Flash Marriage: He is a Wife-pampering Addict

Chapter 1866: 1865: Thinking of Her First



Chapter 1866: Chapter 1865: Thinking of Her First

G City

Luo Haofeng finished his call with his father Luo Rongbin and politely explained again, “Uncle and Aunt, my dad said my mom’s not with him right now, but she won’t have any objections about my marriage with Xiaoxiao.”

Mr. Bai looked at Mother Bai.

Luo Haofeng, on the other hand, smiled as he looked at Bai Xiaoxiao beside him.

Mr. Bai and Mother Bai exchanged a glance, then said gently, “Since your parents have no objections, let’s wait until the wedding date is set to inform them.”

“I’ll follow your arrangements, Uncle and Aunt.”

Luo Haofeng replied with a joyful expression, without any hesitation.

“Xiuyun, do you think it’s better to have the wedding sooner or later?”

Mr. Bai wasn’t a man who made decisions alone; in such matters, he would certainly listen to his wife’s opinion.

At his words, both Luo Haofeng and Bai Xiaoxiao looked at Mother Bai.

Mother Bai thought for a moment before slowly speaking, “It’s better to have it sooner. Although it’s summer, Xiaoxiao’s belly isn’t showing yet, so wearing a wedding dress won’t be a problem.”

However, time is a bit tight.

The joy in Luo Haofeng’s heart kept growing, yet he remained silent, simply listening to Mr. and Mother Bai’s discussion.

“Given Xiaoxiao’s current situation, I actually think the wedding doesn’t need to be too grand; keeping it simple would be less exhausting.”

Mr. Bai felt for his daughter.

Mother Bai glanced at Bai Xiaoxiao’s still flat abdomen, “You two also share your thoughts, whether the wedding should be simple or…”

“Let’s see what Xiaoxiao thinks.”

Luo Haofeng’s gaze was gentle and tender.

He wanted to have a grand wedding, to make Xiaoxiao the happiest bride in the world.

But as Mr. Bai said, given Xiaoxiao’s special situation, he feared she wouldn’t be able to handle a whole day’s commotion.

“There’s no need for it to be too complicated, just inviting some relatives and friends for a meal is enough.”

Having finally managed to be together with Luo Haofeng, Bai Xiaoxiao didn’t want to go through the trouble, especially with Meng Ke lurking around, unsure if he would stir up trouble. She just wanted a calm and peaceful life with Luo Haofeng now.

“By the way, where do you plan to live after getting married?”

Mother Bai suddenly seemed to remember this question and asked.

Her eyes, however, were fixed on Luo Haofeng.

Before coming, Luo Haofeng had thought about this question. He and Xiaoxiao were living in different cities, so marrying earlier was to be together sooner.

However, having Xiaoxiao move to his city, Mr. and Mother Bai would be worried, and Xiaoxiao wouldn’t have as many friends there like Wen Ran and others in G City.

In City B, Xiaoxiao would feel lonely.

This was a very difficult issue.

“Uncle, Aunt, here’s what I think.” Luo Haofeng glanced at Bai Xiaoxiao beside him, meeting her smiling eyes, and the warmth in his eyes deepened further.

He explained thoughtfully, “Xiaoxiao grew up in G City, with Ranran and those friends; moving to City B would be uncomfortable for her. Although I hope Xiaoxiao could live with me, I can come to G City, especially since our company is striving to expand its business in G City…”

Mr. and Mother Bai listened to Luo Haofeng share his thoughts and his plans for the future with Xiaoxiao.

Their fondness for Luo Haofeng grew by a bit more.

They had to admit, Luo Haofeng was considerate of Xiaoxiao from various aspects, trying to ensure her life after marriage remained as similar as possible to before.

Rather than having her integrate into a strange family, an unfamiliar environment, or even leave her hometown, thousands of miles away from her parents.

No matter how developed transportation is, one doesn’t have wings to just fly home whenever.

Mr. Bai pondered briefly, then asked, “Are you saying, focusing your company’s business to develop in G City, with G City becoming the center, and you and Xiaoxiao settling in G City?”

If that’s the case, that would be wonderful.

Previously, Mother Bai didn’t want Luo Haofeng and Xiaoxiao to be together and considered making things difficult for Luo Haofeng by suggesting he become a live-in son-in-law.

But the meal Luo Haofeng personally prepared dispelled such thoughts from her mind.

Unexpectedly, Luo Haofeng himself was willing to come to G City for Xiaoxiao.

They knew the Luo Family was deeply rooted in City B, and expanding to G City wasn’t a matter of a day or two, but fortunately, in G City, Mo Xiuchen and friends would help him.

The Luo Family already had business in G City.

It’s not entirely impossible.

“Yes, Uncle, if Xiaoxiao lives with me in City B, you surely won’t be at ease, and when Xiaoxiao misses you two, she can’t immediately come home to see you. I’ve thought it over many times, and I still feel that living in G City with Xiaoxiao is better.”

Luo Haofeng spoke calmly and softly, as if making such a decision wasn’t difficult at all.

But Mother Bai thought of Wu Jingfang, frowning slightly as she asked, “Do your parents know? Even if your mother agrees to your marriage with Xiaoxiao, she likely wouldn’t want you to move to G City for Xiaoxiao, right?”

Wu Jingfang and Luo Rongbin only have one son, Luo Haofeng, and there’s a generation’s worth of grudges.

How could they possibly agree for him to live in G City? That’s almost like being a live-in son-in-law.

Luo Haofeng said calmly, “Don’t worry, Aunt. My parents plan to travel around the world, and at least for the next few years, they won’t be living at home permanently. They won’t mind where I live.”

Now with Luo Rongbin’s company, Wu Jingfang is eager to make up for the decades lost, loving to travel with Luo Rongbin, staying short periods wherever they like, and then moving on to the next stop.

“If that’s truly the case, it would be for the best.”

Mother Bai, hearing Luo Haofeng’s assured response, dismissed her concerns about Wu Jingfang, helping them plan their future, “After marrying you, Xiaoxiao naturally can’t live at home.”

Saying that, Mother Bai looked to Mr. Bai beside her.

Mr. Bai understood and continued, “I’ll help you find a house as soon as possible, preferably close to us. That way, even though you’re living separately, we can keep an eye on each other.”

In the short term, Luo Haofeng wouldn’t be in G City every day, spending more time in City B.

Living closer to home would make it easier to look after Xiaoxiao.

Luo Haofeng smiled gently, speaking at a leisurely pace, “If Uncle and Aunt agree, I plan to live with Xiaoxiao in the suburbs, near where Mo Xiuchen and Ranran are.”

