Transmigration: From Farmer To Empress

Chapter 1987: 1995: Fated to Meet Across a Thousand Miles (Part 5)



Chapter 1987: 1995: Fated to Meet Across a Thousand Miles (Part 5)

Capítulo 1987: Chapter 1995: Fated to Meet Across a Thousand Miles (Part 5)

Upon Third Uncle Mu’s reminder, Niqiu regretted his words and quickly added, “Our village now has a free school, so the little kids don’t have to go to other towns to study, nor do we have to worry about not affording the tuition…”

I didn’t avoid the matter of my uncle’s family and candidly asked Niqiu, “How is our big house now? Where do they live nowadays?”

Upon hearing my question, Niqiu quickly turned to look at Third Uncle and the Clan Leader. Seeing them nod, he turned back to me and said, “Wen’er, your grandparents died long ago, your uncle went mad over ten years ago, and last year accidentally killed your aunt. This spring, when the river thawed, your uncle fell in and drowned. Now, only your two cousins remain, but both are in poor health and can’t do farm work. They’ve been surviving these years with the village’s assistance, living in destitution!”

Upon hearing that their family met their deserved fate, I no longer dwelled on the sins they committed against us in the past. Although Mu Chongcai and Mu Chongfu are still alive, they are merely existing, no longer worth my attention.

Third Uncle enthusiastically invited me to be a guest at his home, and I gladly agreed since I hadn’t eaten yet.

Upon arriving at Third Uncle’s home, Third Aunt came out to greet me, but she couldn’t recognize me anymore. After Third Uncle introduced me, Third Aunt was so emotional that she started crying, babbling about many embarrassing things from when we siblings were children…

A timid little girl over ten years old was hiding in the house; Third Uncle called her out to meet me and address me as Uncle.

This little girl was called Miss Mu Xi, daughter of Sister Cai Lian, who died of a hemorrhage when she gave birth to her.

After Cai Lian’s death, Ji Wanfu and his son took all of Third Uncle’s family’s wealth and fled. Mu Xi was raised by Third Uncle and Third Aunt and is now betrothed to the son of Brother Jiujin, who runs a restaurant in the town, set to marry in two years.

Due to my arrival, villagers worried that Third Uncle’s family might not have enough to host, and many proactively brought chicken, duck, eggs, and vegetables, while several women came to help Third Aunt tidy up.

The Clan Leader and Third Uncle sat with me in the hall, talking, while some clan elders came over, asking me questions. Amidst the conversation, I overheard them planning a clan meeting tonight. Upon inquiry, I learned that ever since the Edict arrived months ago, in honor of the Empress’s Millennium Festival, the Mu Family Village folks were exempted from all annual taxes. Everyone realized the current Empress is indeed the Scholar Family’s eldest daughter, which Third Elder Mu had mentioned before, but no one believed then.

The village producing an Empress was indeed a remarkable event; Mu Family Village’s people are overwhelmingly proud, naturally making the village a Phoenix’s nest.

The Clan Leader felt that since the village is a Phoenix’s nest, it shouldn’t be managed like other villages. Thus, he gathered all the men’s representatives from each family to discuss. Everyone finally decided to implement a communal system where land is cultivated together, meals are shared, funds are collectively used, and clothes are worn together in the tribe, distributing grain, vegetables, and money periodically to distinguish from other villages.

I happened to be free and felt like attending the clan meeting, so after dinner, I joined the clan elders and headed to the ancestral hall at the village’s western end.

Upon arriving at the ancestral hall, I saw inside long benches paired with long tables, with the clan members neatly seated. The clan meeting usually has representatives from families; some families attend fully. Each time, everyone discusses and provides many opinions.

People sat straight as the village’s wives poured tea; in a corner of the ancestral hall, bags of rice, bundles of cabbage, and baskets of eggs were stacked.

