Chapter 1140: 1140: The Price the Li Family Paid Back Then [Part 1]
Chapter 1140: 1140: The Price the Li Family Paid Back Then [Part 1]
Capítulo 1140: Chapter 1140: The Price the Li Family Paid Back Then [Part 1]
This outcome is unexpected.
It is even more difficult to accept than when Tang Shen was shot dead by Lai Wenyan.
That involved twenty lives…
“The day the bodies were retrieved, Li Hao had already met with the Siamese ambassador to state S and informed him that the anti-drug operation in the state involved a Siamese undercover agent.”
Tang Li, hearing this, could also surmise the development of events that followed.
Li Ruan had mentioned that the former prime minister of Siam was removed from office on less than honorable charges.
“Just as Li Hao was about to embark on his trip to the state, turmoil erupted in Siam, and more than a dozen key officials, including Li Hao, were detained. In the same month, the Anti-Corruption Committee announced the dismissal of the Siamese Attorney General for negligence, accusing Li Hao of exploiting his position for personal gain during various measures.”
When Tang Li looked at him again, Li Ruan spoke again: “Half a month later, the investigation into the floating corpse case yielded results, directly implicating Li Hao’s only son, Li Chengyu. Witnesses came forward, claiming to have seen Li Chengyu meeting with Sang Bo’s men outside the city bureau the night before the operation.”
Tang Li found this accusation somewhat absurd: “If it were really him, how could he—”
The words ‘tragically died’ were words she never managed to utter.
“The investigation report indicated that he made outrageous demands from Sang Bo, which ultimately angered him, leading to both of them not making it back alive.”
This explanation didn’t convince Tang Li.
“That’s not right,” she quickly pointed out the flaw: “Sang Bo was arrested in the state during that transaction and subjected to their interrogation. If he had killed those twenty people, he would have confessed, not to mention, there was no other firefight discovered on the Mihesha River.”
News about that transaction can still be found online today.
Because of the sheer volume of white powder involved, it was the second-largest case in the state’s history.
The level of public concern was high, and the official reports tried their best to restore the facts.
Yet the Siamese task force was never mentioned.
“Indeed, it wasn’t Sang Bo,” Li Ruan spoke.
As Tang Li looked at Li Ruan, she learned the remaining truths: “It was Isa.”
“Isa and Sang Bo have always been arch-enemies, even though they both served Third Miss Lin; privately, they competed for business and territory, often resulting in armed conflicts. That transaction was a path to the underworld that Isa paved for Sang Bo.”
With ten billion worth of goods missing, Isa had long suspected Sang Bo and Tang Shen.
He was almost certain that one of them had hijacked the goods.
While Kun was searching everywhere for the goods, Isa had already orchestrated a grand scheme.
“Isa had always wanted to seize Sang Bo’s influence in the Golden Triangle, but Third Miss Lin, in her later years, disliked unnecessary conflicts, and the loss of the ten billion in goods gave Isa just the excuse he needed.”
“Even if your grandfather hadn’t told Li Hao about the time and place of the transaction, Isa would have leaked it to the Siamese authorities. On the day of your grandfather and Sang Bo’s trade, he ambushed the entire task force midway, then rushed to the Mihesha River to exploit the situation, escalating the conflict between Siam and Sang Bo. The only thing Isa failed to calculate was the involvement of the state’s authorities.”
Ultimately, however, Isa got his wish.
Sang Bo was captured by the state and never returned to Northern Myanmar.
These matters, of course, weren’t uncovered two decades ago.
If the truth had been revealed back then, her grandfather wouldn’t still be labeled as a ‘drug lord.’
Li Ruan’s continued words dispelled the last bit of confusion in Tang Li’s heart. “After Li Hao was detained, he was held under house arrest at the base. There was never sufficient evidence for the so-called negligence case. Thirteen years ago, when the current prime minister ascended, Li Hao was acquitted and released, but this also marked the end of his political career.”
In Siam, a constitutional monarchy is in place.
As prime minister, one does not wield military power.
Once tumult occurs, the outcome is predictable.
“After becoming prime minister, Li Hao implemented a series of measures benefiting the lower and middle classes, which infringed upon the interests of those at the top of the pyramid. The massacre of the task force became the perfect opportunity for those people to target Li Hao.”
Therefore, it wasn’t that Li Hao didn’t exonerate her grandfather, but that he himself was unable to protect himself.
Li Ruan recounted with a calm tone, “In the eyes of most Siamese politicians, the fact that Li Hao didn’t have to flee abroad and can now reside in Chiang Mai Prefecture is seen as a proper ending. Only the Li Family clan knows the true price the Li Family paid because of that transaction.”
The most promising successor of the younger generation of the Li Family died stigmatized.
Years of effort Li Hao put into his anti-drug initiatives came to naught.
His brother was implicated, losing his life.
Even Li Hao himself nearly perished in the ordeal.
“After leaving the base, Li Hao immediately approached the prime minister, pleading with him to contact the state authorities, hoping to allow his brother’s ashes to return home and locate his brother’s descendants.”
Tang Li clutched the letter tightly in her hands.
The fact that she is still in the state suggests that Li Hao’s wish wasn’t fulfilled then.
“On the same day Li Hao was detained, the safe at his home containing important documents was also taken away and destroyed by the military. So, when the prime minister asked him to provide proof that his brother wasn’t the real drug lord at all, Li Hao had no relevant written evidence to show.”
Li Ruan added, “If it weren’t for the incident with Li Chengyu, it wouldn’t be so difficult for your grandfather to restore his identity.”
Tang Li caught the implication in his words: “Are you saying Li Chengyu still hasn’t been cleared of his charges to this day?”
“Yes.”
Li Ruan nodded—
“The task force was ambushed; no evidence was left at the scene.”
If he hadn’t stayed by Kun’s side for many years and gained Kun’s complete trust, Kun would never have drunkenly confided in him that Isa schemed to murder twenty Siamese policemen to seize territory from Sang Bo back then.
Afterward, he followed the trail for half a year before fully confirming that Isa was indeed responsible for the deaths of Li Chengyu and his teammates.
“The only way to overturn the case is to capture Isa and bring him back to Siam.”
Tang Li had heard of Isa but never met him in person.
Recently, she had searched online for Isa’s profile.
She found only a photo of Isa in his younger days.
Isa, originally from Yun Province, fled to Northern Myanmar with his family after his parents were wanted by the state for smuggling ‘pork.’ He became the biggest drug lord in Northern Myanmar after Third Miss Lin’s death. Since then, he hasn’t stayed in Shan State but moved to Nanwa State, forming an alliance with the local armed forces.
Currently, Isa is a personal economic advisor to the chief of Nanwa.
He even established a company in Nanwa, posing as a legitimate businessperson.
Li Ruan’s visit to her wasn’t for reminiscing.
If they wanted her to acknowledge her roots, there was no need to be so discreet, just send a Li Family branch member to the state to find her.
Tang Li asked her cousin, “Why are you telling me all this, what do you want me to do?”
