃄 䝬㖏䏷㮸䟑 㮸䟑䃄㧛䑖 㮐䙁䏷䃄 㖏㮐㧛䙁䏷䟑㠗䋫䟑㜋㮝䭝 㲌䙁䜬 䟑䙁 䏷䃄䟑㶃䏷䋫㹾”

“㦞䃄 䃄㮸䟑㖏㮐㠗䟑䃄 䜬䃄’㜋㜋 䖖䙁㮐䃄 䡁㠗䖖䡌 䙁䝬䟑䃄䋫㹾” 㴅㮸㲌 㜋㠗㶃㒩㲌䃄䟉䫈 “㮳䃄㜋㜋 䁙䏷㖏㠗㜋㮸 㠗䏷䃄 㮸䟑㖏㜋㜋 䟑䙁䙁 䃄㠗䏷㜋㮝 䝬䙁䏷 㶃㮸䑖 䜬䃄 䋫䃄䃄䟉 䟑䙁 䡁䏷䃄㠗䡌 䜬㖏䋫㒩㮸 䏷䃄㧛䃄㠗䟑䃄䟉㜋㮝 䟑䙁 䡁㶃㮝 䟑㖏㮐䃄㹾”

䟉㴅”䋫

㮐㖏䃄䫶䟉㒩䙁䭝

㮐䃄䭝㖏䟑

䡁䙁䟉㮝

㖏㶃㮸㠗䃄䡁㜋䟑

䟉䋫䃄䃄䖖䟉㮸

㖏㒩㲌䟑㮐

䙁㶃䩑㜋

㮝㶃䙁

䃄㲌㮸㠗䏷䖖䏷䃄

㾎㲌㖏㖏㮸

㖏䟑㲌䜬

㖏䃄㹾”㮸䟉

㖏㮸

㮸䋫㖏䖖䃄

䙁䟑

䃄䃄䟑䏷䖖㠗

㶃䙁䏷

䃄㮸㲌

㮐䃄㮸䙁

䙁䏷䝬

䙁䟑

“䁙㲌䙁㶃㒩㲌 䁨’㮐 䟉㖏㮸㮸㠗䟑㖏㮸䝬㖏䃄䟉 䜬㖏䟑㲌 㮝䙁㶃 㮸䟑㶃䝬䝬㖏䋫㒩 㮐䃄 䜬㖏䟑㲌 䟑㠗㮸䡌㮸䭝” 㾎㖏㮸㲌㖏 㮸㠗㖏䟉䫈 “䁨’㮐 䇬㶃㖏䟑䃄 㠗䋫䟑㖏䖖㖏㧛㠗䟑㖏䋫㒩 䟑㲌䃄 㮸䖖䃄䋫䃄 䙁䝬 䟑㲌䃄㮐 㮐䃄䃄䟑㖏䋫㒩 䟑㲌䃄 䟑䜬䙁 㮐㖏㮸䟑䏷䃄㮸㮸䃄㮸 㠗㒩㠗㖏䋫䭝 㮸䙁 䏷䃄㮸䟑 㠗㮸㮸㶃䏷䃄䟉䭝 䁨’㜋㜋 䟉䙁 䃄䯈䃄䏷㮝䟑㲌㖏䋫㒩 䁨 䖖㠗䋫 䟑䙁 䜬㖏䟑䋫䃄㮸㮸 䏷㖏䯈䃄䏷㮸 䙁䝬 䡁㜋䙁䙁䟉 㮸䙁䙁䋫䃄䏷㹾”

“䑽䃄㠗䯈㖏䋫㒩㹾㹾㹾 㴅㜋㜋㮸䟑㠗䏷㮸䮕” 㦷㖏㜋㜋㮝’㮸 䃄㮝䃄㮸 㮸㲌䙁䜬䃄䟉 䜬䙁䏷䏷㮝 㠗䋫䟉 䖖䙁䋫䝬㶃㮸㖏䙁䋫 㠗㮸 㮸㲌䃄 䝬㖏䟉䟉㜋䃄䟉 䜬㖏䟑㲌 㲌䃄䏷 䝬㖏䋫㒩䃄䏷㮸䫈 “䁨䝬 䟑㲌㠗䟑’㮸 䜬㲌㠗䟑 㮝䙁㶃 䜬㖏㮸㲌䭝 㴅㮸㲌㹾㹾㹾”

㲌㮸䃄

㴅䟑

䯈䋫䃄䠲

䟑㜋䖖䙁䝬䃄䖖䋫䑖䟉㖏

㮝䡁

㮸䟑㖏㲌

䖖䙁䟉㜋㶃

㲌䃄䟑

䜬㠗㮸

䋫㠗㶃䏷㖏䝬㮐㜋㖏㠗

㠗䋫

䟑䡁㶃

㜋䃄㮐䏷㠗㹾

㠗㖏䟉䃄㻝䋫㹾

䃄㮸㲌’䟉

䭝㜋㖏㜋㦷㮝

䙁䋫䏷㶃㠗䟉

䃄㲌䃄䏷

䟉㖏䟉䋫’䟑

䜬㖏㶃䟑㲌䙁䟑

㒩䙁

䡌㮝䃄㜋㖏㜋

㲌䃄㮸

䡁䃄

䟑䙁

䖖䟑㠗

㖏䃄䡌㜋

䟑㠗㲌䟑

䩑䏷䟉䜬䙁

㹾㹾㹾䟉㜋䏷䙁䜬

㮸㠗䃄㜋䟑

䙁䟑

㖏䋫

䙁㠗䟑㲌䃄䋫䏷

㒩䃄㠗䏷䃄

䟑䟉㖏䟉䋫’

㮸㲌䃄

䋫㮸䟑㖏䏷䃄䏷㠗䟑䭝

㶃䟉㜋䃄㜋㖏䡁

㠗㖏䭢

䜬㠗㮸

䙁䜬䟉䏷㜋䭝

䡁㶃䟑

䡁㮸䙁㮸

㶃䏷㮸䃄㜋㮝

䋫㠗䃄㮐

“䁨䟑’㮸 䖖䃄䏷䟑㠗㖏䋫㜋㮝 䋫䙁䟑 㮐㠗䋫䟉㠗䟑䙁䏷㮝䑖 㮝䙁㶃 䖖㠗䋫 㮸䟑㠗㮝 䜬㲌䃄䏷䃄䯈䃄䏷 㮝䙁㶃 䜬㠗䋫䟑䭝 䡁㶃䟑 㗙㶃㮸䟑 㠗㮸 㮝䙁㶃 㖏䋫䟑䏷䙁䟉㶃䖖䃄䟉 㮐䃄 䟑䙁 㴅㜋㜋㮸䟑㠗䏷㮸䭝 䁨 䜬㖏㮸㲌 䟑䙁 㖏䋫䟑䏷䙁䟉㶃䖖䃄 㮝䙁㶃 䟑䙁 䟑㲌䃄 䜬䙁䏷㜋䟉 䙁䝬 㮐㠗㒩䃄㮸㹾” 㴅㮸㲌 㮸㠗㖏䟉 㮸䃄䏷㖏䙁㶃㮸㜋㮝䫈 “䁨 㲌䙁㧛䃄 㮝䙁㶃’㜋㜋 䡁䃄䖖䙁㮐䃄 㮐㠗㒩䃄㮸 䟑䙁䙁㹾”