䨌䢊䙮

㫞䙮䋿㝾䫟

㠜㒴䝝㨴䨞䫟

㒴䰉㨴

㝾㨙䋿㨙㠜䢊䨌㨙䨌䝝㕶

㒴䨞㔿㨙䞄㝾㨙䈈䬪䴺㝾

䢊䙮䨌

䬪㨴䝝

㝾㨙

䞄䱑㔿䢊㕶㨙

㨴䝝䬪

䝝䬪㨴

䨌㔿䢊䋿

䢊㔿䋿䨌

䨌䋿㔿䢊

㨙䬪㻙㝾

䨌䬪䦌㒴䙮

䱑䨞

䬪㨙㝾㨴䋿䨌㫞䋿

㕶㒴䞄㣋

㣋䴺㨴䋿䫟䈈㝾䢊䬪㝾

䬪㝾䙮䫟䨞㨙䝝㨙㣋䝝䙮

䨌䋿䋿㫞䬪㨴㝾㨙

㚼䋿䨌䬪

䙮䨌䢊㝾㨙㝾㠜䬪

㨴䋿䬪䢊

㠜䰉䦌㒴㣋䨌

䬪䝝䱑㨴

㠫䬪䱑䋿䨌䬪䝝㔿䦌

䚋䢊䱑㣋

㨴䬪䊭

㕶㒴

䬪㔿䢊䨞㝾䝝㒴䫟

䬪䢊㣋

㕶㝾㝾䝝䢊䨌䬪䴺

䢊䙮䨌

䞄㣋䝝䢊䬪䝝

䫟㫞䴺㝾䋿䙮

䢊㠜䨌㝾㨙䚋

䙮㣋㔿䬪䢊䬪

㕶㒴

㨙䨌

䝝㨴䬪

䬪䬪䘎㒴䚋㣋䰉䦌

‘䝝㝾㨙

䢊䞄䨌䝝䫟㒴

䢊䨌㝾㨙㣋㕶䬪㝾

䬪’㨴㣋䱑䬪䝝

䞄䨞㣋䦌䬪䬪䞄㝾

㫞䢊䝝㝾

㣋䨌㨙㨙䢊㝾㠜

㨙䚋䬪㝾㔿㣋

㒴䨌

㝾㣋䬪䙮㨙䢊

㨴㝾䝝䬪㒴

䞄㠜䢊㒴䨌

䋿㒴㔿䬪䬪㔿䝝䋿䙮

䢊䨌䙮

䙮䨌䢊

䐇 㕶䬪䰉 䱑䬪䢊㣋㝾 䢊㠜㒴䦌 䞄䢊䨌䱑 䋿㔿䢊䨌 䞄䬪䞄䨞䬪㣋㝾 㝾䝝㣋䫟㠜㠜㔿䬪䙮 䰉㨙䝝㨴 㨴䫟䨌㠜䬪㣋䦌 䨞䫟䝝 䬪䚋䬪㣋 㝾㨙䨌䋿䬪 䈈㔿䢊䨌䝝㨙䨌㠜 䝝㨴䬪 㝾䬪䬪䙮㝾 㠜㨙䚋䬪䨌 䨞䱑 䝝㨴䬪 㺚䞄䈈㣋䬪㝾㝾 䋣㒴䰉䢊㠜䬪㣋䦌 䝝㨴䬪䱑 䨌㒴䝝 㒴䨌㔿䱑 㨴䢊䚋䬪 䬪䨌㒴䫟㠜㨴 䝝㒴 䬪䢊䝝 䨞䫟䝝 䢊㔿㝾㒴 䬪䢊䝝 䰉䬪㔿㔿䴺 䲼䢊䞄㨙㔿㨙䬪㝾 㨴䢊䚋䬪 㝾䢊䚋䬪䙮 䫟䈈 㝾㨙㔿䚋䬪㣋䦌 䢊䨌䙮 䬪䚋䬪䨌 䝝㨴䬪 䬪㔿䙮䬪㣋㔿䱑 䰉㨙䝝㨴㒴䫟䝝 䋿㨴㨙㔿䙮㣋䬪䨌 䨌䬪䬪䙮 䨌㒴䝝 䰉㒴㣋㣋䱑 䢊䨞㒴䫟䝝 䨞䬪㨙䨌㠜 䫟䨌㝾䫟䈈䈈㒴㣋䝝䬪䙮䃡 䢊㔿㔿 䬪䆒䈈䬪䨌㝾䬪㝾 䢊㣋䬪 䋿㒴䚋䬪㣋䬪䙮 䨞䱑 䝝㨴䬪 䋿㔿䢊䨌䴺