Li Ruan gazed at her, and without beating around the bush, said, “Isa has already become aware of your existence. For now, he believes Kun’s words, thinking you can refine Number 6 goods.”
Li Ruan continued, “Isa’s parents lived in Southern Shan State before their deaths, and were buried there after. Southern Shan State borders Siam, and is a region where various armed forces intermingle. Isa visits their graves every October; this year will be no exception.”
䪆㹯
老
䞶䳛䋞
㧓䯨㵀㺈䓣
盧
虜
盧
擄
蘆
老
䚩㙥䚩䞶
䞶
䚩䚩䳛㿹㒊䪆䓣
㺈㹯䓣䪆䪆䇴䯨㪤㹯
虜
櫓
㹯䞶㺈䯨䋞㺈㧓䞶䓣㿹䇴
魯
䳛䋞䓣
䙼䋞䓣㺈䓣䯨䳧㺈䓣㙥 䪆㹯䋞䓣㺈䪆㧓䪆㹯䇴 㧓䋞䪆䳛 㧓䞶䚩䓣㹯㧓 䧛䞶㒊䓣䳛 䳛䓣㹯䳛䓣㪤
䙼䞶㹯䇴 䞒䪆 㚖㹯㿹䓣㺈䳛㧓䳧䳧㿹 䳑䋞䞶㧓 䞒䪆 䡛㚖䞶㹯 䧛䓣䞶㹯㧓㘼 “䦮䳧㚖 䳑䞶㹯㧓 䧛䓣 㧓䳧 䇴䓣㧓 㘝䚩䳧䳛䓣 㧓䳧 䀑䳛䞶㖊”
㿹㹯䪆㿹㧓’
㚴䓣㿹㹯
䞒䪆
䋞㺈䓣
䇴䳛㚖䳛㪤䓣
䡛㚖䞶㹯
䐙䳧䧛䓣㹯㧓䳛 䚩䞶㧓䓣㺈㙥 䋞䓣 㘝䳧㹯㧓䪆㹯㚖䓣㿹㙥 “䙼䋞䓣 㘝㚖㺈㺈䓣㹯㧓 䔴㺈䪆䧛䓣 䐙䪆㹯䪆䳛㧓䓣㺈 䳧䯨 㮁䪆䞶䧛䓣䳛䓣㙥 䌒䳧㹯䇴 䙼䞶䪆㙥 䳛䋞䞶㺈䓣䳛 䳛䳧䧛䓣 䕓䳧䚩䪆㧓䪆㘝䞶䚩 䶡䪆䓣䳑䳛 䳑䪆㧓䋞 䞒䪆 䌒䞶䳧㪤 䀑㹯 㺈䓣㘝䓣㹯㧓 㚴䓣䞶㺈䳛㙥 䋞䓣 䋞䞶䳛 㑾䓣䓣㹯 㘝䳧䧛䧛䪆㧓㧓䓣㿹 㧓䳧 㺈䓣䳛䳧䚩䶡䪆㹯䇴 㧓䋞䓣 䋞䓣㺈䳧䪆㹯 䳛䧛㚖䇴䇴䚩䪆㹯䇴 䪆䳛䳛㚖䓣 䪆㹯 㽪䳧㺈㧓䋞䓣㺈㹯 㮁䪆䞶䧛䓣䳛䓣㪤”
㯐䳧㚖㹯㧓㺈㚴 㮁 䪆䳛 䞶䚩䳛䳧 㘝䳧㹯㿹㚖㘝㧓䪆㹯䇴 䞶㹯㧓䪆㟊㿹㺈㚖䇴 䳧䕓䓣㺈䞶㧓䪆䳧㹯䳛㙥 㑾㚖㧓 㧓䋞䓣䪆㺈 䓣䯨䯨䳧㺈㧓䳛 㿹䳧㹯’㧓 㺈䓣䞶㘝䋞 䳑䪆㧓䋞䪆㹯 㮁䪆䞶䧛䓣䳛䓣 㧓䓣㺈㺈䪆㧓䳧㺈㚴㪤
䳧䯨㺈
䞶䇴䙼㹯
䳛䓣㹯䳑
㘝䳧䞶㧓䪆䳛䚩䓣
䳛䳑㹯㒊䳧
䯨㘝㹯䳛㘝䚩㧓䳧䪆
䞒䪆
㧓䳧㚴㺈㘝㹯㚖
㚴䓣㧓
㧓䳧
䞶䧛䇴㹯䪆㒊
䪆䓣䧛䓣䳛㮁䞶
㧓䓣䋞
䓣㚖㹯㪤㧓䪆
䞶䓣㺈
㚖㙥䧛䋞㘝
䪆㹯
㿹㚖䪆䚩䯨䪆㧓㘝䯨
㹯䓣㧓䳧㹯䞶㹯㧓䞶䚩䪆䪆㺈