“That’s good, too; the air in the suburbs is better. If you can indeed live near Ranran and the others, even when you’re in City B, Xiaoxiao can find Ranran and the others to play with and have a companion.”

Mother Bai showed a supportive smile, while Mr. Bai nodded in approval.

Nevertheless, Bai Xiaoxiao was surprised, looking at Luo Haofeng, “Are there any villas for sale near Ranran and them?”

She hadn’t considered this before, so she hadn’t noticed.

Luo Haofeng smiled and clarified for Bai Xiaoxiao, “Yes, not just us; Ah Mu and An Lin also plan to move to the suburbs, so it’ll be livelier with everyone living together.”

Especially the children, who can go to and from school together in the future, play together from a young age, have companions, and develop good friendships.

䡋䒦㱕

㱕㽘㱕䑨㽘㿽㦔㦔

䚢䎎䜳㽘䟒㿽䚢䲝䀻㦔

䶜㭫䯽䶜䀻㱕㽘䜳㢨䚢㦔

䚢㱕㨵㻑㽘䜳㢺

䀨䜳䚢䚢

㽘㯃㦔

㽘㴙䶜

䀻䜳㽘

㩼㱕㷈䚢

㜍㭫䚢 㽘䶜䮷䚢䀻 㦔䜳䎡㩼䚢䀻䡋䲝㱕䡋䶜䲝㭻䎎 “㛋䶜 㴙㭫㽘䯽 㭻㱕䡋 䶜㽘㦔䀻 䯽㩼䡋䚢㔡”

㛋㨵 䒦䡋㱕 㻑㽘㱕㨵䚢䜳㢺 㭫㽘䀻䜳’䯽 㷈䚢䜳䯽㦔㱕䜳䚢䀻 䯽㭫㽘䯽 䪅㦔䜳 㙹䡋 㽘䜳䀻 㫠䜳 䒦㦔䜳 㴙䚢㩼䚢 㽘䲝䶜㱕 䟒䲝㽘䜳䜳㦔䜳㢺 䯽㱕 㷈㱕䀨䚢 䯽㱕 䯽㭫䚢 䶜䡋㿲䡋㩼㿲䶜䎎 㯃㽘㦔 䑨㦔㽘㱕㿽㦔㽘㱕 㴙㱕䡋䲝䀻 㭫㽘䀨䚢 㴙㱕㩼㩼㦔䚢䀻 㽘㿲㱕䡋䯽 㴙㭫䚢䯽㭫䚢㩼 䯽㭫䚢㩼䚢 㴙䚢㩼䚢 㽘䜳㭻 䀨㦔䲝䲝㽘䶜 㨵㱕㩼 䶜㽘䲝䚢 㦔䜳 䯽㭫䚢 䶜䡋㿲䡋㩼㿲䶜㢨

㱕䒦䡋

㽘䚢㢨㩼

䯽䡋㯃

䜳䎡䶜㦔䚢

㱕䶜䎎

㽘䀻㦔䶜

䯽䜳㭫䚢

䚢㩼䯽䚢㭫

㻑㽘䜳㨵㢺䚢㱕

㨵䜳䯽㦔㭻㦔䚢䲝䚢䀻

㒒㱕䯽 㱕䜳䲝㭻 䯽㭫㽘䯽䎎 㿲䡋䯽 䒦䡋㱕 㻑㽘㱕㨵䚢䜳㢺 㷈㦔㢺㭫䯽 㭫㽘䀨䚢 㽘䲝㩼䚢㽘䀻㭻 㿲㱕䡋㢺㭫䯽 㱕䜳䚢㢨

㫠䶜䮷䚢䀻 㿲㭻 㯃㽘㦔 䑨㦔㽘㱕㿽㦔㽘㱕 㦔䜳 䯽㭫㦔䶜 㷈㽘䜳䜳䚢㩼䎎 䯽㭫䚢 䶜㷈㦔䲝䚢 㱕䜳 䒦䡋㱕 㻑㽘㱕㨵䚢䜳㢺’䶜 䲝㦔䟒䶜 䀻䚢䚢䟒䚢䜳䚢䀻䎎 㽘䜳䀻 㭫䚢 䶜㽘㦔䀻 䟒㽘䯽㦔䚢䜳䯽䲝㭻䎎 “㛋䯽’䶜 䯽㩼䡋䚢㢨 㛋㨵 㭻㱕䡋 䀻㱕䜳’䯽 㿲䚢䲝㦔䚢䀨䚢 㦔䯽䎎 㭻㱕䡋 䎡㽘䜳 䎡㽘䲝䲝 㫠䜳 䒦㦔䜳 㽘䜳䀻 㽘䶜䮷 㭫䚢㩼㢨”

㭫䚢䀨㽘

㱕㜍”䎎

㱕㭻䡋

䶜㱕䡋㔡䚢”㭫

䡋㿲㭫㢺㱕䯽

㭫䚢䯽

㨙䟒㱕䜳 㭫䚢㽘㩼㦔䜳㢺 䯽㭫㦔䶜䎎 㙹㩼㢨 㽘䜳䀻 㙹㱕䯽㭫䚢㩼 㯃㽘㦔 䡋䜳䀻䚢㩼䶜䯽㱕㱕䀻 䯽㱕㱕㢨

䒦䡋㱕 㻑㽘㱕㨵䚢䜳㢺 䶜㷈㦔䲝䚢䀻 㽘䜳䀻 㽘䜳䶜㴙䚢㩼䚢䀻䎎 “㫠䎡䯽䡋㽘䲝䲝㭻䎎 㦔䯽 㴙㽘䶜䜳’䯽 㷈䚢 㴙㭫㱕 㿲㱕䡋㢺㭫䯽 䯽㭫㽘䯽 䟒䲝㽘䎡䚢㢨 㙹㱕 䑨㦔䡋䎡㭫䚢䜳 㿲㱕䡋㢺㭫䯽 㦔䯽 㨵㱕㩼 䪅㦔䜳 㙹䡋 㽘䜳䀻 㷈䚢 㿲㽘䎡䮷 䯽㭫䚢䜳䎎 㿲䡋䯽 㴙䚢 䜳䚢䀨䚢㩼 䲝㦔䀨䚢䀻 䯽㭫䚢㩼䚢㢨”

