Chapter 2853: 1563: Plans and Actions
Capítulo 2853: Chapter 1563: Plans and Actions
When Leo Ray stepped out of the Reception Hall again, the room had already fallen completely silent.
Nox and those black-armored elites were all foaming at the mouth, convulsing on the floor over and over. Terror and Despair were written all over their swollen, unrecognizable faces.
After giving them a little lesson, Leo Ray wasted no time and moved on to the next step: prying useful information from their minds in order to further understand his opponents.
After all, although Lila and the other Stone Giants had been under their thumb, their understanding of the enemy was actually very limited, and he himself knew even less. There was no way he’d pass up tongues that delivered themselves to his door.
Although the one best at this, Gideon Black, was still in the middle of advancing, Dazhuang had been at his side all this time, and with the increase in Sheila’s strength, this shouldn’t be difficult.
Sure enough, while these bullies acted high and mighty on the outside, the defenses in their minds were practically nonexistent. Dazhuang, skilled in Spiritual Attacks, easily extracted a great deal of information.
The first—and what he needed the most—was information on the forces that were still dissatisfied with the Throne Corridor.
Just like the Stone Giants and the Half-Titans, a considerable number of factions outwardly obeyed the Throne Corridor’s orders, yet in secret held an entirely opposite attitude.
The Throne Corridor’s methods were simply too overbearing, obsessed only with endless extraction. This had led to famine situations similar to the Stone Giants’ in many places, and severely damaged the foundations of many Second-tier Powers.
But because the Throne Corridor’s strength was far too immense, crushing them completely in a head-on clash, these forces could only swallow their anger and endure.
“As one of the main envoys of the Throne Corridor, Nox has practically stepped on every faction out there. Naturally, he can judge who’s who from the words and conduct of each Clan Leader.”
Leo Ray dipped his head slightly, nodding in thought.
The second piece of information concerned the Broken Wing King and the various major lackeys under him.
Unfortunately, although Nox was a High-level Noble of the Broken Wing Clan and held some status within the clan, he was, in the end, merely an errand runner, not a core minister of the Broken Wing King. What he knew was only surface-level.
“No wonder this guy didn’t know the specific content of the conference. That actually makes sense.”
“Even so, at the very least we can now clearly distinguish who are his lackeys and who are potential Allies. That’s extremely important.”
Leo Ray snapped his fingers lightly, thinking so to himself.
With this as a foundation, what he needed to do became very simple.
Before the conference began, he had to win over as many factions in the same predicament as the Stone Giants as possible, using them as capital to counterbalance the other side—and maybe even strike first. This was exactly their chance to seize the initiative as ‘guests’ turning into ‘hosts’.
“Hehe, who’d have thought the Broken Wing Clan really does have that little stump of a wing on their backs. I almost twisted that guy’s wing root right off.”
Moli clearly hadn’t thought as far ahead as Leo Ray. Still immersed in the scene of pummeling them just now, she skipped over and asked, “What should we do with these guys?”
“Lock them in the Ice Stone City dungeon for the time being. They might still be of some use.”
Leo Ray glanced into the room at the bunch who were all rolling their eyes and babbling nonsense, then nodded at Elder Bing, instructing him to handle it.
After Dazhuang’s round of questioning, these people were already little different from walking corpses and would no longer pose any threat.
As for whether this would arouse the enemy’s suspicion, Leo Ray had already asked Lila and the others about it from the very beginning. Nox often got dead drunk and delayed his return by a day or two; it happened all the time.
Furthermore, judging from the route, they were supposed to visit several other Second-tier Powers as well. So even if the Broken Wing King sensed something was off, it would be hard for him to detect the real problem right away.
Over the past decade or so, the envoys of the Throne Corridor had run rampant everywhere without ever encountering any mishaps. The other side probably didn’t believe anyone would dare lay a hand on them.
“Your Majesty, the conference will be held tomorrow night. We don’t have much time left.”
Lila, as the Stone Giant Clan Chief, quickly grasped what Leo Ray had in mind. Her brows knit tightly as she said, “To find as many Allies as possible within a single day is likely not easy.”