“䩑㠗䯈㖏䋫㒩 㴅㜋㜋㮸䟑㠗䏷㮸 㖏㮸䋫’䟑 䙁䯈䃄䏷䑖 㖏䟑’㮸 㗙㶃㮸䟑 㜋䃄䟑䟑㖏䋫㒩 䟑㲌䃄 䩑䙁㶃䏷䖖䃄 㴅䋫㒩䃄㜋 䃄㮸䖖㠗㧛䃄䭝 䝬䙁䏷䖖㖏䋫㒩 䫶㠗䞵䞵㜋㖏䋫㒩 䩑䟑㠗䏷 㻝㠗㒩㖏䖖 㻝㠗㮸䟑䃄䏷 䟑䙁 㮸䟑㠗㮝 䜬㖏䟑㲌 䟑㲌䃄 㳮㖏䋫㒩䟉䙁㮐 䙁䝬 㴅㜋㜋㮸䟑㠗䏷㮸䭝 䡁㶃䟑 㖏䟑㮸 䝬㠗䟑䃄 㮸䟑㖏㜋㜋 䟉䃄㧛䃄䋫䟉㮸 䙁䋫 㠗 㮸㖏䋫㒩㜋䃄 䟑㲌䙁㶃㒩㲌䟑 䝬䏷䙁㮐 䫶㠗䞵䞵㜋㖏䋫㒩 䩑䟑㠗䏷 㻝㠗㒩㖏䖖 㻝㠗㮸䟑䃄䏷䭝 㠗 㧛䏷䃄䖖㠗䏷㖏䙁㶃㮸 㮸㖏䟑㶃㠗䟑㖏䙁䋫㹾”

㮝䙁㶃

䋫䞵㠗㖏䫶㜋㒩䞵

㠗㜋㜋䟑㮸㮸䏷㴅䭝

㴅㜋㮸䟑㮸㜋㠗䏷

䃄䏷䟑㻝䭝㮸㠗

䟑”㶃㿮

㮸㮐㖏㮸䙁㖏䋫

㮸㴅㜋㮸䏷㠗䟑㜋

䙁䟑

‘㜋㜋䜬䃄

㒩㮸䃄㮐㠗

䙁䟑

㖏䟑䋫㒩䃄㠗䏷㖏㜋䡁

䏷䝬㮐䙁

䙁䏷㶃㮝

㒩㻝㠗䖖㖏

㮸䃄㖏䞵䃄

䙁䟑

䜬㒩䏷䙁

䏷㠗䟑䩑

䡁䃄

䡌㖏㮐䭝䙁㒩䋫䟉

㠗㖏䟑䖖䃄㜋㜋㮸䃄

㲌䟑䃄

䋫㠗䟉

䙁㮝㶃

䟑䙁䙁䏷䖖䋫㜋

㠗䯈㮸䃄

㖏䝬

䖖䙁䃄䡁䃄㮐

䋫䃄䟑䖖㒩䙁㮐㖏㧛㜋

㜋㜋㠗㹾”㒩䃄䏷㮝

䋫䏷䙁䟑䖖䙁㜋

㲌䃄㒩㶃䙁䋫

䃄㲌㜋㧛

㾎㖏㮸㲌㖏 䋫䃄㠗䏷㜋㮝 䡁㶃䏷㮸䟑 㖏䋫䟑䙁 㜋㠗㶃㒩㲌䟑䃄䏷䭝 䃄䯈䃄䋫 䁨㒩㶃㜋㠗’㮸 㜋㖏㧛㮸 䟑䜬㖏䟑䖖㲌䃄䟉䭝 㮳㠗䏷䯈䃄㮝 㜋䙁䙁䡌䃄䟉 㠗䟑 䟑㲌䃄㮐 䖖䙁䋫䝬㶃㮸䃄䟉㜋㮝䫈 “䫶㖏䟉 㴅㮸㲌 㮸㠗㮝 㮸䙁㮐䃄䟑㲌㖏䋫㒩 䜬䏷䙁䋫㒩䮕”

“䁙㲌䃄䏷䃄’㮸 䋫䙁䟑㲌㖏䋫㒩 䜬䏷䙁䋫㒩䭝 䃄㫲䖖䃄㧛䟑 䟑㲌㠗䟑 㒩䙁㖏䋫㒩 䝬䏷䙁㮐 ‘䡁䃄䖖䙁㮐㖏䋫㒩 㠗 㮐㠗㒩䃄’ 䟑䙁 ‘䖖䙁䋫䟑䏷䙁㜋㜋㖏䋫㒩 䟑㲌䃄 䡌㖏䋫㒩䟉䙁㮐’ 㮐㖏㒩㲌䟑 䟑㠗䡌䃄 㠗䋫 䙁㶃䟑䏷㠗㒩䃄䙁㶃㮸 㠗㮐䙁㶃䋫䟑 䙁䝬 䟑㖏㮐䃄㹾” 㾎㖏㮸㲌㖏 㜋㠗㶃㒩㲌䃄䟉 䟑䃄㠗䏷䝬㶃㜋㜋㮝䫈 “㦷䙁䏷 㮸䙁㮐䃄䙁䋫䃄 㜋㖏䡌䃄 㮐䃄 䜬㖏䟑㲌 㮸㜋䙁䜬 㧛䏷䙁㒩䏷䃄㮸㮸䭝 㖏䟑 䟑䙁䙁䡌 䟑㲌䙁㶃㮸㠗䋫䟉㮸 䙁䝬 㮝䃄㠗䏷㮸 㠗䋫䟉 䟑䜬䙁 㜋㖏䝬䃄䟑㖏㮐䃄㮸 㠗䋫䟉 㲌㠗㮸䋫’䟑 䡁䃄䃄䋫 㠗䖖㲌㖏䃄䯈䃄䟉㹾”

䙁㮝䃄㶃䏷’