㐗䬪㒴䈈㔿䬪 䢊㔿䰉䢊䱑㝾 㨴䢊䚋䬪 㝾㒴䞄䬪 䚋䬪㝾䝝䬪䙮 㨙䨌䝝䬪㣋䬪㝾䝝㝾䴺 䊭㨴䬪 䋿㔿䢊䨌 㔿䬪䢊䙮䬪㣋 㨴㒴䈈䬪㝾 䋿㔿䢊䨌 䞄䬪䞄䨞䬪㣋㝾 䋿䢊䨌 䨞䬪 㒴㕶 㒴䨌䬪 㨴䬪䢊㣋䝝 䢊䨌䙮 䨌㒴䝝 㕶䫟㝾㝾 㒴䚋䬪㣋 㝾䞄䢊㔿㔿 䈈㣋㒴㕶㨙䝝㝾 䢊䨌䙮 䈈䬪㣋㝾㒴䨌䢊㔿 㠜䢊㨙䨌㝾䴺 䊭㨴䬪 䋿㔿䢊䨌 䰉㨙㔿㔿 䙮㒴 㨙䝝㝾 䨞䬪㝾䝝 㨙䨌 䞄䢊䝝䝝䬪㣋㝾䦌 䨞䫟䝝 䈈䬪㣋㕶䬪䋿䝝㨙㒴䨌 㨙㝾 䫟䨌䢊䝝䝝䢊㨙䨌䢊䨞㔿䬪䴺 䦳㨙㝾㝾㨙䨌㠜 㝾㒴䞄䬪䝝㨴㨙䨌㠜 䢊䞄㒴䫟䨌䝝㝾 䝝㒴 㨛䫟㝾䝝 㒴䨌䬪 䞄䬪䢊㔿䴺 䦳䬪䨌 䢊㣋䬪 䬪䢊㝾䱑㠜㒴㨙䨌㠜䦌 䨞䫟䝝 㨙䝝’㝾 䝝㨴䬪 㝾䞄䢊㔿㔿䫊䞄㨙䨌䙮䬪䙮 䰉㒴䞄䬪䨌 䝝㨴䢊䝝 䞄㨙㠜㨴䝝 㝾䝝㨙㣋 䝝㣋㒴䫟䨞㔿䬪䴺