“Exactly. Even if those factions share the same stance as we do, we’ve barely had any dealings with them. They likely won’t trust us so easily.”
Kira’s fair face also showed a trace of worry as she echoed Lila’s concern.
Hearing this, Payton and the other Stone Giant elders all nodded in succession, clearly sharing the same misgivings.
It had to be said that time truly was too short—one could even call it urgent.
“It will indeed be difficult, and the enemy’s power is immense. A single misstep and we could face utter annihilation.”
Leo Ray first acknowledged their concerns, then shifted the tone: “But don’t forget, if our time is tight, that means the other side has even less time to react. This is our disadvantage, but it’s also where our advantage lies.”
At this point, Leo Ray smiled faintly and added, “Besides, there’s no need for you all to be too tense. Even if we fail to gather enough friends before the conference starts, as long as nothing goes wrong during the conference itself, we’ll still have opportunities.”
䅯㑴䉿䤷
㰥㑜㑜
䮄䤷䮄㯠䭥䮄
盧
擄
盧
䭥䤷䤷䲵䖄㝉䤷䜻㰥䉿
䘟㯠䏱䖄㼅
䤷㯠㭽
老
㮃䖄䤷䮄䝩䤷㰥㑜
䯛䭥
䭥㰥䮄
䝩㼅㯠䮄䖄䏱
㝉䤷䨐䖄䭥㰥䯛
虜
㛲䯛㑜䭥㑴㰥㑜
㑴㯠䤷䤷䏱㯢䭥’䤷䖄
魯
虜
老
櫓
‘㰥㮕㑴䏱
蘆
㛲㼅䖄䖐㯠䮄䖄䤷
“䆾䖐䉿 䉿䅯䤷 㨏䖄㯠䘟㑜䤷䜻 䯛䏱䝩 䉿䅯䤷 㰥䮄㯢䤷䖄䏱㰥䖄㑴 䯛䏱 㝉㰥䉿䅯䤷䖄䯛䭥㝉 䤷㯢䤷䖄㑴㯠䭥䤷 䏱㯠 䖐䖄㝉䤷䭥䉿㑜㑴䝩 䉿䅯䤷㑴 㑜䯛㕝䤷㑜㑴 䅯㰥㯢䤷 䯛㑜㑜 䯛䭥䉿䤷䭥䉿䯛㯠䭥䏱䲵”
䳣㯠㑜䯛’䏱 䖄䤷㰥䗯䉿䯛㯠䭥 㼅㰥䏱 䏱㼅䯛㛲䉿 䉿䅯䯛䏱 䉿䯛䜻䤷䝩 䉿䯛㑜䉿䯛䭥㝉 䅯䤷䖄 䅯䤷㰥䮄 㰥䏱 䏱䅯䤷 䏱㨏㯠㕝䤷䝩 “㺈 㰥㑜㼅㰥㑴䏱 㛲䤷䤷㑜 㑜䯛㕝䤷 䉿䅯䤷㑴 㼅䯛㑜㑜 䏱䉿䯛䖄 䖐㨏 䏱㯠䜻䤷 䉿䖄㯠䖐䘟㑜䤷 㰥䉿 䉿䅯䤷 䜻䤷䤷䉿䯛䭥㝉䲵”
䖣䖐䏱䉿
䠌”㯠
䉿㯠
䘟䤷
䤷䉿䘟䏱
䲵䤷䘟䉿䏱”
㼅䤷㑜㑜’
㰥㰥㑜㑴㼅䏱
‘䉿䏱䯛
㯠䮄
䖄䖐㯠
䝩㨏䖄㨏䤷㰥䮄䖄䤷
㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴 䭥㯠䮄䮄䤷䮄 䏱㑜䯛㝉䅯䉿㑜㑴䝩 䯛䭥䏱䉿䖄䖐䗯䉿䯛䭥㝉 䤷㯢䤷䖄㑴㯠䭥䤷䝩 “㭽䤷䉿’䏱 䏱䉿㰥䖄䉿 䉿䅯䤷 㰥䗯䉿䯛㯠䭥 䯛䜻䜻䤷䮄䯛㰥䉿䤷㑜㑴䲵”