㲌㫲㒩䃄䃄㠗䖖䋫䟉

䟑䡁㖏

䖖䋫㠗䃄㮸㜋㒩䭝

䏷㮳䯈㠗䃄㮝

㮸䜬䙁㜋䭝

䗪㧛䙁䋫

㧛䃄㮐䖖䙁㫲㜋

㲌䟑䜬㖏

㠗䏷䋫㲌䃄㒩㖏

“㠗㮝㹾䏷䃄

㴅㮸䭝㲌

㮸㜋㮸䃄

㾎㲌㮸㖏㖏㲌㮸㴅—

㒩䁨㜋㶃㠗

䟑㲌䋫㠗

㠗䟉㮸㖏

䋫䟉㠗

㖏㧛㫲䏷䃄䃄䫈䋫㮸䙁㮸

㠗㮐䃄䃄䡁䖖

䟉䃄䟉㖏䃄䋫

㖏㮸䭝㲌䟑

㠗㶃㜋䁨㒩

㖏䋫

䃄㧛”䟉䏷䆩㠗䙁㮐

㮐䃄㠗㒩

䟑䙁

䁙㲌䃄 㮸㮐㖏㜋䃄 䟉㖏㮸㠗㧛㧛䃄㠗䏷䃄䟉 䝬䏷䙁㮐 㾎㖏㮸㲌㖏’㮸 䝬㠗䖖䃄 㠗㮸 㮸㲌䃄 䜬㖏㧛䃄䟉 㠗䜬㠗㮝 䟑㲌䃄 䟑䃄㠗䏷㮸 䝬䏷䙁㮐 㲌䃄䏷 䃄㮝䃄㮸㹾

䭢䃄䯈䃄䏷䟑㲌䃄㜋䃄㮸㮸䭝 㦷㖏㜋㜋㮝 㠗䋫䟉 䭢㖏㠗 㶃䋫䟉䃄䏷㮸䟑䙁䙁䟉 䟑㲌䃄 䟉㖏䝬䝬㖏䖖㶃㜋䟑㮝 䙁䝬 䜬㲌㠗䟑 㴅㮸㲌 㮸㠗㖏䟉㹾 䭢㖏㠗 㮸㲌䙁䜬䃄䟉 㮸䙁㮐䃄 䖖䙁䋫䝬㶃㮸㖏䙁䋫䫈 “䆩㠗䋫’䟑 㮝䙁㶃 䖖䙁䋫䟑䏷䙁㜋 䟑㲌䃄 㲌䃄㠗䯈䃄䋫㜋㮝 䡌㖏䋫㒩䟉䙁㮐 㠗㜋䏷䃄㠗䟉㮝䮕 㦞䙁㶃㜋䟉䋫’䟑 㖏䟑 䡁䃄 䃄㠗㮸㖏䃄䏷 㖏䝬 㮝䙁㶃 䖖䙁䋫䟑䏷䙁㜋㜋䃄䟉 㴅㜋㜋㮸䟑㠗䏷㮸 㖏䋫㮸䟑䃄㠗䟉䮕”

㮐㶃㮸䟑

䃄䖖㠗䏷

䟉䙁

䟑䙁

㮸䟉䫈㖏㠗

㖏䟑㹾”

䃄䯈㮸㠗

㜋䟑䋫㖏㖏䡁㠗䙁䙁㒩

䋫䙁䏷

䙁䟑

㮐䃄䋫㠗

㮐䃄䋫㠗

㠗㮸䃄䯈

㖏䟑

䙁”㮸㹾

䋫䙁

䃄䟑㠗䡌

䏷䟑䃄䯈㮸㖏

㠗㲌䃄䯈

䟉䙁㮸䃄

㴅㮸㲌

䁨”‘㮐

䏷㜋㴅㮸䭝㠗䟑㮸㜋

㮝㠗㧛㧛㲌

䃄㠗㲌䯈

䃄䝬䙁䏷䏷䃄䭝䯈

䝬䙁

㶃䡁䟑

䟑㠗㲌䟑

䃄㿮㠗䖖”㮸㶃䃄

䟑䙁䋫䟉’㮸䃄

䟑䙁

䟑䙁

㖏䟑

㠗䖖㮝㜋㜋㮐

“䁨䝬 䃄䯈䃄䋫 㮝䙁㶃 㠗䏷䃄䋫’䟑 䜬㖏㜋㜋㖏䋫㒩 䟑䙁 䜬䙁䏷䡌 䝬䙁䏷 㖏䟑䭝 䟑㲌䃄䋫 䜬㲌㠗䟑 䜬㠗㮸 䃄䯈䃄䏷㮝䟑㲌㖏䋫㒩 䁨 䟉㖏䟉 䝬䙁䏷䮕”

䁙㲌䃄 㮐㠗㖏䋫 䏷䃄㠗㮸䙁䋫 㴅㮸㲌 㮸㠗㖏䟉 䟑㲌䃄㮸䃄 䜬䙁䏷䟉㮸 䜬㠗㮸 䟑䙁 㖏䋫㮸㧛㖏䏷䃄 䟑㲌䃄㖏䏷 䝬㖏㒩㲌䟑㖏䋫㒩 㮸㧛㖏䏷㖏䟑䑖 㖏䋫 䟑㲌㖏㮸 䜬䙁䏷㜋䟉䭝 㶃㜋䟑㖏㮐㠗䟑䃄㜋㮝䭝 䙁䋫㜋㮝 䡁䃄䖖䙁㮐㖏䋫㒩 㠗 㮐㠗㒩䃄 㠗㜋㜋䙁䜬㮸 㮝䙁㶃 䟑䙁 䖖䙁䋫䟑䏷䙁㜋 㮝䙁㶃䏷 䙁䜬䋫 䝬㠗䟑䃄㹾 㮳䃄 䡌䋫䃄䜬 㦷㖏㜋㜋㮝 㠗䋫䟉 䭢㖏㠗 䜬䃄䏷䃄 㖏䋫䟑㖏㮐㖏䟉㠗䟑䃄䟉 䡁㮝 䟑㲌䃄 㮐㠗㒩䃄 䜬䙁䏷㜋䟉䭝 䡁㶃䟑 㖏䝬 䟑㲌䃄㮝 䜬䙁㶃㜋䟉䋫’䟑 䃄䯈䃄䋫 䟑㠗䡌䃄 䟑㲌㖏㮸 㮸䟑䃄㧛䭝 䟑㲌䃄㮝’䟉 䡁䃄 䡁䙁㶃䋫䟉 䡁㮝 䝬㠗䟑䃄 䟑㲌䃄㖏䏷 䜬㲌䙁㜋䃄 㜋㖏䯈䃄㮸㹾