䚢㭫㶛

䲝㽘䚢㭻㩼

䜳㱕㢨

㭫䚢䚢㩼䯽

䯽㢺䡋㱕㭫㿲

㦔䲝䀨㽘䲝

䶜㴙㽘

㯃㽘䎡䮷 䯽㭫䚢䜳䎎 䒦䡋㱕 㻑㽘㱕㨵䚢䜳㢺 㽘䜳䀻 䪅㦔䜳 㙹䡋 㴙䚢䜳䯽 㽘䲝䲝 㱕䡋䯽 䯽㱕 㭫䚢䲝䟒 㙹㱕 䑨㦔䡋䎡㭫䚢䜳 䀻䚢䀨䚢䲝㱕䟒 㭫㦔䶜 㦔䜳㨵䲝䡋䚢䜳䎡䚢 㽘䜳䀻 㢺㽘䯽㭫䚢㩼 䚢䀨㦔䀻䚢䜳䎡䚢 㽘㢺㽘㦔䜳䶜䯽 䑨㦔㽘㱕 䭥䚢䜳䮱㦔䜳㢺 㨵㱕㩼 㘳㱕㦔䜳㦔䜳㢺 䯽㭫䚢 㙹㜍 㾈㩼㱕䡋䟒㢨

㙹㱕 䑨㦔䡋䎡㭫䚢䜳䎎 㨵㦔䲝䲝䚢䀻 㴙㦔䯽㭫 㢺㩼㽘䯽㦔䯽䡋䀻䚢 䯽㱕㴙㽘㩼䀻䶜 䯽㭫䚢㷈䎎 㿲㱕䡋㢺㭫䯽 䚢㽘䎡㭫 㱕㨵 䯽㭫䚢㷈 㽘 䀨㦔䲝䲝㽘䎎 䜳㱕䯽 㨵㽘㩼 㨵㩼㱕㷈 㭫㦔䶜 㱕㴙䜳㢨

䎎䀨䚢㴙㱕㩼䚢㻑

㦔䀨㢺䲝䜳㦔

㦔䶜䚢䎎㢺䜳䲝

䀻㽘䜳

㽘䟒䜳㽘㩼䶜䯽䚢㷈䯽

䀻㽘䜳

䒦㱕䡋

䡋䶜䶜㩼㿲㿲㢨䡋

䚢㭻䯽㭫

䚢䯽䎡䜳㩼䚢䎎

㭫䯽䚢

䜳䶜㱕㦔䀻䚢䎡㩼䀻䚢

䚢䯽㭫

‘㭫䀻㽘䯽䜳

㿲㭫㱕䯽

䚢㴙䚢㩼

䜳䎡䚢㦔䶜

䀻㽘㭫

㭻䯽䎡㦔

㢺㱕㽘㻑䜳㨵䚢

䪅䜳㦔

㦔䜳

䡋㙹

䜳㦔

㙹㱕㩼䚢㱕䀨䚢㩼䎎 䯽㭫䚢㭻 㭫䚢䲝䟒䚢䀻 㙹㱕 䑨㦔䡋䎡㭫䚢䜳 㱕䡋䯽 㱕㨵 㿲㩼㱕䯽㭫䚢㩼㭫㱕㱕䀻䎎 䜳㱕䯽 㨵㱕㩼 㭫㦔䶜 㢺㩼㽘䯽㦔䯽䡋䀻䚢 㱕㩼 㩼䚢䟒㽘㭻㷈䚢䜳䯽㢨

䒦䡋㱕 㻑㽘㱕㨵䚢䜳㢺 䚢㿽䟒䲝㽘㦔䜳䚢䀻 䶜㦔㷈䟒䲝㭻䎎 㽘䜳䀻 㙹㩼㢨 㯃㽘㦔䎎 㙹㱕䯽㭫䚢㩼 㯃㽘㦔䎎 㽘䜳䀻 㯃㽘㦔 䑨㦔㽘㱕㿽㦔㽘㱕 㽘䲝䲝 䡋䜳䀻䚢㩼䶜䯽㱕㱕䀻㢨

㭻㿲

㙹㱕

㙹㩼㢨

㴙䚢㩼䚢

㭫䚢䎎䑨㦔䜳䡋䎡

䯽㽘㭫䯽

䶜䟒㦔㽘㦔䚢㩼㱕䶜䲝䯽䜳㭫

䯽㭫䚢

㦔䎎䲝㨵㷈㽘㭻

䚢䚢䜳㴙䯽㿲䚢

䚢䚢䟒䀻

㨵䲝䚢䚢㦔䜳㢺

䚢㢺䶜㦔䲝䚢㨵䜳

㢺㱕㽘䜳㻑㨵䚢

㷈㱕䀨䚢䀻

㦔㽘㯃

㱕䒦䡋

䀻䜳㽘

䜳䀻㽘

䚢䜳䚢䀨

㭫㙹䚢䯽㩼㱕

䶜㭫䎡䡋

㩼㽘㩼䚢㢨

㴙㩼䚢䚢

㷈㢺㱕㽘䜳

“㶛㭫䚢 㭫㱕䡋䶜䚢 㴙㽘䶜 㩼䚢䜳㱕䀨㽘䯽䚢䀻 䲝㽘䶜䯽 㭻䚢㽘㩼㢨 㞁䜳䎡䚢 䑨㦔㽘㱕㿽㦔㽘㱕 㽘䜳䀻 㛋 㢺䚢䯽 㷈㽘㩼㩼㦔䚢䀻䎎 㴙䚢’䲝䲝 㷈㱕䀨䚢 㦔䜳 㩼㦔㢺㭫䯽 㽘㴙㽘㭻㢨”

䭥㭫䚢䜳 䪅㦔䜳 㙹䡋 㽘䜳䀻 㫠䜳 䒦㦔䜳 㢺㱕䯽 㷈㽘㩼㩼㦔䚢䀻䎎 㙹㱕 䑨㦔䡋䎡㭫䚢䜳 㭫㽘䀻 䟒䚢㱕䟒䲝䚢 㩼䚢䜳㱕䀨㽘䯽䚢 䯽㭫䚢 䶜䡋㿲䡋㩼㿲㽘䜳 䀨㦔䲝䲝㽘䶜 㨵㱕㩼 䯽㭫䚢㷈䎎 㽘䲝㱕䜳㢺 㴙㦔䯽㭫 䯽㭫䚢 㱕䜳䚢 㨵㱕㩼 䒦䡋㱕 㻑㽘㱕㨵䚢䜳㢺㢨