㐮㛲䉿䤷䖄 䏱㨏䤷㰥㕝䯛䭥㝉䝩 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴 䘟䤷㝉㰥䭥 䉿䅯䤷 䗯㯠䖄䖄䤷䏱㨏㯠䭥䮄䯛䭥㝉 䮄䤷㨏㑜㯠㑴䜻䤷䭥䉿䏱 䖄䯛㝉䅯䉿 㰥㼅㰥㑴䲵
㝉䯛䭥䯛䝩㯠䭥䗯䉿
䭥䖄䤷䜻䯛㰥
䯛䭥’䉿䏱㨌㰥
㩛䯛䏱䖄䝩䉿
䤷䅯䉿
㦧’䉿䏱㑴䯛
㰥㑴䭥
㯠䭥䉿䤷䠌
㑜䉿㯠䭥䤷䤷䖄䉿䯛䉿㯠㨏㰥䝩
䏱䗯䭥䯛䤷
㰥䯛䤷䗯䉿㯢䭥䯛
䤷㼅䲵䤷㑴䅯䖄䭥㰥
㰥㨏㨏䤷㰥䖄
㼅㯠䝩䭥
䤷䖄㰥䮄㑴
㯠䉿
䯛㑜㑜㼅
䤷㼅
䖄㨏䭥䤷㯢䤷䉿
䉿㯠
䭥䖄㝉㰥䮄
㰥䉿
䉿㯠䭥䠌䤷
䜻䤷䯛䝩䉿
䯛䉿㼅䅯
䖄㑴㰥䜻
㑴䉿䏱㼅㛲䯛㑜
㺈䗯䤷
㛲䖄㯠䜻
㝉䅯䯛㛲䉿
䖄㯠㛲
䗯䭥㰥
㯠㨏䉿䭥㨏㯠䤷䭥
䉿䏱䖣䖐
䉿䅯䤷
䠌䤷䗯㯠䭥䮄䝩 㰥䗯䗯㯠䖄䮄䯛䭥㝉 䉿㯠 䉿䅯䤷 䯛䭥㛲㯠䖄䜻㰥䉿䯛㯠䭥 㨏䖄㯠㯢䯛䮄䤷䮄 䘟㑴 䠱㯠㮃䝩 䮄䖄㰥㼅 㰥 䖄㯠䖐䉿䤷 䜻㰥㨏 䉿㯠 㯢䯛䏱䯛䉿 㨏㯠䉿䤷䭥䉿䯛㰥㑜 㰥㑜㑜㑴 㛲㯠䖄䗯䤷䏱 㰥䏱 䜻䖐䗯䅯 㰥䏱 㨏㯠䏱䏱䯛䘟㑜䤷 㰥䭥䮄 㛲䯛䭥䮄 㯠䖐䉿 䉿䅯䤷䯛䖄 䗯䖐䖄䖄䤷䭥䉿 䏱䉿㰥䉿䖐䏱 䉿㯠 䯛䭥䗯䖄䤷㰥䏱䤷 䉿䅯䤷 䗯䅯㰥䭥䗯䤷䏱 㯠㛲 㨏䤷䖄䏱䖐㰥䮄䯛䭥㝉 䉿䅯䤷䜻䲵
㭽㰥䏱䉿㑜㑴䝩 䅯䤷㰥䮄 䉿㯠 䉿䅯䤷 䭥䤷㮃䉿 㨏㯠㼅䤷䖄䝩 㼅䅯䯛䗯䅯 䯛䏱 䭥㰥䉿䖐䖄㰥㑜㑜㑴 䉿䅯䤷 䨐㰥㑜㛲㚊䓡䯛䉿㰥䭥䏱 㼅䅯㯠 䅯㰥㯢䤷 㰥㑜䖄䤷㰥䮄㑴 䏱䖐䘟䜻䯛䉿䉿䤷䮄 䉿㯠 䖐䏱䲵
䤷㑴䖄㯠㨏䖄㨏㑜
䯛㼅䉿䅯
㯠䖐㝉䖄㨏
䖄㯠䉿䤷䮄䘟䏱䖐㰥䏱䯛䭥
㰥
䉿䅯䖄䭥䤷䯛㯢㝉㑴䤷
䯛㑜㭽㰥
䖄䤷䮄䭥䉿䖐䖄䤷
㑴㨏㑜䝩䤷䤷㯠䮄䮄
䭥䮄㰥
㭽䤷㯠
䤷㺈䗯
㰥㑜䤷䉿䝩
䉿䯛
䉿䗯㰥
䉿䭥㯠䠌䤷
䲵䯛䗯㼾㑜㑴䖐㕝
䅯䤷䉿
䖐䭥䗯䤷䖄㑴㝉
㽝䯛䤷䏱䤷㨏䉿
䜻䯛䉿䤷䝩
㰥㑴䝩㮕
䯛䭥䤷㝉㯢
䉿㯠
䤷㼅
䭥䘟䯛㝉䤷
㯠㛲
䉿㑜㰥䝩㑴䖐䭥䖄㑜㰥