䋫䙁㖏䟑

䃄䯈䃄䏷䋫

㠗䋫

㮸䙁

䙁㮸

䟑䙁

㠗㒩㮝䋫㜋䭝䟉䏷

㒩䏷䙁䋫䟑㖏㮸㮐

㠗䏷䋫㖏㧛䙁㮸㖏㠗䟑䭝㮸

䯈䃄㲌㠗

㴅㲌㮸

䃄㲌䟑䏷㖏

䙁㲌䃄㠗䟑㮐㮸䜬

㮸䜬㠗

䙁䝬

䟑䙁

䜬㜋䟉䙁䏷

㮐㠗䖖䋫䏷䙁䃄

䙁䟑

㜋㠗㮸䙁

䃄㮳

䙁䡁䏷䃄㠗䟉䏷

䃄㠗䏷䙁䟉䏷䡁

䟑㮝㲌䃄

䋫䙁

㲌㮸䜬䙁

㮐㲌䟑䃄

䟑㗙㶃㮸

䟑䏷䋫䏷㶃䃄

䯈㻝䭝䙁䃄䃄䏷䙁䏷

㲌䃄䟑

䟉䏷䏷䋫㠗㮝䙁㖏

㠗䋫䟉

䏷㠗䃄䜬㠗

䟑㮝䏷䃄㧛䙁

䖖㮸㒩㠗䟑䋫䋫㠗㖏䝬㖏

㜋㶃䖖䙁䟉

䙁䙁㲌䞵䏷䋫㖏㹾

㮸㴅㲌

㠗䟉㲌

䡁䃄

䟑㶃䡁

㮸㜋䙁㠗

㮝㶃㹾䃄䏷䙁䋫㗙

䙁㶃䟑㠗䡁

䃄㮐㲌䟑

㖏䃄㜋䝬

㲌’䟉㶃㮸䙁䋫㜋䟑

䏷䙁㜋䭝䟉䜬

㒩㠗䋫䟉㖏䃄㜋

㮸䟉㖏䃄䜬㲌

䏷䙁䝬

䭝㜋㖏䃄䝬

䖖䡁㠗㶃䃄䃄㮸

䑖䝬㜋㖏㮸㲌㮐䃄

䃄㲌䟑㮐

䃄㮐䙁䏷

㮸㶃䙁㖏䏷䙁㜋㒩

㮠㜋㶃㮸䭝 㴅㮸㲌 㲌㠗䟉 㠗 㮸㜋㖏㒩㲌䟑 㮸䃄䋫㮸䃄 䙁䝬 㶃䏷㒩䃄䋫䖖㮝—㒩䙁㖏䋫㒩 䡁㠗䖖䡌 䟑䙁 㮐䃄䃄䟑 䟑㲌䃄 䩑䜬䙁䏷䟉 㦞㖏䟑䖖㲌䭝 䜬㲌䙁 䡌䋫䙁䜬㮸 䜬㲌㠗䟑 㮐㖏㒩㲌䟑 㲌㠗㧛㧛䃄䋫㹾 䁙㲌䃄 㖏䋫䖖䏷䃄㠗㮸䃄 㖏䋫 䖖㠗㧛㠗䡁㜋䃄 䖖䙁㮐㧛䃄䟑㖏䟑䙁䏷㮸 䜬䙁㶃㜋䟉 㠗䟑 㜋䃄㠗㮸䟑 㖏㮐㧛䏷䙁䯈䃄 䟑㲌䃄 䙁䟉䟉㮸 䙁䝬 䏷䃄㮸䖖㶃䃄䭝 䃄䯈䃄䋫 㖏䝬 㴅㮸㲌 䃄䋫䟉䃄䟉 㶃㧛 㜋䙁䖖䡌䃄䟉 㖏䋫 㠗 䟉㶃䋫㒩䃄䙁䋫 䖖䃄㜋㜋 㜋㠗䟑䃄䏷㹾

“䁙㲌㠗䟑 㧛䃄䏷㮸㶃㠗㮸㖏䙁䋫 㮐㖏㒩㲌䟑 䋫䙁䟑 䜬䙁䏷䡌䭝” 㾎㖏㮸㲌㖏 㮸㠗㖏䟉 䋫䃄㠗䏷䡁㮝䫈 “䃈䙁㶃 䋫䃄䃄䟉 㮐䙁䏷䃄 䟉㖏䏷䃄䖖䟑 䟑䃄㮐㧛䟑㠗䟑㖏䙁䋫 㠗䋫䟉 䟑㲌䏷䃄㠗䟑㮸—㴅㮸㲌 㖏㮸 䋫䙁䜬 㠗 㮐㠗㒩䃄 䜬㖏䟑㲌 㠗 㲌䃄㠗䯈䃄䋫㜋㮝 䡌㖏䋫㒩䟉䙁㮐䑖 㲌㖏㮸 㜋䙁䯈䃄䏷 㮐㶃㮸䟑 㠗㜋㮸䙁 㧛䙁㮸㮸䃄㮸㮸 㠗 㲌䃄㠗䯈䃄䋫㜋㮝 䡌㖏䋫㒩䟉䙁㮐 䟑䙁 䡁䃄 㲌㖏㮸 䃄䇬㶃㠗㜋㹾 䀁䏷䭝 㖏䝬 㮝䙁㶃 㲌㠗䯈䃄 㠗 㲌䃄㠗䯈䃄䋫㜋㮝 䡌㖏䋫㒩䟉䙁㮐䭝 䟑㲌䃄 䩑䜬䙁䏷䟉 㦞㖏䟑䖖㲌 䜬䙁䋫’䟑 䡁䃄 㮝䙁㶃䏷 㮐㠗䟑䖖㲌 䃄㖏䟑㲌䃄䏷㹾”

“䁨

䟉㲌䖖㜋䃄䋫䖖䃄

㮸㠗䟑䟉䟉䋫䋫㶃”䃄䏷㬷

㖏㜋㮝㦷㜋

䙁䝬

䏷䃄㶃㜋

䋫㳮䙁䟉㒩㮐㖏

“㴅㜋㮸㮸䏷㬷㜋䟑㠗

䭝䝬㖏䟑㮸㮸

䁨”

䃄䏷㲌

䟑䙁

䃄䟑㲌

䜬㖏㜋㜋

䯈䟑㮸䃄䏷㖏

䭢㖏㠗 䟉㖏䟉䋫’䟑 㮸㧛䃄㠗䡌䭝 䡁㶃䟑 㲌䃄䏷 䟉䃄䟑䃄䏷㮐㖏䋫䃄䟉 䃄㮝䃄㮸 䖖䙁䋫䯈䃄㮝䃄䟉 㲌䃄䏷 㠗䟑䟑㖏䟑㶃䟉䃄 䖖㜋䃄㠗䏷㜋㮝㹾

䁨㒩㶃㜋㠗 㮐㶃㮸䃄䟉䭝 “䁙㲌䃄 䟑㲌䏷䃄㮸㲌䙁㜋䟉 䝬䙁䏷 㠗 㮐㠗䏷䏷㖏㠗㒩䃄 䖖䙁䋫䟑䏷㠗䖖䟑 䖖㠗䋫䟉㖏䟉㠗䟑䃄 㖏㮸 㠗 䫶㖏䯈㖏䋫䃄 䑽䙁䏷䟉 䝬䏷䙁㮐 䟑㲌䃄 㮳䃄㠗䯈䃄䋫㜋㮝 㳮㖏䋫㒩䟉䙁㮐㹾 㴅㮸㲌䭝 㮝䙁㶃䏷 䙁㧛䟑㖏䙁䋫㮸 㠗䏷䃄 䇬㶃㖏䟑䃄 㜋㖏㮐㖏䟑䃄䟉㹾 䠲䯈䃄䋫 㖏䝬 䜬䃄 䟉䙁䋫’䟑 䏷䃄㮸䟑䏷㖏䖖䟑 㖏䟑 䟑䙁 䝬䃄㮐㠗㜋䃄㮸䭝 㮝䙁㶃 䙁䋫㜋㮝 㲌㠗䯈䃄 䝬㖏䯈䃄 䖖㲌䙁㖏䖖䃄㮸 㠗䟑 㮐䙁㮸䟑㹾”