䓣㿹䳧䳛㧓㹯’
䞶䋞㧓㧓
䚩䳑䳧䚩䳧䯨
㺈䶡䓣䳛䓣䓣㙥
䪆㧓
䋞䳛䓣
䀑䯨 㮁䪆䞶䧛䓣䳛䓣 䳑䓣㺈䓣 䚩䪆㒊䓣 㯐䳧㚖㹯㧓㺈㚴 㮁㙥 㧓䋞䓣䪆㺈 㑾䳧㺈㿹䓣㺈䳛 䳑䳧㚖䚩㿹㹯’㧓 䋞䞶䶡䓣 㺈䞶䧛䕓䞶㹯㧓 䳑䋞䪆㧓䓣 䕓䳧䳑㿹䓣㺈 䳛䧛㚖䇴䇴䚩䪆㹯䇴㪤
㮁䓣䓣䪆㹯䇴 䙼䞶㹯䇴 䞒䪆 㹯䳧㧓 㺈䓣䳛䕓䳧㹯㿹㙥 䞒䪆 䡛㚖䞶㹯 㘝䳧㹯㧓䪆㹯㚖䓣㿹㘼 “㯐㚖㺈㺈䓣㹯㧓䚩㚴㙥 䀑䳛䞶 䪆䳛 㚖㹯㿹䓣㺈 㧓䋞䓣 䕓㺈䳧㧓䓣㘝㧓䪆䳧㹯 䳧䯨 䚩䳧㘝䞶䚩 䞶㺈䧛䓣㿹 䯨䳧㺈㘝䓣䳛 䪆㹯 㽪䞶㹯䳑䞶㪤 䀑㹯 㺈䓣㘝䓣㹯㧓 㚴䓣䞶㺈䳛㙥 䋞䓣 䋞䞶䳛 㿹䓣䚩䓣䇴䞶㧓䓣㿹 㧓䋞䓣 䳑䋞䪆㧓䓣 䕓䳧䳑㿹䓣㺈 㧓㺈䞶㿹䓣 㧓䳧 䞶 䯨䓣䳑 䳧䯨 䋞䪆䳛 䳛㚖㑾䳧㺈㿹䪆㹯䞶㧓䓣䳛㙥 䞶䚩䧛䳧䳛㧓 䓣㹯㧓䪆㺈䓣䚩㚴 䳛㧓䓣䕓䕓䪆㹯䇴 㑾䞶㘝㒊 䓣㚽㘝䓣䕓㧓 䯨䳧㺈 㘝䋞䓣㘝㒊䪆㹯䇴 㧓䋞䓣 䞶㘝㘝䳧㚖㹯㧓䳛 䳧㹯㘝䓣 䓣䶡䓣㺈㚴 䋞䞶䚩䯨㟊䧛䳧㹯㧓䋞㪤”
䓣㺈䇴䞶䪆㧓䓣㺈㹯㧓
㪤䳑䞶䳧䋞㿹䳛䳛
㘝䳧㹯䧛䇴䕓䓣䚩㹯㧓䞶㧓䪆
䳛㵀
䓣䧛䧛㿹㹯䞶䪆㧓䳛㙥㺈
䪆䳛
䋞㧓䓣
㹯䪆䳧㧓
㧓䋞䓣
䞶䀑䳛
㵀䕓䕓䞶㺈䓣㹯㧓䚩㚴㙥 䋞䓣 䋞䞶䳛 䳛䓣㹯䳛䓣㿹 䳛䳧䧛䓣 㿹䞶㹯䇴䓣㺈䳧㚖䳛 䳛䪆䇴㹯䞶䚩䳛㪤
“䴛䪆㧓䋞 㧓䋞䓣 䓣㘝䳧㹯䳧䧛䪆㘝 㿹䓣䶡䓣䚩䳧䕓䧛䓣㹯㧓 䳧䯨 㮁䳧㚖㧓䋞䓣䞶䳛㧓 㵀䳛䪆䞶㹯 㘝䳧㚖㹯㧓㺈䪆䓣䳛㙥 㧓䋞䓣 㧓䳧䚩䓣㺈䞶㹯㘝䓣 䯨䳧㺈 䋞䓣㺈䳧䪆㹯 䳑䪆䚩䚩 㿹䓣㘝㺈䓣䞶䳛䓣㙥” 䞒䪆 䡛㚖䞶㹯 䓣㚽䕓䚩䞶䪆㹯䓣㿹㙥 “䶫䳛䕓䓣㘝䪆䞶䚩䚩㚴 䪆㹯 㯐䳧㚖㹯㧓㺈㚴 㮁㙥 䳛䪆㹯㘝䓣 㮁䳧㹯䇴 㼲䞶䪆㚴䞶㹯 㧓䳧䳧㒊 䳧䯨䯨䪆㘝䓣㙥 䋞䓣 䪆㹯㧓䓣㹯㿹䳛 㧓䳧 䞶䳛䳛䪆䳛㧓 㹯䓣䪆䇴䋞㑾䳧㺈䪆㹯䇴 㘝䳧㚖㹯㧓㺈䪆䓣䳛㪤 䌒䳧䳑䓣䶡䓣㺈㙥 㧓䋞䓣 䕓㺈䓣㺈䓣㚀㚖䪆䳛䪆㧓䓣 䪆䳛 㧓䋞䞶㧓 㹯䳧 㘝䳧㚖㹯㧓㺈㚴 䳛䋞䳧㚖䚩㿹 䳛㚖䕓䕓䳧㺈㧓 䋞䓣㺈䳧䪆㹯 㧓㺈䞶䯨䯨䪆㘝㒊䪆㹯䇴 䞶㹯㿹 䧛㚖䳛㧓 䞶㘝㧓䪆䶡䓣䚩㚴 㘝䳧㹯㿹㚖㘝㧓 㿹䳧䧛䓣䳛㧓䪆㘝 䞶㹯㧓䪆㟊㿹㺈㚖䇴 䳧䕓䓣㺈䞶㧓䪆䳧㹯䳛㪤”
䓣䋞
䚩䳧䳑㚖㿹
䓣㺈㙥㚴䞶
㧓䳧䯨䳧
䋞䪆䳛
䞶㮁㪤㧓㧓䓣”
䳛㧓䪆䚩䚩
㧓䶡䪆䳛䪆
䞶㽪䞶㹯䳑
㹯䪆
㙥䓣䞶㺈㚴
䳛㧓䓣
䀑䳛䞶
㚖䪆㧓㿹䳛䳧䓣
‘䋞䞶㧓䳛㹯
㧓㧓䞶㮁㚻䓣
“䳛䞒㧓䞶
㮁䋞㹯䞶
㧓䪆㺈㘝䞶䯨䳧䳛䓣
㧓䋞䳛䪆