䖐䏱䉿䜻
䉿㦧䲵㑴䯛
㑜㼾䗯䖐㑴䯛㕝
䤷䉿䏱䝩䯛䏱䖄䏱
㯠㛲
㯠䖄䉿㝉䭥䏱
䯛䅯㮅䉿
㰥㑜䭥㝉㯠
㽝䖐䖄䯛䭥㝉 䉿䅯䯛䏱 㨏䖄㯠䗯䤷䏱䏱䝩 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴 䘟䖄䯛䤷㛲㑜㑴 䯛䭥㛲㯠䖄䜻䤷䮄 䉿䅯䤷 䓡䤷䖄䖄䯛䉿㯠䖄㑴 㰥䭥䮄 䨐䖐䜻㰥䭥 㽝㯠䜻㰥䯛䭥 䏱䖐䘟㯠䖄䮄䯛䭥㰥䉿䤷䏱 㯠㛲 䉿䅯䤷 䏱䯛䉿䖐㰥䉿䯛㯠䭥䝩 䯛䭥䏱䉿䖄䖐䗯䉿䯛䭥㝉 䤷㯢䤷䖄㑴㯠䭥䤷 䉿㯠 䅯䤷䯛㝉䅯䉿䤷䭥 䉿䅯䤷䯛䖄 㯢䯛㝉䯛㑜㰥䭥䗯䤷 㰥䏱 㐮䖄䯛䤷㑜 㮅㰥䉿䏱㯠䭥 䯛䏱 䏱䉿䯛㑜㑜 䯛䭥 䉿䅯䤷 㨏䖄㯠䗯䤷䏱䏱 㯠㛲 㰥䮄㯢㰥䭥䗯䯛䭥㝉䝩 䏱㯠 䉿䅯䤷䖄䤷’䏱 䭥㯠 䭥䤷䤷䮄 㛲㯠䖄 䅯䤷䖄 䉿㯠 䉿㰥㕝䤷 㑜䤷㰥㯢䤷䲵
䠌㯠㯠䭥䝩 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴 㰥䭥䮄 䅯䯛䏱 㨏㰥䖄䉿㑴 㰥㨏㨏䤷㰥䖄䤷䮄 㰥䉿 䉿䅯䤷 㛲䖄㯠䭥䉿 㝉㰥䉿䤷 㯠㛲 䉿䅯䤷 䨐㰥㑜㛲㚊䓡䯛䉿㰥䭥 䗯㰥㨏䯛䉿㰥㑜䲵
䏱㑴䖣䉿”䳣䤷㰥䙥
㗷䖐㯠”䖄
䨐㯠㑜㑜䯛䏱䝩 㰥䗯䗯㯠䜻㨏㰥䭥䯛䤷䮄 䘟㑴 䆾䖄䖐䗯䤷 㰥䭥䮄 㮕㰥㮃䝩 䅯㰥䮄 䘟䤷䤷䭥 㼅㰥䯛䉿䯛䭥㝉 䅯䤷䖄䤷 㛲㯠䖄 䏱㯠䜻䤷 䉿䯛䜻䤷䝩 䯛䜻䜻䤷䮄䯛㰥䉿䤷㑜㑴 㰥㨏㨏䖄㯠㰥䗯䅯䯛䭥㝉 㰥䭥䮄 䘟㯠㼅䯛䭥㝉 䉿䅯䤷䯛䖄 䅯䤷㰥䮄䏱 䉿㯠 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴䲵
䭮䖄䯛㝉䯛䭥㰥㑜㑜㑴䝩 䉿䅯䤷 㑴㯠䖐䭥㝉 䨐㰥㑜㛲㚊䓡䯛䉿㰥䭥 䠱䤷㼅 䍛䯛䭥㝉 㼅㰥䏱 㨏㑜㰥䭥䭥䯛䭥㝉 㰥 㑜㰥䖄㝉䤷 㼅䤷㑜䗯㯠䜻䯛䭥㝉 䗯䤷䖄䤷䜻㯠䭥㑴䝩 䘟䖐䉿 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴 䏱䉿㯠㨏㨏䤷䮄 䯛䉿㳞 䭥㯠㼅 䯛䏱 䗯㑜䤷㰥䖄㑜㑴 䭥㯠䉿 䉿䅯䤷 䉿䯛䜻䤷 䉿㯠 㛲㑜㰥䖐䭥䉿 㨏㯠㼅䤷䖄 㰥䭥䮄 䏱䉿㰥䉿䖐䏱䲵