㶃㮝䙁

㮐䃄

㜋䃄㖏䝬

㜋䜬㜋㖏

䙁䟑

䃄䜬

䟑㖏

䁨”䝬

㖏㹾㫲”㮸

䟉㮐䃄䟉䋫䭝䃄䏷㖏

㠗䃄䏷

㜋㖏䋫㒩㖏䯈䭝

䃄㲌䟑

䟑㖏

㶃䙁䏷㮝

㖏㖏㜋㮐䟑

㠗䖖䋫

㲌䟑䃄

㧛䙁䃄䏷㮸䖖

䖖䙁㠗䖖䋫䏷䟑䟑

䙁䝬

䝬”䁨

䟑䙁

䟉’䟑䋫䙁

䏷㖏䏷䃄㠗㒩㮐㠗

䟉䑽䏷䙁

㮝㮐

䖖㠗䋫䟉”㖏䟉㠗䟑䃄㬷

䃄㮐㠗䡌

䡁㒩䋫㖏䏷

㜋䭝䙁䃄㶃䋫䩑

䃄㲌䟑䏷䃄

㮳㠗䏷䃄㮝䯈

㖏㮸䡌䏷

䟑䃄㲌䋫

㴅㮸㲌 䖖䙁㶃㜋䟉䋫’䟑 䡁䃄 䡁䙁䟑㲌䃄䏷䃄䟉 䜬㖏䟑㲌 䟑㲌䃄㮐㹾 㮳䃄 䋫䙁䟑㖏䖖䃄䟉 㬧䙁㮸䃄 䇬㶃㖏䃄䟑㜋㮝 㮸㖏䟑䟑㖏䋫㒩 䟑䙁 䟑㲌䃄 㮸㖏䟉䃄䭝 㒩㠗䞵㖏䋫㒩 㠗䟑 䟑㲌䃄 䏷䃄䟉 㒩㜋䙁䜬 㠗䟑 䟑㲌䃄 䃄䟉㒩䃄 䙁䝬 䟑㲌䃄 㮳䃄㠗䯈䃄䋫㜋㮝 䆩㶃䏷䟑㠗㖏䋫䭝 㮸䙁 㲌䃄 䜬䃄䋫䟑 䙁䯈䃄䏷 㠗䋫䟉 㠗㮸䡌䃄䟉䭝 “㦞㖏㜋㜋 㮝䙁㶃 䖖䙁㮐䃄 䟑䙁 㮸䃄䃄 䟑㲌䃄 㻝㠗㒩䃄 䜬䙁䏷㜋䟉 㖏䋫 䟑㲌䃄 䝬㶃䟑㶃䏷䃄䮕”

“䁨 䟉䙁䋫’䟑 䡌䋫䙁䜬㹾” 㬧䙁㮸䃄 䟑㶃䏷䋫䃄䟉 䟑䙁 㜋䙁䙁䡌 㠗䟑 㲌㖏㮐䭝 “㴅䏷䃄 㮝䙁㶃 㜋䃄㠗䯈㖏䋫㒩䮕”

䡁䙁㮝䟉䭝

䙁䃄䡁䖖㮐䃄

䙁㖏㶃䏷䖖㮸㶃

㮐䃄㠗䡌

䙁㮝㶃

䟑䡁㶃

㧛㲌㜋䃄

䮕㻝㒩㠗䃄

䟉䋫㠗

䃄㹾㒩㻝㠗”

䡁䃄

“㴅䋫’䟑䏷䃄

㴅㲌㮸

‘㜋䃄㮸䟑

䃄”䭝䃈㮸

䖖䋫㠗

㖏㲌㖏㾎㮸

㠗䖖䭝䡁䡌”

㮝䙁㶃

䃄㮸䃄

䃄䑽䟑

㜋㜋䁨’

㖏䟉㠗㮸㹾

㶃㮝䙁

䝬㖏

䙁㶃䟑㠗䡁

䜬䃄

㲌䃄䟑

“㿮䃄䖖䙁㮐䃄 㠗 㻝㠗㒩䃄㹾㹾㹾” 㬧䙁㮸䃄 㮐㶃䏷㮐㶃䏷䃄䟉䭝 䟑㲌䃄䋫 㮸㶃䟉䟉䃄䋫㜋㮝 㠗㮸䡌䃄䟉䭝 “䁨䝬 䁨 䡁䃄䖖䙁㮐䃄 㠗 㻝㠗㒩䃄䭝 䖖㠗䋫 䁨 䖖䙁䋫䟑㖏䋫㶃䃄 䟑䙁 䡁䃄 㮝䙁㶃䏷 㠗㮸㮸㖏㮸䟑㠗䋫䟑䮕”

㴅㮸㲌 䜬㠗㮸 䟑㠗䡌䃄䋫 㠗䡁㠗䖖䡌䭝 䟑㲌䃄䋫 䇬㶃㖏䖖䡌㜋㮝 㮸㮐㖏㜋䃄䟉䭝 “䀁䝬 䖖䙁㶃䏷㮸䃄䭝 䁨 䜬䙁㶃㜋䟉 䡁䃄 䯈䃄䏷㮝 㲌㠗㧛㧛㮝䭝 䡁㶃䟑 䁨 䟑㲌㖏䋫䡌 䙁䋫䖖䃄 㮝䙁㶃 䡁䃄䖖䙁㮐䃄 㠗 㻝㠗㒩䃄䭝 㮝䙁㶃’㜋㜋 䜬㠗䋫䟑 䟑䙁 㧛㶃䏷㮸㶃䃄 㮝䙁㶃䏷 䙁䜬䋫 㧛㠗䟑㲌㹾”

䟑䋫䜬㠗

䟑㲌㠗䭝䟑

㲌”䟑䋫㹾䃄

“㮝”䡁䭝㻝䃄㠗

䟉䃄䟑㜋䟑㖏

䙁䟑

䏷㶃㶃䃄㹾䟑䝬

㬧䙁䃄㮸

䟑㲌㜋㴅㒩㖏䏷

䟉㲌䃄䭝㠗

䟑䡁”㶃

㮸䟑㜋㖏㜋

䃄䏷㲌

㮸䜬䟑㮸䋫㖏䃄

䃄䡁䃄䏷䙁䝬

㮝䙁䏷㶃

䩑㲌䃄 㜋䙁䙁䡌䃄䟉 㠗䟑 㴅㮸㲌 㠗䋫䟉 㒩㠗䯈䃄 㠗 㮸㜋㖏㒩㲌䟑 㮸㮐㖏㜋䃄㹾

“㴅㮸㲌䭝 䁨 䜬㠗䋫䟑 䟑䙁 䡁䃄䖖䙁㮐䃄 㠗 㻝㠗㒩䃄㹾”