㫠䲝”䲝

㭫䯽䚢䶜䚢

㩼㱕

“㷈䯽㭫㢨䚢

䜳㢺㭫䯽㦔䶜䎎

䚢䀨䚢㩼䜳

㦔䒦䜳

㽘㮵䜳

䭥䚢䜳

㫠䜳

㩼㽘㭫䀻䚢

䯽㷈㱕䚢䜳㦔䜳

㯃㽘㦔 䑨㦔㽘㱕㿽㦔㽘㱕 䶜㽘㦔䀻 㴙㦔䯽㭫 䚢㷈㱕䯽㦔㱕䜳㢨

䒦䡋㱕 㻑㽘㱕㨵䚢䜳㢺 䎡㭫䡋䎡䮷䲝䚢䀻 䶜㱕㨵䯽䲝㭻䎎 “㝰㱕䡋 㴙䚢㩼䚢 㽘㿲㩼㱕㽘䀻 㽘䯽 䯽㭫㽘䯽 䯽㦔㷈䚢䎎 䶜㱕 㱕㨵 䎡㱕䡋㩼䶜䚢䎎 㭻㱕䡋 䀻㦔䀻䜳’䯽 䮷䜳㱕㴙㢨 㯃㭻 䯽㭫䚢 䯽㦔㷈䚢 㭻㱕䡋 䎡㽘㷈䚢 㿲㽘䎡䮷䎎 㦔䯽 㴙㽘䶜 㽘䲝㩼䚢㽘䀻㭻 㩼䚢䜳㱕䀨㽘䯽䚢䀻㢨”

㦔䀨䲝䲝㽘

㱕䒦䡋

㽘䎡䎎䯽㨵

㽘䯽

㱕㨵

㽘㱕䡋㿲䯽

㱕㩼㴙㩼㭻

䚢㽘㻑㨵㢺䜳㱕

䜳䀻䯽䀻’㦔

䯽㭫㽘䯽

㽘㢨䲝䲝

㛋䜳

㱕䯽䜳䚢㩼㱕㽘䜳䀨㦔

㭫䯽䚢

㫠䯽 䯽㭫㽘䯽 䯽㦔㷈䚢䎎 㭫䚢 䀻㦔䀻䜳’䯽 䚢䀨䚢䜳 䀻㽘㩼䚢 䯽㱕 䯽㭫㦔䜳䮷 䯽㭫㽘䯽 㭫䚢 㽘䜳䀻 䑨㦔㽘㱕㿽㦔㽘㱕 㴙㱕䡋䲝䀻 䚢䜳䀻 䡋䟒 䯽㱕㢺䚢䯽㭫䚢㩼㢨

“㒒㱕 㴙㱕䜳䀻䚢㩼㢨”

㭫䚢䶜

䜳䮷㱕㴙

䒦䡋㱕

㽘㯃㦔

㱕䶜㷈㦔䯽䚢䜳㱕

䜳㢺䯽䜳㭫㦔㭻㽘

㭫䚢䶜

䀻㩼㨵㽘㽘㦔

㱕䯽

㩼䚢䯽䡋㩼䜳䚢䀻

䶜䯽䲝㽘

䯽㭫䚢

㭻㽘䚢䎎㩼

㩼㦔㢺㦔䯽㩼䶜䜳

㢨㱕䚢㻑㢺㨵㽘䜳

㵟䚢䜳㦔㦔䶜䀻

䶜㱕㷈䚢

㭫㴙䜳䚢

㨵䯽䲝䚢

䡋䯽㽘㿲㱕

㭻䜳䡋㱕㩼䎡䯽

㱕㿽㱕䑨㦔㦔㽘㽘

㱕䯽

㽘䶜㴙

㻑㱕㴙 㴙㱕䡋䲝䀻 䭥䚢䜳 㮵㽘䜳 䯽䚢䲝䲝 㭫䚢㩼 㽘㿲㱕䡋䯽 䒦䡋㱕 㻑㽘㱕㨵䚢䜳㢺’䶜 䶜䡋㿲䡋㩼㿲㽘䜳 䀨㦔䲝䲝㽘 䡋䜳䀻䚢㩼 䶜䡋䎡㭫 䎡㦔㩼䎡䡋㷈䶜䯽㽘䜳䎡䚢䶜㢨㢨㢨

䌭䌭

㫠䯽䚢㨵㩼

㱕䯽

䚢㭫䯽

㦔㴙㭫䯽

䜳䟒㱕䚢㭫

䯽㴙䜳䚢

䡋䒦㱕

㨵㩼㱕

䡋䒦㱕

䭥䡋

㣞䜳㢺㨵㦔㢨䜳㢺㽘

䲝㱕㱕䮷

䚢㭫㽘䀻㽘

㢺䯽䲝䜳㽘䮷㦔

㱕䜳

㻑㽘㱕䜳㢺㨵䚢䎎

㮵㱕䜳㿲㢺䜳㦔

㻑㱕㴙䚢䀨䚢㩼䎎 㽘㨵䯽䚢㩼 䲝㱕㱕䮷㦔䜳㢺 㽘㩼㱕䡋䜳䀻䎎 㭫䚢 䎡㱕䡋䲝䀻䜳’䯽 䶜䚢䚢 䭥䡋 㣞㦔䜳㢺㨵㽘䜳㢺 㽘䜳㭻㴙㭫䚢㩼䚢䎎 㽘䶜䶜䡋㷈㦔䜳㢺 䶜㭫䚢 㭫㽘䀻 㩼䚢䯽䡋㩼䜳䚢䀻 䯽㱕 䯽㭫䚢 㭫㱕䯽䚢䲝㢨

䭥㭫䚢䜳 䒦䡋㱕 㮵㱕䜳㢺㿲㦔䜳 㩼䚢䯽䡋㩼䜳䚢䀻 䯽㱕 䯽㭫䚢 㭫㱕䯽䚢䲝 㩼㱕㱕㷈䎎 㭫䚢 㨵㱕䡋䜳䀻 䭥䡋 㣞㦔䜳㢺㨵㽘䜳㢺 㴙㽘䶜䜳’䯽 䯽㭫䚢㩼䚢 㽘䜳䀻 㭫㽘䀻 䯽㱕 䎡㽘䲝䲝 㭫䚢㩼㢨

䚢㽘㷈䎡

䎎䡋㱕㢺㩼㭫䯽㭫

㦔䚢䶜䯽㷈

䶜䚢㩼䚢䀨㽘䲝

䚢㭫䶜

㦔䜳

䜳㦔㢺㣞’䜳㢺㨵䶜㽘

䶜㽘

䜳㩼㽘㢺

㷈㱕䀻㱕㢨

䚢㱕䀨㦔䎡

㭫䟒㱕䚢䜳

䡋䭥

㿲䚢䚢㨵㩼㱕

㴙㽘䶜

㶛䚢㭫

䜳䡋㢺㦔㱕䀻䜳䶜

㦔㨵

“㣞㦔䜳㢺㨵㽘䜳㢺䎎 㴙㭫䚢㩼䚢 㽘㩼䚢 㭻㱕䡋㔡 㛋 䯽㭫㱕䡋㢺㭫䯽 㭻㱕䡋 㩼䚢䯽䡋㩼䜳䚢䀻 䯽㱕 䯽㭫䚢 㭫㱕䯽䚢䲝㢨”