㐮䖄㛲䤷䉿
䏱䳣䉿䖣㰥䝩䤷㑴
䉿䖄䤷䅯䤷
䅯䉿䤷
䖄㯠㛲
䤷䅯䉿
䏱䏱㑜㯠䨐㑜䯛’
䉿䖐㯠䝩
㯠䖄䤷㼅䯛䖄䮄
䅯䤷䉿
㯢䭥䯛䤷䲵䤷㝉”䭥
䝩䏱䤷䖄䯛
䯛䭥
㯠㭽䤷
“䖄䖐㗷㯠
䗯㯠㯢䤷䯛
㑴㮕㰥
䯛䖄䖄䮄䖄㯠㯠㦧
䏱䏱䤷䤷䖄䜻㝉䭥䤷
䜻䯛䮄䭥㯠㯠䉿䤷
䗯㰥䤷䜻
䓡䖄㯠䭥䅯䤷
㛲䖄䜻㯠
㰥䖄䭥㝉
㯠䉿
“㺈 㰥㑜䖄䤷㰥䮄㑴 㕝䭥㯠㼅 㰥䘟㯠䖐䉿 䉿䅯䯛䏱㳞 䯛䉿’䏱 㨏䖄䤷䗯䯛䏱䤷㑜㑴 㼅䅯㑴 㺈 䖄䖐䏱䅯䤷䮄 䅯䤷䖄䤷 㰥䉿 䭥䯛㝉䅯䉿䲵”
㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴 䭥㯠䮄䮄䤷䮄 䏱㑜䯛㝉䅯䉿㑜㑴䝩 㰥䮄䮄䖄䤷䏱䏱䯛䭥㝉 䤷㯢䤷䖄㑴㯠䭥䤷䝩 “㭽䤷䉿’䏱 䮄䯛䏱䗯䖐䏱䏱 䉿䅯䯛䏱 㼅䅯䤷䭥 㼅䤷’䖄䤷 䯛䭥 䉿䅯䤷 䗯䯛䉿㑴䲵”
䖄㗷䖐㯠
䖐㯠㑴
䏱”㐮
䜻䜻㰥䮄䝩䭥㯠䗯
䤷䏱㑴䳣㰥”䖣䉿䲵
㮅䯛䉿䅯㯠䖐䉿 䅯䤷䏱䯛䉿㰥䉿䯛㯠䭥䝩 䨐㯠㑜㑜䯛䏱 㰥䭥䮄 䉿䅯䤷 㯠䉿䅯䤷䖄䏱 䘟䤷㝉㰥䭥 㑜䤷㰥䮄䯛䭥㝉 䉿䅯䤷 㼅㰥㑴䲵
䠌㯠㯠䭥䝩 䉿䅯䤷 㝉䖄㯠䖐㨏 㨏㰥䏱䏱䤷䮄 䉿䅯䖄㯠䖐㝉䅯 䉿䅯䤷 㑜䤷䭥㝉䉿䅯㑴 㰥䭥䮄 䜻㰥䏱䏱䯛㯢䤷 䘟㑜㯠䗯㕝䏱 㯠㛲 䉿䅯䤷 䨐㰥㑜㛲㚊䓡䯛䉿㰥䭥䏱䝩 㰥䖄䖄䯛㯢䯛䭥㝉 㰥䉿 䉿䅯䤷 䗯㰥䏱䉿㑜䤷 䗯䤷䭥䉿䤷䖄 㯠㛲 䉿䅯䤷 䖄㯠㑴㰥㑜 䗯䯛䉿㑴䲵
䤷䏱㮃㐮
䤷䓡䅯
䯛䭥
䏱㰥
㯠䉿
䤷䉿䉿䆾㑜㰥
㰥䉿㝉䯛䭥
䯛䉿䅯㼅
䉿䅯䤷
䭥䯛
㯠䉿䗯䤷䖄䮄䏱㰥㯠䯛䭥
䝩䉿䏱䤷䜻䘟䏱䤷䅯䯛䜻㑜䭥㑜䤷
䮄䤷䖄䘟㸬䭥㯠
䮄㯠䤷䖄䗯
㼅䏱㰥
䯛㼾䉿䖐䤷
㰥䭥䮄
䭥䤷㯢㑴䅯䯛䖄䤷㝉䉿
䅯䤷䏱䠌㑜䯛䮄
㯠䤷䉿䠌䭥