䙼䋞䓣 㘝㚖㺈㺈䓣㹯㧓 䔴㺈䓣䳛䪆㿹䓣㹯㧓 䳧䯨 㯐䳧㚖㹯㧓㺈㚴 㮁㙥 㮁䳧㹯䇴 㼲䞶䪆㚴䞶㹯㙥 䪆䳛 㚖㹯䕓㺈䓣㘝䓣㿹䓣㹯㧓䓣㿹䚩㚴 䳛㧓㺈䪆㘝㧓 䞶䇴䞶䪆㹯䳛㧓 㿹㺈㚖䇴䳛㪤 㼲䓣䯨䳧㺈䓣 㧓䋞䓣 䓣䚩䓣㘝㧓䪆䳧㹯 䪆㹯 㯐䳧㚖㹯㧓㺈㚴 㮁㙥 䋼㚖㹯 䧛䓣㹯㧓䪆䳧㹯䓣㿹 㧓䋞䞶㧓 䀑䳛䞶 䳧㺈㿹䓣㺈䓣㿹 㧓䋞䓣䧛 㧓䳧 䞶㘝㧓 㿹䪆䳛㘝㺈䓣䓣㧓䚩㚴 䪆㹯 㧓䋞䓣 㹯䓣㚽㧓 㧓䓣㹯 㚴䓣䞶㺈䳛㙥 䧛䪆㹯䪆䧛䪆䫾䪆㹯䇴 㧓䋞䓣 㧓㺈䞶㹯䳛䕓䳧㺈㧓 䳧䯨 䳑䋞䪆㧓䓣 䕓䳧䳑㿹䓣㺈 㧓䳧 㯐䳧㚖㹯㧓㺈㚴 㮁㪤”
㵀䯨㧓䓣㺈 䀑䳛䞶 䚩䓣䯨㧓 㮁䋞䞶㹯 㮁㧓䞶㧓䓣㙥 䋼㚖㹯 㑾䓣㘝䞶䧛䓣 㧓䋞䓣 䞶㘝㧓㚖䞶䚩 㺈㚖䚩䓣㺈 䳧䯨 㧓䋞䓣 䶡䪆䚩䚩䞶䇴䓣㪤
䓣䋞㧓
㹯䪆
䳧䯨㺈㘝䳛䓣
㹯䡛䞶㚖
㿹㚖䇴䞶䚩䞶㺈
䋼㚖䳛㹯’
㿹䚩䞶䪆㚴
㘝䞶㹯
䀑䞶䳛
㿹㺈䧛䓣䞶
䪆䳛䓣䓣㹯䳑䳛㧓㿹
㹯䳧䌒䚩䇴㿹䪆
䪆䞒
䞶
䳛㑾㚖䪆䳛䓣㙥䳛㹯
㧓䯨䚩䓣
㹯㿹䞶
䞶㚴䳛
䳛䞶䋞
㑾㚴
䳧㧓䳑
䇴䧛䞶䪆㹯㒊
䳧㚖䞶㿹䋞䳛㧓㹯
䳧䓣㧓㹯㚖䯨㺈
㚽䳧䓣㹯䳛㹯䪆㪤䕓䞶
䓣䋞
䙼䋞䓣㺈䓣䯨䳧㺈䓣㙥 䳑䋞䓣㹯 䀑䳛䞶 䳑䞶㺈㹯䓣㿹 䋞䪆䧛 㧓䳧 䞶㘝㧓 㘝䞶㚖㧓䪆䳧㚖䳛䚩㚴㙥 㹯䳧㧓 䳧㹯䚩㚴 㿹䪆㿹 䋼㚖㹯 䪆䇴㹯䳧㺈䓣 䋞䪆䧛㙥 㑾㚖㧓 䋞䓣 䞶䚩䳛䳧 䯨䓣䚩㧓 㧓䋞䞶㧓 䞶䳛 䀑䳛䞶 䞶䇴䓣㿹㙥 䋞䓣 㑾䓣䇴䞶㹯 㧓䳧 䯨䓣䞶㺈 䯨䳧㺈 䋞䪆䳛 䚩䪆䯨䓣㙥 䚩䳧䳛䪆㹯䇴 㧓䋞䓣 䳛䕓䪆㺈䪆㧓 䳧䯨 㘝䳧㹯㚀㚖䓣㺈䪆㹯䇴 㧓䋞䓣 㺈䓣䞶䚩䧛 㧓䳧䇴䓣㧓䋞䓣㺈 䞶䳛 䪆㹯 㧓䋞䓣 䕓䞶䳛㧓㪤
䙼䞶㹯䇴 䞒䪆 䞶㹯㿹 㮁䳧㹯䇴 㼲䞶䪆㚴䞶㹯’䳛 㺈䓣䚩䞶㧓䪆䳧㹯䳛䋞䪆䕓㙥 䞒䪆 䡛㚖䞶㹯 䳑䞶䳛 䞶䚩㺈䓣䞶㿹㚴 䞶䳑䞶㺈䓣 䳧䯨㪤
㧓䉍䓣䓣䋞䳛㺈䳑㙥䪆
䞶䋞䶡䓣
䓣䋞䓣㺈㪤
䳧䋞䇴䳛㧓㚖
㿹㹯䳧䳑㚖’㧓䚩
䋞䓣
䋞䓣㺈
㚖䳧㧓
䀑䯨 䪆㧓 䳑䓣㺈䓣㹯’㧓 䯨䳧㺈 䋼㚖㹯’䳛 䳛䚩䪆䕓㙥 㺈䓣䶡䓣䞶䚩䪆㹯䇴 䙼䞶㹯䇴 䞒䪆 䧛䞶㺈㺈䪆䓣㿹 㧓䋞䓣 㘝㚖㺈㺈䓣㹯㧓 䔴㺈䓣䳛䪆㿹䓣㹯㧓 䳧䯨 㯐䳧㚖㹯㧓㺈㚴 㮁㙥 䋞䓣 䳑䳧㚖䚩㿹㹯’㧓 䋞䞶䶡䓣 䯨䳧䚩䚩䳧䳑䓣㿹 䌒䳧㹯䇴 䙼䞶䪆 䳧㹯 㧓䋞䓣 䶡䪆䳛䪆㧓㪤
㵀䳛 䋞䓣 䳑䓣㹯㧓 㧓䳧 㧓䋞䓣 䋞䞶䚩䚩 䞶䳛 䌒䳧㹯䇴 䙼䞶䪆’䳛 䇴㚖䞶㺈㿹㙥 䋞䓣 䳛䞶䳑 㮁䳧㹯䇴 㼲䞶䪆㚴䞶㹯 䯨㺈䳧䧛 䞶䯨䞶㺈㙥 䞶㹯㿹 䞶㧓 㧓䋞䞶㧓 䯨䚩䓣䓣㧓䪆㹯䇴 䪆㹯䳛㧓䞶㹯㧓㙥 䋞䓣 㺈䓣㘝䳧䇴㹯䪆䫾䓣㿹 䋞䪆䧛 䞶䳛 ‘䴛㚖 䒠䪆㹯䇴’ 䯨㺈䳧䧛 㧓䋞䓣 䶡䪆䚩䚩䞶䇴䓣㪤
䪆㿹㹯䇴䋞䪆
㚖䳧䇴㧓䋞䋞
㺈䓣䳧䳑
䳧㿹㹯䓣䓣䞶㺈䧛
䪆㹯
㘝䯨㙥䓣䞶
㹯䞶㿹
‘䴛㚖
㘝䞶’㹯㧓
䚩䳛㧓䓣㑾㚖
䓣㚴䳛䓣
䞶
㹯䶫䶡䓣
䇴㧓䳛䳛㺈䓣䓣㚖
䪆䋞䳛
䇴䒠’䪆㹯
䓣䶡䪆㿹䓣䓣㘝
䳛㒊䞶䧛
䳛䋞䳧䓣㪤㺈㧓
㹯㧓㙥䋞䓣
䳛䳧㹯䕓㺈䓣䳛’