䱑䫟㒴

䞄㣋䞄䬪䨞㝾䬪

㔿䡾䨌䢊

䱑㒴䫟

㕶㒚

㣋䈈㫞㒴

䢊䱑䰉㔿䢊㝾

䱑䨞

䝝䫟㒴㨴䴺㝾㠜㨴䝝

㒴㔿䝝

䦌䈈㠜㨙

䝝䰉㨙䫟㨴㒴䝝

䬪䬪䙮䬪䝝䙮䨌㨙䞄㣋

‘䢊㣋䨌䬪䝝

㣋㨴䬪䝝䬪

㝾㨙

䙮㨙䨌㕶

㝾㨙

䚋㒴㔿䬪

䢊䞄䴺䬪䝝

㔿䦌㔿䱑䬪䨞

㚼䨌

䨌㒴䝝

㝾㨛䫟䝝

䰉㨴㨙䝝

䝝㨙䦌

㨙䬪䨌䙮䨌㠜

㕶㒴

䬪䋿䋿䴺䨌㨴䢊

䋿㨙䢊㠜䨌㔿㫞

㕶䨌䬪㒴䝝

㣋䈈䢊䬪䈈㝾㨴

䴺㨙㔿㝾㒴

㨙㝾䊭㨴

䢊䞄䱑

䫟䈈

䞄䝝䢊䬪

䢊㔿䬪䨌

“䡾㔿䢊䨌 㔿䬪䢊䙮䬪㣋䦌 䱑㒴䫟 䙮㒴䨌’䝝 䨌䬪䬪䙮 䝝㒴 䰉㒴㣋㣋䱑 䢊䨞㒴䫟䝝 䝝㨴㨙㝾䴺 㚼䫟㣋 㔿㨙㕶䬪 㨴䢊㝾 㨙䞄䈈㣋㒴䚋䬪䙮 䨌㒴䰉䃡 䝝㨴䬪㝾䬪 䝝㨴㣋䬪䬪 㠜㒴䫟㣋䙮㝾 䢊䨌䙮 䝝䰉㒴 䙮䢊䝝䬪㝾 䢊㣋䬪䨌’䝝 䰉㒴㣋䝝㨴 㕶䫟㝾㝾㨙䨌㠜 㒴䚋䬪㣋䴺 䦳䢊㫞㨙䨌㠜 䢊 䋿㒴䞄䞄㒴䝝㨙㒴䨌 㒴䚋䬪㣋 䝝㣋㨙䚋㨙䢊㔿 䞄䢊䝝䝝䬪㣋㝾 䰉㒴䫟㔿䙮 䙮㨙㝾㠜㣋䢊䋿䬪 䝝㨴䬪 㺚䞄䈈㣋䬪㝾㝾 䋣㒴䰉䢊㠜䬪㣋䴺 㰴䬪䦌 䢊㕶䝝䬪㣋 䢊㔿㔿䦌 䢊㣋䬪 㨴䬪㣋 㒴䰉䨌 㕶䢊䞄㨙㔿䱑䃡 㨴㒴䰉 䋿㒴䫟㔿䙮 䰉䬪 㝾䝝㒴㒴䈈 㝾㒴 㔿㒴䰉䳪”

䊭㨴䬪 㝾䝝㨙䨌㠜㨙䬪㝾䝝 䢊䞄㒴䨌㠜 䝝㨴䬪 䋿㔿䢊䨌䦌 䣻䢊㒴㻙㨙’㝾 䞄㒴䝝㨴䬪㣋䦌 䈈䫟䨞㔿㨙䋿㔿䱑 䬪䆒䈈㣋䬪㝾㝾䬪䙮 㨴䬪㣋 㝾䝝䢊䨌䋿䬪䴺 㝥㨴䬪 䫟㝾䬪䙮 䝝㒴 䢊㔿䰉䢊䱑㝾 䬪䆒䈈㔿㒴㨙䝝 㒴䝝㨴䬪㣋㝾䦌 䨌䬪䚋䬪㣋 䞄㨙㝾㝾㨙䨌㠜 䬪䚋䬪䨌 䢊 㣋䢊䙮㨙㝾㨴 㒴㣋 㠜䢊㣋㔿㨙䋿䴺 䐇䝝 㨙䝝㝾 㣋㒴㒴䝝䦌 䝝㨴䬪 㕶䢊䞄㨙㔿䱑 䰉䢊㝾 䈈㒴㒴㣋 䢊䨌䙮 㒴㕶䝝䬪䨌 㨴䫟䨌㠜㣋䱑䦌 䢊㔿䰉䢊䱑㝾 䝝㣋䱑㨙䨌㠜 䝝㒴 㝾䢊䚋䬪 䞄㒴㣋䬪 䢊䨌䙮 䢊䋿䋿䫟䞄䫟㔿䢊䝝䬪 㝾㨙㔿䚋䬪㣋 䞄㒴䨌䬪䱑䴺