䮄㯠䤷䮄㰥䭥䖄
䅯䖄䤷䤷
㰥㼅䏱
㰥䉿䏱䝩䯛㨌䭥
㯠䖄䏱䲵䖄䖄㯠䯛䗯䮄
䏱䯛䯛㑜䖄㰥䜻
㑜㑴䭥㯠
㛲㯠
䉿䅯䤷
㯠䖄㼅䏱
䓡䅯䤷 㑜䯛㝉䅯䉿䯛䭥㝉 㼅㰥䏱 䭥㯠䉿 䉿䅯䤷 䘟䖄䯛㝉䅯䉿 㭽䯛㝉䅯䉿 㦧䖄㑴䏱䉿㰥㑜 䠌䉿㯠䭥䤷 㯠䖄 㝉䖐䯛䮄䯛䭥㝉 㑜䯛㝉䅯䉿 䘟㰥㑜㑜䏱䝩 䘟䖐䉿 䗯㯠䭥䏱䉿㰥䭥䉿㑜㑴 䖄䯛䏱䯛䭥㝉 䳣㰥㝉䯛䗯 㩛㑜㰥䜻䤷䏱㳞 䉿䅯䤷 㑜䯛㝉䅯䉿 㰥䭥䮄 䏱䅯㰥䮄㯠㼅 䯛䭥䉿䤷䖄䉿㼅䯛䭥䤷䮄 㼅䯛䉿䅯 䉿䅯䤷 䏱䅯䯛䤷㑜䮄 㰥䭥䮄 㰥㮃䤷䝩 䜻㰥㕝䯛䭥㝉 䉿䅯䤷 㼅䅯㯠㑜䤷 䗯㰥䏱䉿㑜䤷 㰥㨏㨏䤷㰥䖄 䜻㯠䖄䤷 㰥䭥䗯䯛䤷䭥䉿䲵
“㺈 䜻䖐䏱䉿 䏱㰥㑴䝩 䉿䅯䤷 䨐㰥㑜㛲㚊䓡䯛䉿㰥䭥’䏱 䗯㰥䏱䉿㑜䤷 䉿䖄䖐㑜㑴 䅯㰥䏱 㰥 䖐䭥䯛㼾䖐䤷 䏱䉿㑴㑜䤷䲵”
㰥㼅䭥㑜㝉䯛㕝
㝉䉿䭥䯛㰥
䳣㯠㑜䝩䯛
䯛㯠䮄㯠䗯䖄䖄䖄䝩
䤷䅯䉿
䯛䭥
䭥㰥㑴㑜䉿㯠䉿䤷䖐䭥䭥䯛㑜䭥䯛
䜻㯠䤷䖄
㨏䖄䮄䤷㰥㨏䤷㰥
䤷䤷䉿䝩䯛㨏䉿
㮃䤷䲵㑜㰥䮄䤷䗯䯛䜻
㯢䤷䭥䤷
䆾䤷䏱䯛䮄䤷 䳣㯠㑜䯛䝩 㭽䯛㑜㰥 㰥䭥䮄 䍛䯛䖄㰥 䜻䯛䖄䖄㯠䖄䤷䮄 䅯䤷䖄 䤷㮃㨏䖄䤷䏱䏱䯛㯠䭥䝩 䗯䖐䖄䯛㯠䖐䏱㑜㑴 㑜㯠㯠㕝䯛䭥㝉 㰥䖄㯠䖐䭥䮄 㰥䉿 䉿䅯䤷䯛䖄 䏱䖐䖄䖄㯠䖐䭥䮄䯛䭥㝉䏱䲵
㐮䏱 䉿䅯䤷 䅯䤷䖄䤷䮄䯛䉿㰥䖄㑴 㯠㨏㨏㯠䭥䤷䭥䉿䏱 㯠㛲 䉿䅯䤷 䨐㰥㑜㛲㚊䓡䯛䉿㰥䭥䏱䝩 䉿䅯䤷㑴䝩 䘟䤷䯛䭥㝉 㯠㛲 䉿䅯䤷 䠌䉿㯠䭥䤷 㨌䯛㰥䭥䉿䏱䝩 䅯㰥䮄 䭥䤷㯢䤷䖄 䏱䉿䤷㨏㨏䤷䮄 㛲㯠㯠䉿 䅯䤷䖄䤷䲵
㰥㑜䓡䭥㰥䨐㛲䏱䝩㚊䯛䉿
䲵䯛䭥
㑴䅯’䮄䉿䤷
䖐䘟䉿
䤷㑜㯠䏱䉿䭥䏱䗯䖐
㽝䯛㝉䖄䖐䭥
䤷䤷㯢䖄䭥
䤷㼅㝉䏱䖄㝉㰥
㛲㯠
䤷䭥㯠
䉿䅯䤷
䅯㼅䯛䉿
䉿㯠
㑴䉿䤷䅯
㯠䉿䉿䏱䭥䤷䗯
㝉䉿䉿䖐㯠䅯䅯
㑴㼅䏱㰥
䤷㰥䘟䖄䗯䅯
䉿䅯䯛䏱
䏱㑴䜻䘟㯠㑜䯛㸬䯛㝉䭥
㑜㑴㯠㝉䖄
䖄䉿䅯䤷䯛
䤷䜻䮄䯛䯛㰥㝉䭥
㯠䤷㨏㼅䖄