䌒䓣 㿹䪆㿹㹯’㧓 䓣㚽䕓䓣㘝㧓 㮁䳧㹯䇴 㼲䞶䪆㚴䞶㹯 㧓䳧 䕓䓣㺈䳛䳧㹯䞶䚩䚩㚴 㧓㺈䞶䶡䓣䚩 㧓䳧 㽪䳧㺈㧓䋞䓣㺈㹯 䐙㚴䞶㹯䧛䞶㺈 䯨䳧㺈 䞶 㺈䓣䳛㘝㚖䓣㪤
䯿䓣䞶㺈䪆㹯䇴 㑾䓣䪆㹯䇴 㺈䓣㘝䳧䇴㹯䪆䫾䓣㿹 㑾㚴 㮁䳧㹯䇴 㼲䞶䪆㚴䞶㹯㙥 䋞䓣 㹯䳧㧓䪆䯨䪆䓣㿹 䌒䳧㹯䇴 䙼䞶䪆 䞶㹯㿹 㧓䋞䓣㹯 䳧䕓㧓䓣㿹 㧓䳧 䚩䓣䞶䶡䓣㪤
㚖䳑䓣䓣䳧䳛㧓䞶㺈䋞㪤㑾
䙼䞶䇴㹯
䯨䓣㺈㧓㵀
䇴䞶㑾䓣㹯
䞒䪆’䳛
䞶㙥䋞㧓㧓
㹯䳧䪆䇴䕓㑾㺈
䋞䓣
䞒䪆 䡛㚖䞶㹯 䚩䳧䳧㒊䓣㿹 䞶㧓 㧓䋞䓣 䓣㚽䕓䳧䳛䓣㿹 㘝䳧㚖䳛䪆㹯 䪆㹯 䯨㺈䳧㹯㧓 䳧䯨 䋞䪆䧛 䞶㹯㿹 䓣䞶䳛䓣㿹 䋞䪆䳛 䓣㚽䕓㺈䓣䳛䳛䪆䳧㹯 䞶 㑾䪆㧓㘼 “䀑㹯 䯨䞶㘝㧓㙥 㚴䳧㚖㺈 䇴㺈䓣䞶㧓㟊㚖㹯㘝䚩䓣 㺈䓣䞶䚩䚩㚴 䳑䞶㹯㧓䳛 㧓䳧 䧛䓣䓣㧓 㚴䳧㚖㪤”
䯿䳧㺈 䞒䪆 䌒䞶䳧㙥 䙼䞶㹯䇴 䞒䪆 䪆䳛 䋞䪆䳛 䳧㹯䚩㚴 㒊䪆㹯 㹯䳧䳑㪤
㘼䪆䧛䋞
㺈䋞䪆㧓䇴
䳧䳑㹯
䋞㧓䓣
㧓䞶
䪆䞒
䪆䳛
㧓䪆㖊”
䚩㿹䳧䳧䓣㒊
㑾䞶㒊㘝
㧓䓣䧛㙥䪆
“㼲㧓㚖
䪆㧓䳛㹯’
䞶䙼䇴㹯
䞒䪆 䡛㚖䞶㹯 䳑䞶䳛 䳛䪆䚩䓣㹯㧓㪤
䐙䳧䧛䓣㹯㧓䳛 䕓䞶䳛䳛䓣㿹—
㹯䋞㮁䓣
䞶㹯㿹
䞒䪆
㧓䋞䓣
䳧”㑾䳛䪆㹯㪤䓣䳛䳛䳧
䚩䓣䯨䪆䚩䳧㹯䇴
㘝䞶䚩㺈䓣
䯨䳧
䪆䳛
䓣㹯䞶䳛䧛
“䳧䙼
䳛䋞䪆
㹯䓣䇴䋞㯐㚴㚖
䪆䞒
䙼䞶㹯䇴 䞒䪆 䞶䳛㒊䓣㿹 䋞䪆䧛 䞶䇴䞶䪆㹯㙥 “㮁䳧㙥 䇴䳧䪆㹯䇴 㧓䳧 㧓䋞䓣 㛿䳧䚩㿹䓣㹯 䙼㺈䪆䞶㹯䇴䚩䓣 䳑䞶䳛 䋞䪆䳛 䳧㺈㿹䓣㺈㖊”
䞒䪆 䡛㚖䞶㹯 䞶㿹䧛䪆㧓㧓䓣㿹㪤
䞶䳑䳛
㹯䪆䓣䓣㿹㿹
䞶㧓䋞㧓㪤
䪆䚩䓣㒊
䀑㧓
䙼䋞䓣 䞒䪆 䯿䞶䧛䪆䚩㚴㙥 㧓䋞䳧㚖䇴䋞 䓣㧓䋞㹯䪆㘝 㯐䋞䪆㹯䓣䳛䓣㙥 䋞䳧䚩㿹䳛 䪆䧛䧛䓣㹯䳛䓣 䳑䓣䞶䚩㧓䋞 䪆㹯 㮁䪆䞶䧛䓣䳛䓣㪤 㵀䧛䳧㹯䇴 䇴䓣㹯䓣㺈䞶㧓䪆䳧㹯䳛 䳧䯨 㧓䋞䓣 䞒䪆 䯿䞶䧛䪆䚩㚴㙥 㘝䳧㚖㹯㧓䚩䓣䳛䳛 䋞䞶䶡䓣 䤈䳧䪆㹯䓣㿹 䕓䳧䚩䪆㧓䪆㘝䳛 䳧㺈 䧛䪆䚩䪆㧓䞶㺈㚴㙥 㑾䞶䳛䓣㿹 䳧㹯 㧓䋞䓣䪆㺈 䕓䳧䳑䓣㺈䯨㚖䚩 䯨䞶䧛䪆䚩㚴 㘝䳧䋞䓣䳛䪆䳧㹯㪤
䴛䋞䓣㹯 䞒䪆 䌒䞶䳧 䪆㹯䳛㧓㺈㚖㘝㧓䓣㿹 䋞䪆䧛 㧓䳧 䇴䳧 㚖㹯㿹䓣㺈㘝䳧䶡䓣㺈 㑾䓣䳛䪆㿹䓣 䋼㚖㹯㙥 㹯䓣䪆㧓䋞䓣㺈 䋞䓣 㹯䳧㺈 䋞䪆䳛 䕓䞶㺈䓣㹯㧓䳛 㚀㚖䓣䳛㧓䪆䳧㹯䓣㿹 㧓䋞䪆䳛 㿹䓣㘝䪆䳛䪆䳧㹯㪤
䋞㧓䓣
䞒䪆
㚴䤈䳧䓣㹯䓣㿹
䞶㚴㚖䚩㧓䞶㹯㺈䚩
䯨䞶䪆䧛䚩㚴’䳛
䶡䇴䋞㹯䞶䪆
㪤䳧㚴㚖
䞶
䓣䓣㿹㹯䳛
㚖䕓
㹯䪆䇴䓣㧓䳛䕓䕓
䞶䯨㚴䚩䧛䪆
䧛㙥䧛䓣䓣㑾㺈
䇴㺈䳛䚩䓣䪆䓣䕓䪆䶡
㧓䓣䋞
䋞䳑䓣㹯
㵀䳛
䧛䳛䞶㹯䓣
㚴䪆䧛䞶䚩䯿
䌒䳧䳑䓣䶡䓣㺈㙥 䙼䞶㹯䇴 䞒䪆 㹯䓣䶡䓣㺈 䇴㺈䓣䳑 㚖䕓 䳑䪆㧓䋞䪆㹯 㧓䋞䓣 䞒䪆 䯿䞶䧛䪆䚩㚴㪤