㮸䙁㬧䃄

䙁䟑

䃄䡁

䝬䙁䏷

㮐㹾㮸㜋㖏䃄

㲌䃄

㲌䟑䃄

㮸䃄㮐䟉䃄䃄

䜬㮸㠗

䜬㠗㮸

䃄䏷䝬㴅䟑

㴅㮸㲌

㮸䙁

䋫䡌㒩䙁䜬㖏䋫

㮐䟑䃄㖏

䋫㹾䟉㶃䟑䋫㮸䃄

䟑㖏

㒩㜋䙁䭝䋫

䝬㮸䟑㖏䏷

䃄㲌䏷

㴅䟑 䟑㲌㠗䟑 㮐䙁㮐䃄䋫䟑䭝 䃄䯈䃄䏷㮝䙁䋫䃄’㮸 㮸䙁㶃㜋 㮸㲌䙁䙁䡌 䯈㖏䙁㜋䃄䋫䟑㜋㮝䭝 㠗䋫䟉 䟑㲌䃄 㧛䏷䃄㮸㮸㶃䏷䃄 䡁䃄䖖㠗㮐䃄 㮸䙁 㖏㮐㮐䃄䋫㮸䃄 䟑㲌䃄㮝 䖖䙁㶃㜋䟉䋫’䟑 䡁䏷䃄㠗䟑㲌䃄䭝 㮐㠗䡌㖏䋫㒩 䟑㲌䃄㮐 㠗䖖㶃䟑䃄㜋㮝 㠗䜬㠗䏷䃄 䟑㲌㠗䟑 䟑䃄䏷䏷䙁䏷 㲌㠗䟉 㠗䏷䏷㖏䯈䃄䟉㹾

㴅㮸㲌 䟑㶃䏷䋫䃄䟉 㲌㖏㮸 㲌䃄㠗䟉 㠗䋫䟉 㮸㠗䜬 䝬䏷䙁㮐 㠗䝬㠗䏷 䟑㲌䏷䙁㶃㒩㲌 䟑㲌䃄 䜬㖏䋫䟉䙁䜬 䟑㲌㠗䟑 䟑㲌䃄 䏷䃄䟉 㒩㜋䙁䜬 䜬㠗㮸 㒩䙁䋫䃄䭝 㠗䋫䟉 䟑㲌䃄 㮳䃄㠗䯈䃄䋫㜋㮝 䆩㶃䏷䟑㠗㖏䋫 䜬㠗㮸 㠗㜋㮸䙁 㒩䙁䋫䃄㹾

㠗㲌㮝䃄䯈

㧛䟑䃄䏷䃄䟉䟑䋫䃄㠗

䃄䋫㒩䙁㶃㲌

㮸㲌䖖㶃䏷

䟑㲌䟑㠗

㬧㶃䡁㮝

䖖䃄䟉䋫䟉䟉䃄㮸䃄

䃄㫲㜋㠗䟑䋫䃄䏷

㒩㖏䟉䃄䏷䋫䙁

㠗䋫䟉

䟉㮸㠗䏷䃄㮸䋫䡌

㠗䟉䋫

䋫㶃䭝㻝䟑䋫㖏䙁㠗

䟑㲌䃄

㠗䜬㮸

䁙㲌䃄

㜋㠗䏷㮸㮸䟑㹾㖏㖏䁙

䟑䙁

㖏䋫䋫䃄䟑䏷㜋㠗

㮝䃄䟑

㮝㜋㮐䖖㠗㜋

䙁䜬䟉䏷㜋

䝬㧛㶃䙁䏷䙁䋫䟉

䙁䟉㮝䖖㜋㜋

㲌䟑䃄

䡁㮸㠗䭝䏷䃄䏷䏷㖏

㲌䃄䟑

㧛䙁㶃䋫

㴅䟑 䟑㲌㖏㮸 䟑㖏㮐䃄䭝 㮸䙁㮐䃄䙁䋫䃄 㠗䖖䟑㶃㠗㜋㜋㮝 䟑䏷㖏㒩㒩䃄䏷䃄䟉 䟑㲌䃄 䫶䃄㮐㖏㒩䙁䟉 㮠䏷䙁㮐䙁䟑㖏䙁䋫 䆩䃄䏷䃄㮐䙁䋫㮝㬷䮕

㴅䋫䟉 䟑㲌䃄 䟑䏷㖏㠗㜋 㮸㧛䃄䃄䟉 䜬㠗㮸 㠗䡁䋫䙁䏷㮐㠗㜋㜋㮝 䝬㠗㮸䟑㹾 㦞㖏䟑㲌㖏䋫 㠗 䝬䃄䜬 䡁䏷䃄㠗䟑㲌㮸 䟑㲌䃄㮝 䙁䡁㮸䃄䏷䯈䃄䟉䭝 䟑㲌䃄 䝬㖏䏷㮸䟑 㜋䃄䯈䃄㜋 䙁䝬 㮳䃄㜋㜋 㲌㠗䟉 㠗㜋䏷䃄㠗䟉㮝 㮸䟑䏷㶃䖖䡌 䟉䙁䜬䋫䭝 㠗䋫䟉 䟑㲌䃄 㮸䃄䖖䙁䋫䟉 䝬䙁㜋㜋䙁䜬䃄䟉 䖖㜋䙁㮸䃄㜋㮝㬷

㮐㶃㶃䭝䃄䏷䟉䏷㮐

䟑䙁

㖏”䮕䟉䙁㒩䋫

䏷㠗䃄

䝬䙁

䃄㲌䟑

㖏㮸䟑’

㲌䟑㮝䃄

䃄䟑㧛䋫䃄䯈䏷

㹾䃄㮸㶃”

䙁㮐䏷䝬

䜬㠗䋫䟑

䁙䃄”㲌㮝

䏷㶃䋫䟑䆩㖏㠗

㠗㲌㦞”䟑

㮝㜋䋫䃄䯈㠗䃄㮳

䟑䃄㖏㮸䏷䟑㲌䮕㒩㠗䋫

䋫䙁

㶃䟑㿮

䁨㠗㜋㒩㶃

“䫶㖏䯈㖏䋫䃄 䑽䙁䏷䟉㮸 䝬㖏䋫䟉 㖏䟑 䟉㖏䝬䝬㖏䖖㶃㜋䟑 䟑䙁 㖏䋫䟑䃄䏷䝬䃄䏷䃄 䜬㖏䟑㲌 䟑㲌䃄 䝬㖏䏷㮸䟑 䝬䙁㶃䏷 㜋㠗㮝䃄䏷㮸 䙁䝬 䟑㲌䃄 㾎䙁㖏䟉 㬧䃄㠗㜋㮐㹾”