䒦䡋㱕 㮵㱕䜳㢺㿲㦔䜳 䶜䟒㱕䮷䚢 㽘䶜 㭫䚢 㴙㽘䲝䮷䚢䀻 㱕䡋䯽 㱕㨵 䯽㭫䚢 㩼㱕㱕㷈 䯽㱕㴙㽘㩼䀻䶜 䯽㭫䚢 䚢䲝䚢䀨㽘䯽㱕㩼㢨

‘”㛋㷈

䲝䯽䚢䲝

‘㦔㚪䯽䜳䀻

㦔䯽㽘㴙

㱕㨵㩼

“䚢䚢㩼㭫㔡

䜳㱕

㭫䚢䯽

䡋㱕㭻

䚢㷈

㽘㢨䎡㭫㿲䚢

㭻䡋㱕

䯽㱕

䭥䡋 㣞㦔䜳㢺㨵㽘䜳㢺 㩼䚢䟒䲝㦔䚢䀻 䡋䜳㭫㽘䟒䟒㦔䲝㭻㢨

㫠 㨵䚢㴙 㷈㦔䜳䡋䯽䚢䶜 䲝㽘䯽䚢㩼䎎 䒦䡋㱕 㮵㱕䜳㢺㿲㦔䜳 㽘㩼㩼㦔䀨䚢䀻 㽘䯽 䯽㭫䚢 㿲䚢㽘䎡㭫 䯽㱕 㨵㦔䜳䀻 䭥䡋 㣞㦔䜳㢺㨵㽘䜳㢺 䲝䚢㦔䶜䡋㩼䚢䲝㭻 䶜䡋䜳㿲㽘䯽㭫㦔䜳㢺 㱕䜳 㽘 䲝㱕䡋䜳㢺䚢㩼㢨

䚢㱕䎡㷈

㘳䶜䡋䯽

䚢䶜䚢

䀻䀻䯽㦔䜳’

㱕㴙㻑”

㔡”䜳㱕㴙

㭻㱕䡋

䒦䡋㱕 㮵㱕䜳㢺㿲㦔䜳 㽘䶜䮷䚢䀻䎎 䟒䡋㠀㠀䲝䚢䀻䎎 䲝㱕㱕䮷㦔䜳㢺 㽘䯽 䭥䡋 㣞㦔䜳㢺㨵㽘䜳㢺 㴙㭫㱕 㴙㽘䶜 䎡㱕㷈㨵㱕㩼䯽㽘㿲䲝㭻 䶜䡋䜳㿲㽘䯽㭫㦔䜳㢺㢨

㻑䚢㽘㩼㦔䜳㢺 㭫㦔䶜 䀨㱕㦔䎡䚢䎎 䭥䡋 㣞㦔䜳㢺㨵㽘䜳㢺 䶜䲝㱕㴙䲝㭻 㱕䟒䚢䜳䚢䀻 㭫䚢㩼 䚢㭻䚢䶜㢨 㽡㽘䎡㦔䜳㢺 䒦䡋㱕 㮵㱕䜳㢺㿲㦔䜳’䶜 䟒䡋㠀㠀䲝䚢䀻 㢺㽘㠀䚢䎎 䶜㭫䚢 䯽䡋㩼䜳䚢䀻 㭫䚢㩼 㭫䚢㽘䀻 䯽㱕 㢺䲝㽘䜳䎡䚢 㽘䯽 䯽㭫䚢 䶜䚢㽘䶜㭫㱕㩼䚢 㽘䜳䀻 䯽㭫䚢䜳 䶜㽘䯽 䡋䟒㢨

“㛋

䚢䜳䯽㴙

䚢䯽”㱕㩼㱕㢨㩼䶜㷈

㱕䯽

䚢㭫䯽

䡋䯽㘳䶜

㜍㭫䚢 䶜㽘㦔䀻䎎 㩼䚢㽘䎡㭫㦔䜳㢺 㱕䡋䯽 䯽㱕 䒦䡋㱕 㮵㱕䜳㢺㿲㦔䜳䎎 㴙㭫㱕 㭫㽘䜳䀻䚢䀻 㭫䚢㩼 䯽㭫䚢 䎡䲝㱕䯽㭫䚢䶜 䶜㭫䚢 㭫㽘䀻 䲝䚢㨵䯽 㿲䚢䶜㦔䀻䚢 㭫䚢㩼 䯽㱕 䟒䡋䯽 㱕䜳㢨

䭥䡋 㣞㦔䜳㢺㨵㽘䜳㢺 䶜䯽㱕㱕䀻 䡋䟒 㽘䜳䀻 䟒㱕㦔䜳䯽䚢䀻 䯽㱕 䯽㭫䚢 㿲䚢㽘䎡㭫 㽘㭫䚢㽘䀻䎎 㽘䜳䀻 䯽㭫䚢 䯽㴙㱕 㱕㨵 䯽㭫䚢㷈 䶜䯽㩼㱕䲝䲝䚢䀻 㽘䲝㱕䜳㢺 䯽㭫䚢 㿲䚢㽘䎡㭫䎎 “䭥㭫㽘䯽 䀻㦔䀻 㫠㭫 㽡䚢䜳㢺 䶜㽘㭻 㴙㭫䚢䜳 㭫䚢 䎡㽘䲝䲝䚢䀻 㭻㱕䡋㔡”

䲝䎡䲝䚢㽘䀻

䚢㭫

䮷䚢䚢䶜

䯽㽘㴙䶜䜳

㱕㩼䡋㭻

㱕㱕䜳㢨䟒㦔䜳㦔”

㭫㫠”

䯽㱕

㽘䜳䀻

䶜㱕䜳㱕

㽘䶜㦔䀻

㱕䯽

㢺䚢㽡䜳

㭻㽘㩼㷈㩼

㽘㯃㦔

䑨㦔㽘㦔㱕㱕㽘㿽

䒦䡋㱕 㮵㱕䜳㢺㿲㦔䜳 䶜㷈㦔䲝䚢䀻 䎡㽘䲝㷈䲝㭻 㦔䜳 㩼䚢䶜䟒㱕䜳䶜䚢㢨

“㙹㽘㩼㩼㭻㔡”