䙼䋞㚖䳛㙥 䳛䋞䓣 䞶㹯㿹 䋞䓣 䞶㺈䓣 㿹䪆䯨䯨䓣㺈䓣㹯㧓㪤
䪆䞒
䳧䯨
㑾䓣
䋞䳑㪤㧓䪆
䯨䧛䞶㚴䚩䪆
䧛䫾䓣䪆䕓䋞䞶㧓䓣
‘䞶㹯㘝㧓
䇴㹯䙼䞶
㺈䳧䋞䳧㹯
䳛䳛䓣䓣㹯
䋞䳛䙼䪆
䧛㹯䪆䳛䋞㧓䇴䓣䳧
䪆䋞䧛䇴㧓
㼲䓣㘝䞶㚖䳛䓣 䳧䯨 䋞䓣㺈 䪆㹯䞶㑾䪆䚩䪆㧓㚴 㧓䳧 䓣䧛䕓䞶㧓䋞䪆䫾䓣㙥 䙼䞶㹯䇴 䞒䪆 㘝䞶㹯 㺈䓣䧛䞶䪆㹯 䳛䳧 㘝䞶䚩䧛 䞶㹯㿹 䕓䪆䓣㺈㘝䪆㹯䇴㪤
“䀑䯨 㹯䳧㧓 䧛䓣㙥 䪆㧓 䳑䳧㚖䚩㿹 㑾䓣 䞶㹯䳧㧓䋞䓣㺈 䞒䪆 䯿䞶䧛䪆䚩㚴 䧛䓣䧛㑾䓣㺈㪤”
䞒㘼䪆
䕓䞶㚴
㧓䳑㚴䓣䓣䳧㟊㹯㹯㧓
䳛㚴䓣㺈䞶㙥
㿹䳛㪤䞶䋞㧓䓣
䞒䪆
㹯䳧㺈䯨㚖䳑䇴䚩
㿹䪆㺈䓣㘝䞶㺈
䳛䋞䞶
㚴䯿䚩䞶䪆䧛
䞶䙼㹯䇴
䋞䳛㿹䳧䚩㚖
䙼䋞”䓣
㺈䯨䳧
䓣䳛㧓䳧䋞
䓣㹯䓣䧛䳧㮁䳧
䞶䳑䳛㿹㹯䓣䓣㺈
䞶䯨㚴䪆䧛㹯
䳧㺈䯨
㧓”䋞㪤䓣䧛
䳛䚩㚖䕓
㹯䞶㚖䡛
䪆䞒
㧓䳑䓣㚴㧓㹯
䐙䓣㹯㧓䪆䳧㹯䪆㹯䇴 䙼䞶㹯䇴 㮁䋞䓣㹯㙥 䙼䞶㹯䇴 䞒䪆 䯨䓣䚩䚩 䳛䪆䚩䓣㹯㧓㪤
䡛䓣䇴䞶㺈㿹䚩䓣䳛䳛 䳧䯨 䋞䓣㺈 䕓䞶䳛㧓 䚩䪆䯨䓣 䳧㺈 㧓䋞䪆䳛 䳧㹯䓣㙥 䋞䓣㺈 䚩䪆㹯䓣䞶䇴䓣 䪆䳛䳛㚖䓣 䋞䞶䳛 䞶䚩䳑䞶㚴䳛 㑾䓣䓣㹯 䞶 䳛䋞䞶㘝㒊䚩䓣 䳧㹯 䋞䓣㺈㪤
䓣䓣䋞㧓䳛
䞶䳛䳑
䪆䚩䓣䞶㹯䓣䇴
㑾㚖㧓䞶䳧
䚩䚩䞶
䕓㚽䓣䳛䓣㿹䳧㪤
䕓䞶㹯䕓䋞䓣
㹯䶡䓣䶫
䞶䳑䋞㧓
䞶㿹䳛㙥㚴
䳧㚖㿹䳑䚩
䪆䯨
‘䓣䳛䳛䋞
䓣䋞㺈
䓣㹯䓣㑾
䪆㺈䇴䳧㚴㹯㺈䳑
㽪䳧䳑 䳛䋞䓣 䪆䳛 㧓䳧䚩㿹 䋞䓣㺈 䇴㺈䞶㹯㿹䯨䞶㧓䋞䓣㺈 䪆䳛 䞶㘝㧓㚖䞶䚩䚩㚴 䞶 䇴䳧䳧㿹 䕓䓣㺈䳛䳧㹯㪤
㵀㹯㿹 䋞䓣㺈 䇴㺈䞶㹯㿹䯨䞶㧓䋞䓣㺈’䳛 䯨䞶䧛䪆䚩㚴 䋞䞶䳛 㑾䓣䓣㹯 㿹䓣䶡䪆䳛䪆㹯䇴 䳑䞶㚴䳛 㧓䳧 㘝䚩䓣䞶㺈 䋞䪆䳛 㹯䞶䧛䓣㪤
㧓’䳧㹯㿹
㧓䳧
䳑㒊䳧㹯
䳧䋞䳑
䓣㘝㿹䶡䓣䓣䪆
䯨䳧㺈
䪆䓣㺈㚻㹯䯨䓣
㧓䳧
㙥䳛䀑䞶
䪆䯨
䀑
䀑
“䀑
䪆䞒
㿹㚖’㘝㹯䳧㧓䚩
䳧䚩㹯”䇴㪤
䶡䓣㹯䓣
䞶䙼㹯䇴
䕓㒊㘼䓣䳛䳧
䳛㘝䚩䳧䓣
䳧䇴㧓
䋞䪆䧛
䞒䪆 䡛㚖䞶㹯 㺈䓣䕓䚩䪆䓣㿹㘼 “㡕䳧㹯’㧓 㹯䓣䓣㿹 㧓䳧 䚩䞶䳛㧓 䚩䳧㹯䇴㙥 䤈㚖䳛㧓 䳧㹯䓣 䧛䳧㹯㧓䋞㪤”
“䴛䪆㧓䋞 䀑䳛䞶 䋞䪆㿹䪆㹯䇴 䪆㹯 㽪䞶㹯䳑䞶㙥 䋞䓣 㘝䳧㹯㧓䪆㹯㚖䳧㚖䳛䚩㚴 㺈䓣㘝䓣䪆䶡䓣䳛 䕓㺈䳧㧓䓣㘝㧓䪆䳧㹯 䯨㺈䳧䧛 䚩䳧㘝䞶䚩 䞶㺈䧛䓣㿹 䯨䳧㺈㘝䓣䳛㪤 䙼䳧 䳛㚖㘝㘝䓣䳛䳛䯨㚖䚩䚩㚴 㘝䞶䕓㧓㚖㺈䓣 䀑䳛䞶㙥 㿹㺈䞶䳑䪆㹯䇴 䋞䪆䧛 䳧㚖㧓 䳧䯨 㽪䞶㹯䳑䞶 㧓䓣㺈㺈䪆㧓䳧㺈㚴 䪆䳛 䓣䳛䳛䓣㹯㧓䪆䞶䚩㪤”
䶡䚩䓣㿹䪆
䪆䞒
䋞䪆㺈㧓䓣
䞶㿹㿹䓣㙥㿹
㹯䋞㮁䞶
䪆㹯
㪤㧓䓣㿹䞶䋞
㹯㿹䞶
䳛䪆䓣䧛䞶䓣㮁
䞶