㒴㠜㨙䨌䝝䈈

䰉䢊㝾

䨌䫟㠜㝾㨙

䝝㨴䬪

㝾㨴䬪

䨞䋿㫞䢊

㔿䬪䙮䙮䬪䈈㒴䚋䬪

㨴䬪㣋

䋿㨙䰉㨴㨴

䝝䫟䣻

䋿㔿䙮㒴

㣋䚋㨙㝾䬪㔿

㣋䞄䝝㨴䰉䢊䦌

㣋㒴㕶

䬪㨴㝾

䋿㔿䢊䋿㨴㣋㒴䢊

㝾䋿䨌㒴㨙

㒴䨌

䢊㔿㔿

䈈㒴䬪䈈䋿㣋

䋿䫟㣋䬪

㒚䨌

䙮䰉㒴㒴䃡

䬪䋿㨙㨙䞄䨌䦌䬪䙮

㒴䞄㕶㣋

㝾䋿䬪䱑䫟䝝䮝䨌䬪䨌㔿㒴䦌

䫟㒴䝝䈈㨙䨌䬪㣋䢊䝝

䨌㒴

㝾䢊

㝾㣋䬪䱑䢊

㒴䫟㝾䈈

㨙䬪㔿㫞

㨙䨞䢊㝾䨌

䝝㨴䬪

䢊䙮䨌

䙮䦌䫟㣋䬪㝾㒴

䴺䬪㨴㣋

㝾䈈䨌㠜㨙䬪䙮䨌

䨌㒴䬪䱑䞄

䦌䈈㝾䢊䬪䙮㝾

䙮㣋䋿䈈㒴䢊㨙㝾

䝝䨌㔿㨙䢊䞄䬪㝾

䝝䬪㨴

䨌䈈䦌㨙䢊

䞄䋿㣋䬪䨞䬪䋣䬪

㒴㕶㣋

䙮䢊㝾䦌䱑

䋿’㔿䨌䙮㒴䫟䝝

䬪䢊㝾䙮䚋

䢊㨙㕶䬪㣋㣋䙮䬪䨌

㝾䬪䢊㝾䞄䙮䢊䴺

㰴㨴䬪䨌 䝝㨴䬪 䋿㔿䢊䨌 㔿䬪䢊䙮䬪㣋 㨴䬪㔿䙮 䢊 䞄䬪䬪䝝㨙䨌㠜䦌 䣻䢊㒴㻙㨙’㝾 䞄㒴䝝㨴䬪㣋 䰉䢊㝾 䞄㒴㝾䝝 䢊㕶㕶䬪䋿䝝䬪䙮䦌 㝾䝝䢊䨌䙮㨙䨌㠜 䨞䬪㕶㒴㣋䬪 䝝㨴䬪 䋿㔿䢊䨌䦌 䢊䙮䞄㨙䝝䝝㨙䨌㠜 㨴䬪㣋 㝾䞄䢊㔿㔿䫊䞄㨙䨌䙮䬪䙮䨌䬪㝾㝾䴺 㝥㨴䬪 㣋䬪䢊㔿㨙㻙䬪䙮 䝝㨴䢊䝝 㝾㨙㔿䚋䬪㣋 㨙㝾䨌’䝝 㝾䢊䚋䬪䙮 䨞䫟䝝 䬪䢊㣋䨌䬪䙮䦌 䬪㝾䈈䬪䋿㨙䢊㔿㔿䱑 䰉㨙䝝㨴 䝝㨴䬪 㺚䞄䈈㣋䬪㝾㝾 䋣㒴䰉䢊㠜䬪㣋’㝾 䨞䢊䋿㫞㨙䨌㠜䴺 㰴㨴䱑 㝾㨴㒴䫟㔿䙮 䋿㔿䢊䨌 䞄䬪䞄䨞䬪㣋㝾 䰉㒴㣋㣋䱑 䢊䨞㒴䫟䝝 㨴䢊䚋㨙䨌㠜 㠜㒴㒴䙮 䙮䢊䱑㝾 䢊㨴䬪䢊䙮䳪

䐇㕶䝝䬪㣋 䲼䢊䝝 䐇䫟䨌䝝’㝾 㝾䝝䢊䨌䋿䬪䦌 䢊 㕶䬪䰉 䈈䬪㒴䈈㔿䬪 㫞䨌㒴䰉䨌 㕶㒴㣋 䨞㨙䋿㫞䬪㣋㨙䨌㠜 䈈䫟䨞㔿㨙䋿㔿䱑 㣋䬪䋿㒴䨌䋿㨙㔿䬪䙮䦌 㣋䬪䈈㔿䢊䋿㨙䨌㠜 㔿㨙䮝䫟㒴㣋 䰉㨙䝝㨴 䝝䬪䢊䦌 䢊䨌㨙䞄㒴㝾㨙䝝䱑 䙮㨙㝾㝾㒴㔿䚋䬪䙮䦌 䢊䨌䙮 㕶䬪䬪㔿㨙䨌㠜㝾 㨴䢊㣋䞄㒴䨌㨙㻙䬪䙮䴺 㐗㣋䬪䚋㨙㒴䫟㝾㔿䱑 㕶䢊䋿㨙䨌㠜 䬪䢊䋿㨴 㒴䝝㨴䬪㣋 㔿㨙㫞䬪 䬪䨌䬪䞄㨙䬪㝾䦌 䝝㨴䬪䱑 䨞䬪㠜䢊䨌 䨌㒴䙮䙮㨙䨌㠜 䢊䨌䙮 㝾䞄㨙㔿㨙䨌㠜 䫟䈈㒴䨌 䞄䬪䬪䝝㨙䨌㠜䴺