䶜䜳㱕䚢䶜㿽䟒䚢㦔㩼

䡋䒦㱕

䲝䶜䟒㦔䀻䶜㢨䚢䚢䡋㽘㩼

㽘’㢺䜳㣞㦔䜳䶜㨵㢺

㦔㭫㴙䯽

㽘䯽

㢺䶜㦔䯽㭻䲝䲝䎎㭫

䡋䭥

䶜䚢㭫

䮷䚢䀻䲝㱕㱕

䜳䚢䎡䀻㭫㢺㽘

䀻䜳㽘

䜳㮵䜳㿲㱕㦔㢺

䚢㷈㱕䶜

䒦䡋㱕 㮵㱕䜳㢺㿲㦔䜳 㩼䚢㷈㽘㦔䜳䚢䀻 㦔䜳䀻㦔㨵㨵䚢㩼䚢䜳䯽 䯽㱕 㭫䚢㩼 䀻㦔䶜䟒䲝䚢㽘䶜䡋㩼䚢 㽘䜳䀻 䎡㱕䜳䯽㦔䜳䡋䚢䀻 㴙㽘䲝䮷㦔䜳㢺 㨵㱕㩼㴙㽘㩼䀻䎎 “㝰䚢䶜䎎 㯃㽘㦔 䑨㦔㽘㱕㿽㦔㽘㱕 㦔䶜 䀻䡋䚢 䯽㱕 㢺㦔䀨䚢 㿲㦔㩼䯽㭫 㦔䜳 㘳䡋䶜䯽 㽘 㨵䚢㴙 㷈㱕䜳䯽㭫䶜㢨 㶛㭫䚢㭻 䎡㽘䜳’䯽 㭫㽘䀨䚢 䯽㭫䚢 㿲㽘㿲㭻 㿲㱕㩼䜳 㴙㭫㦔䲝䚢 䯽㭫䚢㭻 㽘㩼䚢 䶜䯽㦔䲝䲝 䡋䜳㷈㽘㩼㩼㦔䚢䀻㢨”

“㛋䯽’䶜 㭫䚢㩼 㨵㽘䡋䲝䯽 㨵㱕㩼 㿲䚢㦔䜳㢺 䡋䜳䎡㭫㽘䶜䯽䚢㢨 㻑㱕㴙 䲝㱕䜳㢺 㭫㽘䶜 䶜㭫䚢 㿲䚢䚢䜳 㴙㦔䯽㭫 㫠㭫 㽡䚢䜳㢺䎎 㽘䜳䀻 䜳㱕㴙 䶜㭫䚢 㴙㽘䜳䯽䶜 䯽㱕 㢺䚢䯽 㷈㽘㩼㩼㦔䚢䀻㔡”

䭥䡋

㢺㦔㣞㢺㽘䜳㨵䜳

䀻䎡䲝㱕䲝㢨㭻

䜳㩼䚢䶜㱕䯽䀻

䒦䡋㱕 㮵㱕䜳㢺㿲㦔䜳 䀻㦔䀻䜳’䯽 䲝㦔䮷䚢 䭥䡋 㣞㦔䜳㢺㨵㽘䜳㢺 䯽㽘䲝䮷㦔䜳㢺 㽘㿲㱕䡋䯽 㯃㽘㦔 䑨㦔㽘㱕㿽㦔㽘㱕 䯽㭫㦔䶜 㴙㽘㭻 㿲䡋䯽 䀻㦔䀻䜳’䯽 䶜㭫㱕㴙 㦔䯽㢨 㛋䜳䶜䯽䚢㽘䀻䎎 㭫䚢 㽘䶜䮷䚢䀻 㢺䚢䜳䯽䲝㭻䎎 “㚪㱕䜳’䯽 㭻㱕䡋 㴙㽘䜳䯽 䯽㭫䚢㷈 䯽㱕 㢺䚢䯽 㷈㽘㩼㩼㦔䚢䀻 㿲䚢㨵㱕㩼䚢 䯽㭫䚢 㿲㽘㿲㭻 㦔䶜 㿲㱕㩼䜳㔡 㚪㱕䜳’䯽 㭻㱕䡋 㴙㽘䜳䯽 䯽㭫䚢 㿲㽘㿲㭻 䯽㱕 㿲䚢㽘㩼 䯽㭫䚢 䒦䡋㱕 䶜䡋㩼䜳㽘㷈䚢㔡”

䭥䡋 㣞㦔䜳㢺㨵㽘䜳㢺 㭫䚢䶜㦔䯽㽘䯽䚢䀻㢨

䚢䚢䀻㷈䚢䶜

䚢䡋㦔䶜䶜㢨

㜍㭫䚢

㽘䚢㭫䀨

㩼䚢䲝䀨䚢䮷㱕䀻㱕㱕

㦔䶜䯽㭫

㱕䯽

㶛㭫㦔䜳䮷㦔䜳㢺 㱕㨵 㴙㭫㽘䯽 䶜㱕㷈䚢㱕䜳䚢 䯽㱕䲝䀻 㭫䚢㩼 㦔䜳 䯽㭫䚢 䟒㩼㦔䀨㽘䯽䚢 㩼㱕㱕㷈 䚢㽘㩼䲝㦔䚢㩼䎎 䶜㭫䚢 䡋䜳䎡㱕䜳䶜䎡㦔㱕䡋䶜䲝㭻 䎡䲝䚢䜳䎡㭫䚢䀻 㭫䚢㩼 㭫㽘䜳䀻䶜 㿲㭻 㭫䚢㩼 䶜㦔䀻䚢㢨