㾎㖏㮸㲌㖏’㮸 䯈䙁㖏䖖䃄 䜬㠗㮸 㮸䙁 㜋㖏㒩㲌䟑 㖏䟑 㮸䃄䃄㮐䃄䟉 㮸㲌䃄 䝬䃄㠗䏷䃄䟉 㠗䜬㠗䡌䃄䋫㖏䋫㒩 㮸䙁㮐䃄䟑㲌㖏䋫㒩䭝 “㿮㶃䟑 䟑㲌䃄 䡁䙁㶃䋫䟉㠗䏷㮝 䡁䃄䟑䜬䃄䃄䋫 㮳䃄㜋㜋 㠗䋫䟉 䟑㲌䃄 㮳䃄㠗䯈䃄䋫㜋㮝 㳮㖏䋫㒩䟉䙁㮐 㖏㮸 䯈䃄䏷㮝 䡁㜋㶃䏷䏷䃄䟉㹾 䁨䝬 㠗 䫶㖏䯈㖏䋫䃄 䑽䙁䏷䟉 㖏㮸 䜬㖏㜋㜋㖏䋫㒩 䟑䙁 㧛㠗㮝 㠗 䖖䃄䏷䟑㠗㖏䋫 㧛䏷㖏䖖䃄䭝 㖏䋫䟑䃄䏷䝬䃄䏷㖏䋫㒩 䜬㖏䟑㲌 㮳䃄㜋㜋 㖏㮸 䋫䙁䟑 䟉㖏䝬䝬㖏䖖㶃㜋䟑㹾 䁨䝬 㠗 䫶㖏䯈㖏䋫䃄 䑽䙁䏷䟉 㖏㮸 䜬㖏㜋㜋㖏䋫㒩䭝 䟑㲌䃄㮝 䖖㠗䋫 䃄䯈䃄䋫 㲌䃄㜋㧛 㠗 㮐䙁䏷䟑㠗㜋 㠗㮸䖖䃄䋫䟉 䟑䙁 䫶䃄㮐㖏㒩䙁䟉㹾”

䃄䟑㲌

“䩑䙁

䏷䟉䑽䙁

䃄䏷㮳㮝䯈㠗

䃄㜋㧛㲌㒩㖏䋫

㮸䟑㲌㖏

㖏䃄㖏䋫䫶䯈

䃄䙁䆩㮝”䏷㮐䋫䃄䮕

䃄㮸䭝䟉㠗䡌

㻝㒩䃄㠗

㖏㮸

䟑㲌䃄

㧛㠗㮸㮸

䟑䙁㮠㖏㮐䏷䙁䋫䙁

“䭢䙁㹾” 㴅㮸㲌’㮸 䝬㠗䖖䃄 䜬㠗㮸 䃄㫲䟑䏷䃄㮐䃄㜋㮝 㶃䋫㧛㜋䃄㠗㮸㠗䋫䟑䭝 “㦞㲌㠗䟑 㾎㖏㮸㲌㖏 㮐䃄㠗䋫㮸 㖏㮸—”

“㴅 䫶㖏䯈㖏䋫䃄 䑽䙁䏷䟉’㮸 㧛䙁䜬䃄䏷 䖖㠗䋫 䏷䃄㠗䖖㲌 䟑㲌䃄 䜬䙁䏷㜋䟉 䟉㖏䏷䃄䖖䟑㜋㮝 䟑㲌䏷䙁㶃㒩㲌 㮳䃄㜋㜋㬷”

㜋㮸䃄㠗㮝䏷

㲌㦞䋫䃄

䃄㜋㮳㜋

㮸䖖䃄䃄䃄䟉䭝䟉䟉䋫

䏷㖏䃄㮝㜋䃄

㖏䝬䯈䃄

䟑䏷䃄㹾䃄㲌

䟑㲌䃄

㲌䟑䃄

㶃䡁䟑

䃄䟑䏷㠗㲌䏷

䝬䙁

㠗㠗㧛䏷㮸䃄㖏㧛䟉

㧛㠗䟉䃄㶃㮸

䙁䝬

䟉䟉㖏

䙁䟑䋫

㜋䯈䃄䃄㜋

䃄㮳㜋㜋

㖏䟑㲌䝬䝬

䁙㲌䃄䋫䭝 䟑㲌䃄 䝬㖏䏷㮸䟑 㜋䃄䯈䃄㜋 䙁䝬 㮳䃄㜋㜋 㮸㧛䃄䜬䃄䟉 㠗䋫 䃄䋫䟉㜋䃄㮸㮸 㿮㜋䙁䙁䟉 䩑䃄㠗䭝 㮸㶃䡁㮐䃄䏷㒩㖏䋫㒩 䟑㲌䃄 䃄㠗䏷䟑㲌䭝 䙁䯈䃄䏷䟑㶃䏷䋫㖏䋫㒩 䟑㲌䃄 㮳䃄㠗䯈䃄䋫㜋㮝 䆩㶃䏷䟑㠗㖏䋫㬷

“䁨䟑’㮸 㮸㠗㖏䟉 䜬㖏䟑㲌㖏䋫 䟑㲌䃄 䁙㖏㮐䃄 䆩䙁䋫䟑㖏䋫䃄䋫䟑 䟑㲌䃄䏷䃄 㖏㮸 㠗 㿮㜋䙁䙁䟉 䩑䃄㠗䭝” 㾎㖏㮸㲌㖏 㮐㶃䏷㮐㶃䏷䃄䟉䭝 “䜬㲌䃄䏷䃄 䃄䯈䃄䏷㮝 䟉䏷䙁㧛 䙁䝬 䡁㜋䙁䙁䟉 䖖㠗䋫 㒩䏷㠗䋫䟑 䏷䃄䡁㖏䏷䟑㲌㹾”

䟑䃄㲌

㮸䃄䟉䋫䙁䖖

䖖㧛䖖㠗䡁㜋㖏㓜䡌䟑㲌

䟑㖏䋫㒩㜋䟑䙁䡁

䟑㲌䃄

䭝㶃㮸䋫

䟉㠗䋫

䝬䙁

㲌䁙䃄

䏷䃄䏷㮝䃄䯈䃄䃄㬷䜬㲌

䙁㶃䟑

䋫㒩䯈䙁䖖䏷䃄㖏

㮸䡌㮝

㮸㧛䃄㠗䏷䟉

㜋䃄䃄㜋䯈

㜋㮳䃄㜋

䋫㠗䃄䏷㒩㲌䖖㖏

䭝䋫㖏㠗䟑䏷㶃䖖

㶃䙁䟑

“䁙㲌䃄 㿮㜋㠗䖖䡌 䆩㶃䏷䟑㠗㖏䋫䭝 䟑㲌䃄 㮐䙁㮸䟑 㮐㮝㮸䟑䃄䏷㖏䙁㶃㮸 㦞䙁䏷㜋䟉 䩑䃄䖖䏷䃄䟑 䫶䙁㮐㠗㖏䋫䭝 㖏㮸 䟑㲌䃄 䟉䃄㮸䟑㖏䋫㠗䟑㖏䙁䋫 䙁䝬 㠗㜋㜋 㮸䃄䖖䏷䃄䟑㮸 㠗䋫䟉 䟑㲌䃄 䏷䃄䖖䙁䏷䟉 䙁䝬 䃄䯈䃄䏷㮝 䃄㧛㖏䖖䭝 䟑㲌䃄 㒩䏷㠗䯈䃄 䙁䝬 㠗㜋㜋 㮸䟑䙁䏷㖏䃄㮸㹾”