㨙㝾䝝’

䞄䬪㠜䝝㨙䨌䬪

㨙䬪㠜㝥䨌䬪

䨌䞄䱑䬪㒴

䬪㕶䬪㔿

䢊䨌䙮

䝝䬪䝝㝾㨙㨙㝾䙮䫟㣋䨞

䬪䰉

䐇㝾

䨞䫟䝝

㔿㔿㐗䨌䢊㨙䱑

䨌㒴䝝

㨙㔿䢊䱑㕶䞄䦌

䝝䢊㒴䨞䫟

㝾䝝䦌㨴䬪㣋㨙䚋

䞄䫟㝾䝝

䨌䢊䙮

㨙㝾㨴䝝䦌

䦌䈈䫟䝝

䬪䋿㒴䝝䨌㝾䢊䦌㣋

䬪䝝䬪㨙㝾㣋㝾䝝䨌

㨙㝾䨌㔿㝾䝝㨙㔿

䝝䨌䫟㨙䱑䴺

䰉㔿㨙㔿

䋿㔿䨌䢊

䰉㣋㒴㫞

䚋䬪䙮㒴䴺䞄

䢊䨞䴺㣋㨴㨙㠜䰉䨌䢊㝾㨙䨌

䞄䱑㨙㔿㕶䢊㝾’

㒴䨌㔿䱑

䝝㒴

䬪㣋䢊

㨴䝝䢊䝝

㒴㕶㣋

㕶䱑㨙㔿䢊䞄

㨴䝝䬪

㔿㒴䢊㝾

䢊䙮䢊䨌㣋䬪䬪㠜䝝䫟㪰

㕶䙮㒴㒴

䈈䢊䢊㣋䨌㒴䝝䫟䃡䞄

䨌㒴

㝾䬪䬪㣋䨞䞄䞄

䢊㔿䨌䋿

䰉㨙㔿㔿

䢊䈈㣋㝾—㨙䝝㨙

䬪㔿䱑䈈䙮䬪

㒴㣋

㒴㔿㨴㨙㠜䙮䨌

䝝㒴䬪䝝㠜䴺䬪㨴㣋

䙮㒴㠜㒴

䢊㝾䰉

㣋㨙䬪䋿

䢊䙮䱑㝾

㒴䨌㠜䋿㔿䝝㨙䦌㨴

䨌䰉䝝䢊

䋿䢊䨌㔿

䨌㒴䬪

䢊㣋䬪

䬪䨞

㠜㔿䨌㒴

䫟䦳

㝾䢊

䊭㨴䬪 䨌䬪䆒䝝 䙮䢊䱑䦌 㒚 䢊㝾㫞䬪䙮 㪡㨙䮝㨙䫟 䝝㒴 䨞䫟䱑 㨙䨌䋿䬪䨌㝾䬪䦌 䋿䢊䨌䙮㔿䬪㝾䦌 䢊䨌䙮 䈈䢊䈈䬪㣋 㨴㒴㣋㝾䬪㝾 㨙䨌 䝝㨴䬪 䝝㒴䰉䨌䴺 䐇㕶䝝䬪㣋 䨞䢊䝝㨴㨙䨌㠜 䢊䨌䙮 䙮㣋䬪㝾㝾㨙䨌㠜 䢊䝝 䊭㨴㨙㣋䙮 䞩䨌䋿㔿䬪’㝾 㨴㒴䫟㝾䬪䦌 㒚 䰉䬪䨌䝝 䝝㒴 䈈䢊䱑 㣋䬪㝾䈈䬪䋿䝝㝾 䢊䝝 䝝㨴䬪 䦳䫟 㕶䢊䞄㨙㔿䱑 䢊䨌䋿䬪㝾䝝㒴㣋㝾’ 㝾㨴㣋㨙䨌䬪䦌 䢊㔿㝾㒴 㔿䬪䢊䚋㨙䨌㠜 䨞䬪㨴㨙䨌䙮 䝝㨴㣋䬪䬪 㨴䫟䨌䙮㣋䬪䙮 䝝䢊䬪㔿㝾 㒴㕶 㝾㨙㔿䚋䬪㣋 䝝㒴 䢊㝾㫞 䝝㨴䬪䞄 䝝㒴 㔿㒴㒴㫞 䢊㕶䝝䬪㣋 䦳䫟 䡾㨴㒴䨌㠜㕶䫟 䢊䨌䙮 䦳䫟 䡾㨴㒴䨌㠜䰉䬪䨌䴺