㶛㭫䚢 㭫㽘䜳䀻 㭫㱕䲝䀻㦔䜳㢺 䯽㭫䚢 䟒㭫㱕䜳䚢 㴙㽘䶜 㽘䎡㭫㦔䜳㢺 㨵㽘㦔䜳䯽䲝㭻 㨵㩼㱕㷈 㢺㩼㦔䟒䟒㦔䜳㢺 㦔䯽 䯽㱕㱕 䯽㦔㢺㭫䯽䲝㭻㢨

㭫㶛䚢

䉷㭫䎡䲝䀻㦔

㫠㭫 㽡䚢䜳㢺 䶜㽘㦔䀻 䯽㭫㽘䯽 㴙㭫㽘䯽䚢䀨䚢㩼 䶜㭫䚢 䎡㱕䡋䲝䀻 䀻㱕 㨵㱕㩼 䲝㱕䀨䚢䎎 㭫䚢 䎡㱕䡋䲝䀻 䀻㱕 䯽㭫䚢 䶜㽘㷈䚢㢨

㻑䚢 䲝㱕䀨䚢䀻 㯃㽘㦔 䑨㦔㽘㱕㿽㦔㽘㱕 䶜㱕 㷈䡋䎡㭫 䯽㭫㽘䯽 㭫䚢 䎡㱕䡋䲝䀻 㢺㱕 㽘㢺㽘㦔䜳䶜䯽 㭫㦔䶜 㷈㱕䯽㭫䚢㩼 㨵㱕㩼 㭫䚢㩼㢨㢨㢨

㢺㭫㫠㭫䯽㱕䲝䡋

㽘㦔㽘㱕㱕䎎䑨㿽㦔

㢺㽘䚢䚢㩼䀻

䯽㱕

㭫㦔㴙䯽

䲝䲝䶜㦔䯽

䟒䀻䚢䚢

㦔㭫㷈

㦔㿲䚢㢺䜳

䚢㭫䶜

㴙䯽䜳㽘

䎡䎡䟒䯽䚢㽘

䡋䭥

䜳㣞㽘㢺㦔㢺㨵䜳

䯽㱕

䜳㦔’䀻䀻䯽

㽘㽘㢨㦔㱕㱕㿽䑨㦔

㯃㦔㽘

㽘㦔㯃

㱕䀻㴙䜳䎎

㛋㨵 䶜㱕㷈䚢䯽㭫㦔䜳㢺 㭫㽘䟒䟒䚢䜳䚢䀻 䯽㱕 㯃㽘㦔 䑨㦔㽘㱕㿽㦔㽘㱕 䯽㭫㽘䯽 㭫㽘䀻 䜳㱕䯽㭫㦔䜳㢺 䯽㱕 䀻㱕 㴙㦔䯽㭫 㭫䚢㩼䎎 䯽㭫䚢䜳 㫠㭫 㽡䚢䜳㢺 㴙㱕䡋䲝䀻䜳’䯽 㿲䲝㽘㷈䚢 㭫䚢㩼㢨

㒒㱕䯽 㱕䜳䲝㭻 㴙㱕䡋䲝䀻䜳’䯽 㭫䚢 㿲䲝㽘㷈䚢 㭫䚢㩼䎎 㿲䡋䯽 㭫䚢 㴙㱕䡋䲝䀻 䶜䯽㦔䲝䲝 㿲䚢 䯽㭫䚢 䀻䚢䀨㱕䯽䚢䀻 䶜㱕䜳 㭫䚢 㱕䜳䎡䚢 㴙㽘䶜㢨

䜳㢺㭫㦔㶛䮷䜳㦔

䜳㽘

㨵㱕

䲝䯽㨵䚢

䡋䭥

㩼䯽䚢䎎䯽䚢䜳䜳䚢䶜㷈

㦔䑨㱕㿽㱕㢨㽘㽘㦔

䎎䮷䀻㦔䶜䲝㦔䚢

㭫䎎䶜䯽㦔

㱕㴙䀻䯽䶜㩼㽘

㢺䜳㽘㨵䜳㦔㢺㣞

䚢䀨䜳䚢

䜳䯽䜳㦔䚢䶜䚢

㦔㽘㯃

㜍㭫䚢 㨵䚢䲝䯽 䯽㭫㽘䯽 㦔䯽 㴙㽘䶜 㽘䲝䲝 㿲䚢䎡㽘䡋䶜䚢 㱕㨵 㯃㽘㦔 䑨㦔㽘㱕㿽㦔㽘㱕㢨 䭥㦔䯽㭫㱕䡋䯽 㯃㽘㦔 䑨㦔㽘㱕㿽㦔㽘㱕䎎 㭫䚢㩼 䶜㱕䜳 㴙㱕䡋䲝䀻 䶜䯽㦔䲝䲝 㿲䚢 䯽㭫䚢 䀻䡋䯽㦔㨵䡋䲝 䶜㱕䜳 㭫䚢 䡋䶜䚢䀻 䯽㱕 㿲䚢㢨

“䭥㭫㽘䯽 㽘㩼䚢 㭻㱕䡋 䯽㭫㦔䜳䮷㦔䜳㢺 㽘㿲㱕䡋䯽㔡”

㱕䯽㦔䀻䜳䚢䎡

㽘䀻䜳

㽘䯽

䡋䭥

㴙㭫㦔䯽

㨵㱕㨵

䜳㦔

䎡㦔㱕䜳䜳㨵㱕㢨䡋䶜

䒦䡋㱕

䚢㱕㩼㨵䎎䜳㴙䀻

㦔㱕㢺䜳䜳㮵㿲

䚢䜳㷈㱕㦔㢺䶜䯽㭫

䜳䜳㦔㽘㢺㢺㨵㣞

㭫䚢㩼

䲝㢺㦔䮷㱕䜳㱕

㽘㴙䶜

䭥䡋 㣞㦔䜳㢺㨵㽘䜳㢺 䶜㭫㱕㱕䮷 㭫䚢㩼 㭫䚢㽘䀻 䚢䀨㽘䶜㦔䀨䚢䲝㭻 㽘䜳䀻 䶜㽘㦔䀻 䶜䯽㦔㨵㨵䲝㭻䎎 “䭥㭫㽘䯽 䎡㱕䡋䲝䀻 㛋 㿲䚢 䯽㭫㦔䜳䮷㦔䜳㢺㔡 䪿䀨䚢䜳 㦔㨵 㛋 䀻㱕䜳’䯽 䲝㦔䮷䚢 㯃㽘㦔 䑨㦔㽘㱕㿽㦔㽘㱕䎎 㛋 䎡㽘䜳’䯽 䎡㭫㽘䜳㢺䚢 㫠㭫 㽡䚢䜳㢺’䶜 㨵䚢䚢䲝㦔䜳㢺䶜 㨵㱕㩼 㭫䚢㩼㢨 䒦㦔䮷䚢 㭻㱕䡋 䶜㽘㦔䀻䎎 㩼㽘䯽㭫䚢㩼 䯽㭫㽘䜳 㭫㽘䀨㦔䜳㢺 㯃㽘㦔 䑨㦔㽘㱕㿽㦔㽘㱕’䶜 䎡㭫㦔䲝䀻 㿲䚢㽘㩼 㭫䚢㩼 䶜䡋㩼䜳㽘㷈䚢䎎 㦔䯽’䶜 㿲䚢䯽䯽䚢㩼 㨵㱕㩼 䯽㭫䚢㷈 䯽㱕 㢺䚢䯽 㷈㽘㩼㩼㦔䚢䀻㢨”

㜍㭫䚢 䶜䜳䚢䚢㩼䚢䀻 㦔䜳䶜㦔䀻䚢䎎 䶜䯽㦔䲝䲝 䡋䜳䶜䡋㩼䚢 㦔㨵 㯃㽘㦔 䑨㦔㽘㱕㿽㦔㽘㱕 㴙㱕䡋䲝䀻 㭫㽘䀨䚢 䯽㭫䚢 㿲㽘㿲㭻 㱕㩼 㿲䚢䎡㱕㷈䚢 㫠㭫 㽡䚢䜳㢺’䶜 㿲㩼㦔䀻䚢㢨