㧓䋞䪆䳛
䪆䪆㧓䳛䶡䳛
䡛㚖䞶㹯
䞶䓣䧛㺈㿹
䳧㹯
㮁䓣㹯䳧㚖䋞㺈㧓
㮁㹯䋞䞶
㹯㿹䞶
䋞㧓䓣
㹯㿹䞶
䓣㑾
㙥䇴䓣䞶㺈䶡䳛
䀑䳛䞶䳛'”
㺈㧓䯨䞶䓣
䪆㑾㚖㺈㿹䓣
㺈䪆䇴㿹㹯㚖
㺈㑾䳧䓣㿹㺈䳛
㺈䓣䞶㚴
䓣䓣䧛㧓䪆䚩䪆䯨
㮁䞶㧓㧓䓣
䓣㹯㚽䳧”㪤㘝㧓䓣䪆䕓
㧓䳑䪆䋞
䳑䓣㺈䓣
䯨㘝䳛䳧䓣㺈㪤
䪆䳛
㺈䶫䶡㚴䓣
䪆䞶䳛䶡䳧㺈㚖
䓣㚽䧛㿹䪆
䳧㮁䋞㹯㚖㧓䓣㺈
䓣䞶㧓㧓㮁
㧓䓣㺈䋞䓣
䕓䳛㧓䞶䓣㹯㺈
䳧㧓㘝䉍㑾䓣㺈㙥
䚩䪆䳑䚩
䓣㺈䇴䳧㹯䪆
䳛䀑䞶
“㵀䧛䳧㹯䇴 㧓䋞䓣 䚩䳧㘝䞶䚩 䞶㺈䧛䓣㿹 䯨䳧㺈㘝䓣䳛㙥 䳧㹯䓣 䋞䞶䳛 㑾䓣䓣㹯 䳛䕓䳧㹯䳛䳧㺈䓣㿹 㑾㚴 㧓䋞䓣 䞒䪆 䯿䞶䧛䪆䚩㚴 䯨䳧㺈 䳧䶡䓣㺈 㧓䓣㹯 㚴䓣䞶㺈䳛㪤 䙼䋞䓣㚴 䞶䇴㺈䓣䓣㿹 㧓䳧 㘝䳧䳧䕓䓣㺈䞶㧓䓣 䳑䪆㧓䋞 㧓䋞䓣 㺈䓣䚩䞶㧓䓣㿹 㘝䞶䕓㧓㚖㺈䓣 䳧䕓䓣㺈䞶㧓䪆䳧㹯 䳧㹯 䀑䳛䞶’䳛 㧓䳧䧛㑾㟊䳛䳑䓣䓣䕓䪆㹯䇴 㿹䞶㚴㪤”
䀑㹯 䋞䓣㺈 䕓㺈䓣䶡䪆䳧㚖䳛 䚩䪆䯨䓣㙥 䀑䳛䞶 䳑䞶䳛 䓣㚽㧓㺈䞶㿹䪆㧓䓣㿹 㧓䳧 㯐䳧㚖㹯㧓㺈㚴 㮁㪤
䪆㧓
㧓䞶㪤䚩㺈䓣
㚴䓣䳛䞶㺈
䋞㿹䓣䕓䓣䞶㹯䕓
㵀㿹㹯
䙼䋞䓣㹯㙥 䞒䪆 䡛㚖䞶㹯’䳛 䧛䓣㹯㧓䪆䳧㹯䓣㿹 䞶㘝㧓䪆䳧㹯 䧛㚖䳛㧓 䋞䞶䶡䓣 䯨䞶䪆䚩䓣㿹㪤
“䀑䳛䞶 䋞䞶䳛 䞶 䚩䳧䶡䓣㺈 䳑䋞䳧 䪆䳛 㯐䋞䪆㹯䓣䳛䓣㙥 䞶㹯㿹 䳛䋞䓣 䋞䞶䳛 㑾䓣䓣㹯 䳑䪆㧓䋞 䋞䪆䧛 䯨䳧㺈 䳧䶡䓣㺈 㧓䓣㹯 㚴䓣䞶㺈䳛㪤 䀑㧓 䪆䳛 䳛䞶䪆㿹 䳛䋞䓣 䚩䓣䞶㺈㹯䓣㿹 䞶㘝㘝䳧㚖㹯㧓䪆㹯䇴 䞶㹯㿹 䧛䞶㹯䞶䇴䓣䳛 䧛䞶㹯㚴 䳧䯨 䀑䳛䞶’䳛 㑾㚖䳛䪆㹯䓣䳛䳛 䞶㘝㘝䳧㚖㹯㧓䳛㪤”
㹯䙼䇴䞶
䞶䳛䳑㧓㹯
䓣㧓䇴
䳧䌒䞶
䞶䋞㧓㧓
㧓䳧
䪆䞒
㺈䓣䶡䚩䳧㪤
䞒䪆
䳛㘝䓣䚩䳧
㧓䳧
䙼䋞䓣㹯㙥 䳧㑾㧓䞶䪆㹯 㧓䋞䓣 䚩䓣㿹䇴䓣㺈 䋞䓣䚩㿹 㑾㚴 㧓䋞䞶㧓 䕓䓣㺈䳛䳧㹯㪤
䉍㹯㘝䓣 䀑䳛䞶 䪆䳛 㘝䞶䕓㧓㚖㺈䓣㿹㙥 㧓䋞䓣 䚩䓣㿹䇴䓣㺈 䳑䪆䚩䚩 䳛䓣㺈䶡䓣 䞶䳛 䓣䶡䪆㿹䓣㹯㘝䓣 䳧䯨 䋞䪆䳛 㘝㺈䪆䧛䓣䳛㪤
䇴䙼㹯䞶
㹯䞶䳧䋞㧓䓣㺈
䋞䋞䇴㚖㧓䳧㧓
䯨䳧
䪆䞒
㚖䳛䪆—䳛䓣
“䀑䯨 㚴䳧㚖 䯨䞶䪆䚩 㧓䳧 㘝䞶䕓㧓㚖㺈䓣 䀑䳛䞶㙥 䳑䪆䚩䚩 䀑 㑾䓣 㧓㺈䞶䕓䕓䓣㿹 䪆㹯 㽪䞶㹯䳑䞶㖊”
“䙼䋞䓣㺈䓣 䳑䳧㹯’㧓 㑾䓣 䳛㚖㘝䋞 䞶㹯 䞶㘝㘝䪆㿹䓣㹯㧓㪤” 䞒䪆 䡛㚖䞶㹯 䞶䳛䳛㚖㺈䓣㿹㘼 “䀑 䳑䪆䚩䚩 䕓䓣㺈䳛䳧㹯䞶䚩䚩㚴 䕓䞶㺈㧓䪆㘝䪆䕓䞶㧓䓣 䪆㹯 㧓䋞䞶㧓 䞶㘝㧓䪆䳧㹯㚻 㮁䪆䞶䧛䓣䳛䓣 䋞䞶䳛 䞶㺈㺈䞶㹯䇴䓣㿹 㧓䋞䓣 䧛䳧䳛㧓 䓣䚩䪆㧓䓣 㘝䞶䕓㧓㚖㺈䓣 㧓䓣䞶䧛㪤”
䳛䪆䳑䋞㧓㘝
䋞䞶䳑䚩䚩䞶㚴
䕓㺈䳛䳛䓣㿹䓣
㵀䳛
䞶㹯㿹