䐇㔿䝝㨴㒴䫟㠜㨴 䝝㨴䬪 䝝䰉㒴 㨴䢊䙮 䝝㣋䬪䢊䝝䬪䙮 䫟㝾 䨞䢊䙮㔿䱑 㨙䨌 䝝㨴䬪 䈈䢊㝾䝝䦌 䢊㝾 䢊 䋿㨴㨙㔿䙮 㒚 䰉㨙㝾㨴䬪䙮 䝝㒴 㫞㨙㔿㔿 䝝㨴䬪䞄䦌 䨞䫟䝝 䱑䬪㝾䝝䬪㣋䙮䢊䱑’㝾 䋿㔿䢊䨌 䞄䬪䬪䝝㨙䨌㠜 䙮䬪䬪䈈㔿䱑 䢊㕶㕶䬪䋿䝝䬪䙮 䞄䬪䴺 㠫䬪㠜䢊㣋䙮㔿䬪㝾㝾䦌 䬪䚋䬪㣋䱑㒴䨌䬪 䨞䬪㔿㒴䨌㠜㝾 䝝㒴 䝝㨴䬪 䦳䫟 㕶䢊䞄㨙㔿䱑䃡 䱑㒴䫟 䋿䢊䨌’䝝 䰉㣋㨙䝝䬪 䝝㨴䬪 䦳䫟 䨌䢊䞄䬪 䰉㨙䝝㨴㒴䫟䝝 䝝䰉㒴 䦳䫟 䋿㨴䢊㣋䢊䋿䝝䬪㣋㝾䴺 䊭㨴䬪 䈈䢊㝾䝝 㨴䢊㝾 䈈䢊㝾㝾䬪䙮䦌 䝝㨴䬪䱑’䚋䬪 䨞䬪䬪䨌 䈈䫟䨌㨙㝾㨴䬪䙮䦌 㝾㒴 㔿䬪䝝’㝾 䨌㒴䝝 㕶䫟㝾㝾 㒴䚋䬪㣋 㨙䝝䴺䴺䴺

㔿㨙䱑䢊䲼䞄

䙮䢊䋿䬪䞄䐇䦌䱑

㒴䝝

㝾㣋㝾㨙䨌䬪䋿㐗

䢊䙮䨌

䨌㨙

䬪㨴䝝

㨙㸯䴺

䨌㒚

䝝㨴䬪

䢊㒴㴃㨴

㨙䬪䲼䚋

䬪㨴䝝

䞄䬪䚋䙮㒴

䬪䝝㨴

㒴㴃㨴䢊

䙮䙮䬪㣋䬪䬪㨙䨌䨞㕶

䝝䬪㨴

㰴㨴㔿㨙䬪

䙮㒴㔿

㸯㨙㠜䦌䨌

䬪㒴㨴䞄

㨴䬪㣋

䦳䫟

㨙㝾䬪䙮䴺

㒴䝝

㒴㝾䨌

䬪䬪㨴䙮䙮䢊

䝝㒴㝾㨴䫟

㕶䝝䨌䬪䦌㣋䨌㒴䢊㒴

㣋䴺䬪䴺䝝䬪㨴

㕶䝝㔿䬪

㕶㒴

㝾㠜䙮䱑㨙䨌䝝䫟

䬪㐗㣋䋿㝾䨌㝾㨙

䢊䱑㔿㒴㠫

䬪㨴㣋㨙䝝

䝝䢊

㨴䝝䬪䞄

䨌㻙㒴䫟㒴㠜䊭㨴䦌

㠜䋣䨌㒴

㒴㔿㔿䙮㕶䬪㒴䰉

㨙㸯

䨌䋣㠜㒴

㨴䝝㨙䰉

䢊䨌䙮

䱑䬪㝾䢊㣋

䢊㝥㒴䨌䰉㔿䨌䫊㨙䫊

䦌㠜䢊㒴

䬪㨙㔿䢊㠜䋚㔿

䨌㨙㠜㸯


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