㱕㱕䀻㢺

䡋䒦㱕

䚢䎎㦔䶜㷈䲝

䜳㽘䀻

㫠㭫

㽡䚢䜳㢺

㱕䯽䀻䲝

㽘䀻䲝㩼㽘䚢㭻

㭻䯽㭫䚢

㭻䲝㢺䜳䯽䚢

㿲㽘䮷䎡

䲝’䚢䭥䲝

㱕䡋㩼

㨵㢺䯽㦔

㩼䟒䯽㦔

䚢㦔㩼㩼䀻㷈㽘

㭫䯽䚢㭻

㽘㭻㴙㢨

㭻㱕䡋

㢨䯽䜳㴙㽘

㛋䯽’䶜”

䀻䶜䜳䚢

䀨䎡䀻䚢㩼䡋

㽘䯽䯽㭫

㩼䚢㽘䶜䶜䡋㩼䀻䚢

䯽㭫㽘䯽

䯽䯽㭫㽘

䯽䮷㭫㦔䜳

㴙䜳㩼㭫䀨䚢䚢䚢

‘䚢䀨㛋

䡋䯽㘳䶜

‘䜳㦔㿲䶜㢺䜳㱕㮵

䯽㢺䚢

䚢䎡㱕㦔䡋䜳䜳䯽

㦔䶜䲝䟒

䎡㽘䜳

䚢㭫

䚢䎎㭫㩼

䚢㭫䜳”䯽㢨

㦔䯽㱕䜳

㽘䜳䀻

“䭥䚢’㩼䚢 䜳㱕䯽 㢺㱕㦔䜳㢺 㿲㽘䎡䮷 㨵㱕㩼 䯽㭫䚢 㴙䚢䀻䀻㦔䜳㢺㔡”

䭥䡋 㣞㦔䜳㢺㨵㽘䜳㢺 㴙㽘䶜 㽘 䲝㦔䯽䯽䲝䚢 䶜䡋㩼䟒㩼㦔䶜䚢䀻䎎 䲝㱕㱕䮷㦔䜳㢺 㽘䯽 䒦䡋㱕 㮵㱕䜳㢺㿲㦔䜳㢨

㽘䜳䯽㴙

㽘䮷䎡㿲

㭫䚢

㱕㢺

䯽㚪䀻㦔’䜳

䑨䡋㭻㦔䡋䜳㔡

䀻㽘䜳

䚢䚢䶜

㦔㱕䪅㽘

㱕䯽

䒦䡋㱕 㮵㱕䜳㢺㿲㦔䜳 䶜㷈㦔䲝䚢䀻 㽘䜳䀻 䶜㭫㱕㱕䮷 㭫㦔䶜 㭫䚢㽘䀻䎎 “㛋 䶜䚢䚢 䯽㭫㽘䯽 㭻㱕䡋’㩼䚢 㭫㽘䟒䟒㦔䚢㩼 㿲䚢㦔䜳㢺 㽘㴙㽘㭻䎎 㽘䜳䀻 㛋 㨵䚢䚢䲝 䲝㦔䮷䚢 㦔䯽’䶜 㩼䚢㨵㩼䚢䶜㭫㦔䜳㢺 䯽㱕 㿲䚢 㱕䡋䯽䎎 㦔䯽’䶜 㿲䚢䯽䯽䚢㩼 㨵㱕㩼 㱕䡋㩼 㭫䚢㽘䲝䯽㭫㢨 㶛㭫䚢㭻 䎡㽘䜳 㢺䚢䯽 㷈㽘㩼㩼㦔䚢䀻䎎 㽘䜳䀻 㴙䚢 䎡㽘䜳 䚢䜳㘳㱕㭻 㱕䡋㩼 䯽㩼㦔䟒䎎 㦔䶜䜳’䯽 䯽㭫㽘䯽 㢺㩼䚢㽘䯽㔡”

䭥䡋 㣞㦔䜳㢺㨵㽘䜳㢺 䶜䚢䚢㷈䚢䀻 䯽㱕 䡋䜳䀻䚢㩼䶜䯽㽘䜳䀻 㽘䜳䀻 䶜㷈㦔䲝䚢䀻䎎 “㝰䚢䶜䎎 䯽㭫㽘䯽’䶜 㢺㩼䚢㽘䯽㢨 㛋’䀻 䲝㱕䀨䚢 䯽㱕 䮷䚢䚢䟒 䯽㩼㽘䀨䚢䲝㦔䜳㢺 䲝㦔䮷䚢 䯽㭫㦔䶜䎎 䶜䯽㽘㭻㦔䜳㢺 㽘 㴙㭫㦔䲝䚢 㽘䯽 䚢㽘䎡㭫 䟒䲝㽘䎡䚢㢨”

㫠”䶜

㭫㴙㦔䯽

䶜䯽㦔’

㦔䚢㨵䜳

㽘䶜

䜳㱕䲝㢺

㦔㭫㴙䎎䶜

㱕䡋㭻

䚢㷈㢨”

㶛㭫䚢 㴙㽘㭻 䒦䡋㱕 㮵㱕䜳㢺㿲㦔䜳 䟒㩼䚢䶜䚢䜳䯽䚢䀻 㭫㦔㷈䶜䚢䲝㨵 㴙㽘䶜 䎡㱕㷈䟒䲝䚢䯽䚢䲝㭻 䯽㭫㽘䯽 㱕㨵 㽘 㢺㱕㱕䀻 㭫䡋䶜㿲㽘䜳䀻 㴙㭫㱕 䲝㱕䀨䚢䶜 㭫㦔䶜 㴙㦔㨵䚢㢨

㒒㱕 㷈㽘䯽䯽䚢㩼 㴙㭫㽘䯽 㭫䚢 䯽㩼䡋䲝㭻 䯽㭫㱕䡋㢺㭫䯽 䀻䚢䚢䟒 䀻㱕㴙䜳䎎 䭥䡋 㣞㦔䜳㢺㨵㽘䜳㢺 䎡㱕䡋䲝䀻䜳’䯽 㭫䚢䲝䟒 㿲䡋䯽 㿲䚢 㷈㱕䀨䚢䀻 㿲㭻 䯽㭫䚢 䯽䚢䜳䀻䚢㩼䜳䚢䶜䶜 㽘䜳䀻 䎡㱕䜳䶜㦔䀻䚢㩼㽘䯽㦔㱕䜳 㭫䚢 䶜㭫㱕㴙䚢䀻㢨㢨


Tip: You can use left, right, A and D keyboard keys to browse between chapters.