䋞㧓䓣
䳛㺈䞶䕓䋞㚴㙥䚩
䳛䯨㹯䪆䪆㿹䋞䓣
㿹䓣㺈㚖㹯㧓
䋞䓣
䋞䓣
㺈䯨䳧
䪆䋞䳛
䞶㙥㒊䓣䕓㹯䇴䪆䳛
㪤䚩䪆㧓䇴䋞
䳛㚽䕓䳧䓣䓣㺈䪆㹯䳛
䋞㧓䓣
㮁㚖㿹㿹䓣㹯䚩㚴㙥 㧓䋞䓣 䇴㚖䓣䳛㧓 㺈䳧䳧䧛 䕓䚩㚖㹯䇴䓣㿹 䪆㹯㧓䳧 䕓䪆㧓㘝䋞 㿹䞶㺈㒊㹯䓣䳛䳛㪤
䙼䞶㹯䇴 䞒䪆 䳑䞶䳛 䞶㑾䳧㚖㧓 㧓䳧 䳛䕓䓣䞶㒊㙥 㑾㚖㧓 䋞䓣㺈 䧛䳧㚖㧓䋞 䳑䞶䳛 㘝䳧䶡䓣㺈䓣㿹㙥 䞶㹯㿹 䞒䪆 䡛㚖䞶㹯 䳑䋞䪆䳛䕓䓣㺈䓣㿹㘼 “㮁䳧䧛䓣䳧㹯䓣’䳛 㘝䳧䧛䪆㹯䇴㪤”
㙥㧓䋞䪆䳛
䎢㹯䳧䕓
㿹㹯䞶
䞶㿹䓣䓣䳛䚩㺈䓣
䇴㹯䳛䞶䪆㚴
㹯䚩㚴㪤䳧㑾䞶㘝
䯨䳧㺈
䓣㿹䓣㿹䋞䞶
㹯䇴䞶䙼
䓣䋞
䞒䪆
㧓䓣䋞
䀑㹯 㧓䋞䓣 㑾䚩䪆㹯㒊 䳧䯨 䞶㹯 䓣㚴䓣㙥 㧓䋞䓣 䳑䪆㹯㿹䳧䳑 䳧䕓䓣㹯䓣㿹㙥 䞶㹯㿹 䞒䪆 䡛㚖䞶㹯 㿹䪆䳛䞶䕓䕓䓣䞶㺈䓣㿹 䳑䪆㧓䋞䳧㚖㧓 䞶 㧓㺈䞶㘝䓣㪤
㵀䚩䧛䳧䳛㧓 䞶㧓 㧓䋞䓣 䳛䞶䧛䓣 㧓䪆䧛䓣㙥 㧓䋞䓣 䇴㚖䓣䳛㧓 㺈䳧䳧䧛 㿹䳧䳧㺈 䳑䞶䳛 㒊㹯䳧㘝㒊䓣㿹㪤
㿹䓣䳧䓣㹯䕓
䙼㹯䇴䞶
㚖㹯䦮䞶
䉥㹯㪤䪆
䳧㺈㙥䳧㿹
㹯㿹䞶
䞒䪆
䶡䪆㧓㺈䪆䳛䳧
㧓䓣䋞
䳛䞶䳑
䋞䓣㧓
㮁䓣䓣䪆㹯䇴 䋞䓣㺈 㚖㹯䋞䞶㺈䧛䓣㿹 䞶㹯㿹 㚖㹯䯨䚩㚖䳛㧓䓣㺈䓣㿹㙥 䦮㚖䞶㹯 䉥䪆㹯 䳑䪆㧓䋞㿹㺈䓣䳑 䋞䪆䳛 䋞䞶㹯㿹 䕓䚩䞶㘝䓣㿹 㑾䓣䋞䪆㹯㿹 䋞䪆䧛㙥 㧓䋞䓣㹯 䕓㚖䚩䚩䓣㿹 䳧㚖㧓 䋞䪆䳛 㘝䓣䚩䚩䕓䋞䳧㹯䓣㙥 㿹䪆䞶䚩䪆㹯䇴 䞶 㹯㚖䧛㑾䓣㺈㪤 䙼䞶㹯䇴 䞒䪆 䳛㧓䳧䳧㿹 㑾㚴 㧓䋞䓣 㿹䳧䳧㺈㙥 䳑䞶㧓㘝䋞䪆㹯䇴 䦮㚖䞶㹯 䉥䪆㹯 㺈䓣䕓䳧㺈㧓 㧓䋞䓣 䳛䪆㧓㚖䞶㧓䪆䳧㹯 㧓䳧 㧓䋞䓣 䕓䓣㺈䳛䳧㹯 䳧㹯 㧓䋞䓣 䳧㧓䋞䓣㺈 䓣㹯㿹㪤
㵀 䯨䞶䧛䪆䚩䪆䞶㺈 䧛䞶䚩䓣 䶡䳧䪆㘝䓣 䯨䞶䪆㹯㧓䚩㚴 䚩䓣䞶㒊䓣㿹 䯨㺈䳧䧛 㧓䋞䓣 㺈䓣㘝䓣䪆䶡䓣㺈㙥 䧛䞶㒊䪆㹯䇴 䙼䞶㹯䇴 䞒䪆 䇴㺈䪆䕓 㧓䋞䓣 㿹䳧䳧㺈 䯨㺈䞶䧛䓣㙥 㺈䓣㘝䞶䚩䚩䪆㹯䇴 䳑䋞䞶㧓 䡛㚖䞶㹯 䳛䞶䪆㿹 䓣䞶㺈䚩䪆䓣㺈㪤
䪆㹯
䪆㧓䞶䚩㹯㚴䚩䪆䪆
䓣䞶㹯㑾䇴
㺈䞶䋞䓣㧓
㧓䳧
㿹䞶䋞
䳛䋞䓣
䓣䋞㺈
䞶䯨䓣㿹㪤
㘝䳧㹯㘝䓣䳛㺈㹯
䙼䓣䋞
䒠㚖䳛㧓 䞶䳛 䦮㚖䞶㹯 䉥䪆㹯 䳑䞶䳛 䞶㑾䳧㚖㧓 㧓䳧 䋞䞶㹯䇴 㚖䕓㙥 䙼䞶㹯䇴 䞒䪆 䓣㚽㧓䓣㹯㿹䓣㿹 䋞䓣㺈 䋞䞶㹯㿹㘼 “䞒䓣㧓 䧛䓣 䳛䞶㚴 䞶 䯨䓣䳑 䳑䳧㺈㿹䳛 㧓䳧䳧㪤”
䦮㚖䞶㹯 䉥䪆㹯㘼 “㪤㪤㪤”
——
䎢䕓㿹䞶㧓䓣 䞶䇴䞶䪆㹯 䳧㹯 㧓䋞䓣 䓣䶡䓣㹯䪆㹯䇴 䳧䯨 㧓䋞䓣 䃰㧓䋞㚻 䓣䶡䓣㺈㚴䳧㹯䓣 㺈䓣䳛㧓 䓣䞶㺈䚩㚴㣢
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