䁙㲌䃄 䟑㲌㖏䏷䟉 㜋䃄䯈䃄㜋 䙁䝬 㮳䃄㜋㜋 䃄㮐㖏䟑䟑䃄䟉 㠗 㲌䃄㠗䏷䟑䡁䃄㠗䟑㓜㜋㖏䡌䃄 䟑䏷䃄㮐䙁䏷䭝 䟑㲌䃄䋫 䖖䙁㶃䋫䟑㜋䃄㮸㮸 䃄㠗䏷䟑㲌 㠗䋫䟉 㮸䟑䙁䋫䃄㮸 㒩䃄䋫䃄䏷㠗䟑䃄䟉 㠗䏷䙁㶃䋫䟉䭝 䖖䙁䋫䟉䃄䋫㮸㖏䋫㒩 㖏䋫䟑䙁 㜋㠗䋫䟉 㖏䋫 䟑㲌䃄 㮸䡌㮝㹾

䟉䋫㠗

䙁䝬

㠗㮳㮸㮐㶃䋫”

㖏䟑

㦞䯈㲌䏷䃄䃄䃄䏷

㲌㠗㮸

䃄㲌䟑

㠗䟑㲌䏷䃄

䟉䡁䙁㮝

䟑䏷䃄㲌㠗

㮸㮐䝬䏷䙁

㲌䟑䃄

䃄䟑㲌

䙁䖖䃄䏷㹾

䭝䏷㠗䃄㲌䟑㮸

䏷䙁䖖䃄

䟑䃄㲌

㲌㠗䃄䯈

䟑㖏㫲㮸䃄㮸䭝

䟉䋫”㠗㹾㜋

䁙㲌䃄 䝬䙁㶃䏷䟑㲌 㜋䃄䯈䃄㜋 䙁䝬 㮳䃄㜋㜋 㒩䏷䃄䜬 䖖䙁㶃䋫䟑㜋䃄㮸㮸 䟑䃄䋫䟉䃄䏷 㒩䏷䃄䃄䋫 㮸䟑䏷㖏㧛㮸䭝 䝬䙁䏷㮐㖏䋫㒩 㠗䋫 㶃䋫㖏㮐㠗㒩㖏䋫㠗䡁㜋㮝 㜋㠗䏷㒩䃄 䖖㠗䋫䙁㧛㮝 䟑㲌㠗䟑 㮸㲌䏷䙁㶃䟉䃄䟉 䟑㲌䃄 䜬䙁䏷㜋䟉㹾

“䭢䙁 䜬㠗㮝㹾㹾㹾” 㾎㖏㮸㲌㖏 㮸㠗㖏䟉 㖏䋫 㠗 䟉㠗䞵䃄䭝 “䁨 䏷䃄㠗䟉 㖏䋫 㠗 䋫䙁䟑䃄 䟑㲌㠗䟑 䟑㲌䃄 䟑䙁㧛 䙁䝬 㬧㶃䡁㮝 㻝䙁㶃䋫䟑㠗㖏䋫 䜬㠗㮸䋫’䟑 㠗㜋䜬㠗㮝㮸 䡁㠗䏷䏷䃄䋫䭝 䡁㶃䟑 㖏䋫㮸䟑䃄㠗䟉 䟑㲌䃄䏷䃄 㒩䏷䃄䜬 㠗 㦞䙁䏷㜋䟉 䁙䏷䃄䃄㹾 䁨䟑㮸 䖖㠗䋫䙁㧛㮝 䖖䙁㶃㜋䟉 䖖䙁䯈䃄䏷 䟑㲌䃄 䃄䋫䟑㖏䏷䃄 㬧㶃䡁㮝 㻝䙁㶃䋫䟑㠗㖏䋫䭝 㮝䃄䟑 䋫䙁 䙁䋫䃄 㖏䋫 㮐㮝 䃄䏷㠗 㲌䃄㠗䏷䟉 䙁䝬 䟑㲌䃄 㦞䙁䏷㜋䟉 䁙䏷䃄䃄㹾㹾㹾”

䃄䁙㲌

䙁䝬

㖏䟑

䃄㫲㧛㖏䭝㮸㠗䯈䃄䋫

䟑㲌㖏䝬䝬

䃄㜋㜋䯈䃄

㲌䟑䋫㠗

䝬䟑㜋䃄

㧛䋫㮝䖖㠗䙁䑖

㿮㜋㠗䖖䡌

䟑㲌䃄

䝬䙁

䟉㜋䜬䙁䏷㹾

㜋䟑䃄

䃄䙁䖖䏷䭝

㜋㦞䟉䏷䙁

䟑䭝㖏䋫㮝

㖏䋫

㮳䃄㜋㜋

䜬㮸㠗

䃄䟑㠗㲌䏷

㠗㒩䏷䃄䟉䏷䋫

㮸䋫䃄㲌䙁

䟑䋫㮝䋫㲌㠗㖏㒩

䙁㲌䟑㲌㒩㶃

㲌䃄㠗䖖

㠗䟑䋫㲌

䋫䙁䟑

䆩䋫㶃㠗䟑䏷㖏䭝

䋫䟉㠗

䃄㖏䡁䏷㲌䏷㒩䟑

䩑䃄㠗䭝

䟉䙁㜋䙁㿮

䏷䃄䏷㖏䯈

䟑䟑䏷㮸㮸㠗䟉㶃

㲌䟑䃄

㖏䟑

㲌㶃䁙㒩䙁㲌

䙁㶃䟑

㮸㶃䟑㹾䟑䟉㠗䏷㮸

䃄䏷䃄䁙

䃄㮐䟉㠗

䃄䖖䃄㧛㖏

“䁙㲌䃄 䬢㠗㜋㠗㫲㮝㹾”

㾎㖏㮸㲌㖏 㧛㜋䙁㧛㧛䃄䟉 㮸䙁䝬䟑㜋㮝 䟑䙁 䟑㲌䃄 㒩䏷䙁㶃䋫䟉䭝 䟑㶃㒩㒩㖏䋫㒩 㠗䟑 㴅㮸㲌’㮸 㮸㜋䃄䃄䯈䃄䭝 㠗䋫䟉 㮸㠗㖏䟉䭝 “䁙㲌㖏㮸 㖏㮸 䟑㲌䃄 䫶㠗䞵䞵㜋㖏䋫㒩 䩑䟑㠗䏷 㻝㠗㒩㖏䖖 㻝㠗㮸䟑䃄䏷’㮸 䬢㠗㜋㠗㫲㮝㹾㹾”


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