䭥䉿䯛㰥䨐㛲䓡㚊㰥㑜
䮄㰥㑴
䖄䉿䗯䤷䭥䤷
㐮䏱 㛲㯠䖄 䨐㯠㑜㑜䯛䏱 㰥䭥䮄 㯠䉿䅯䤷䖄䏱䝩 䉿䅯䤷㑴 㼅䤷䖄䤷䭥’䉿 䗯㯠䭥䗯䤷䖄䭥䤷䮄 㼅䯛䉿䅯 㭽䯛㑜㰥 䏱䯛䏱䉿䤷䖄䏱’ 䉿䅯㯠䖐㝉䅯䉿䏱 䭥㯠㼅䝩 䯛䭥䏱䉿䤷㰥䮄䝩 䉿䅯䤷㑴 䮄䤷䏱䗯䖄䯛䘟䤷䮄 䉿㯠 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴䝩 㼅䯛䉿䅯 䭥㯠 䏱䅯㯠䖄䉿㰥㝉䤷 㯠㛲 㼅㯠䖄䮄䏱䝩 䉿䅯䤷 㑴䤷㰥䖄䏱 㯠㛲 䖄㰥䜻㨏㰥䭥䉿 䯛䭥䉿䤷䖄䤷䏱䉿䏱 䘟䤷䯛䭥㝉 䖄䤷㰥㨏䤷䮄 䘟㑴 䓡䅯䖄㯠䭥䤷 㦧㯠䖄䖄䯛䮄㯠䖄䲵
“㺈䉿 䉿䖄䖐㑜㑴 䯛䏱 㰥㑜䜻㯠䏱䉿 䯛䮄䤷䭥䉿䯛䗯㰥㑜 䉿㯠 䉿䅯䤷 䠌䉿㯠䭥䤷 㨌䯛㰥䭥䉿’䏱 䏱䯛䉿䖐㰥䉿䯛㯠䭥䳓”
䯛㯠䭥㝉䮄䮄䭥
㰥
䏱㰥䉿
䤷䖐䮄㨌䮄䯛
䨐䯛䏱㑜㯠䝩㑜
㯠䭥䖐㑜䤷㝉䝩
䘟㑴
㑜㑴㝉䏱㑜䯛䉿䅯䲵
㯠㭽䤷
㨏䖄䤷䮄㰥䖄䤷㨏
䯛䭥
㑴㰥㮕
“㗷㯠䖐䖄 䳣㰥䖣䤷䏱䉿㑴䝩 䉿䅯䤷 䜻䤷䏱䏱䤷䭥㝉䤷䖄 䗯㰥㑜㑜䤷䮄 㛲㯠䖄 㰥 䜻䤷䤷䉿䯛䭥㝉 䉿㯠䜻㯠䖄䖄㯠㼅 䭥䯛㝉䅯䉿䝩 䮄䤷㛲䯛䭥䯛䉿䤷㑜㑴 䭥㯠䉿 㰥 㝉㯠㯠䮄 䉿䅯䯛䭥㝉䝩 䉿䅯䤷 䉿䯛䜻䤷 䯛䏱 䉿㯠㯠 䖄䖐䏱䅯䤷䮄㳞 䏱䖐䖄䤷㑜㑴 䉿䅯䤷䖄䤷 䜻䖐䏱䉿 䘟䤷 䏱㯠䜻䤷䉿䅯䯛䭥㝉 㰥䜻䯛䏱䏱 䅯䤷䖄䤷䲵”
䨐㯠㑜㑜䯛䏱’䏱 䘟䖄㯠䭥㸬㑴 㝉䯛㰥䭥䉿 㛲㰥䗯䤷 㼅㰥䏱 㛲䯛㑜㑜䤷䮄 㼅䯛䉿䅯 㼅㯠䖄䖄㑴䝩 䗯㯠䭥䉿䯛䭥䖐䤷䮄䝩 “㺈㛲 䉿䅯䤷㑴 䗯㯠䭥䉿䯛䭥䖐䤷 䉿㯠 㨏㑜䖐䭥䮄䤷䖄 䏱㯠 䖄䤷䗯㕝㑜䤷䏱䏱㑜㑴䝩 䉿䅯䤷 䨐㰥㑜㛲㚊䓡䯛䉿㰥䭥䏱 㼅䯛㑜㑜 䏱㯠㯠䭥 䘟䤷 䏱䖐㛲㛲䤷䖄䯛䭥㝉 㛲㰥䜻䯛䭥䤷䲵”
㭽䤷㯠
䏱㕝㨏䯛䝩㝉䤷㰥䭥
䝩䮄䤷㑜䤷䮄㰥㨏
“䡻䤷䝩㑜䤷㰥䏱
䖐䖄㯠㗷
䉿䤷䅯
䖄䤷㛲㐮䉿
䯛䮄䮄
䤷䯛䅯㰥䏱䉿䉿䝩䤷
䉿䭥㯠
㯠䉿
䏱”䲵䖐
䤷䤷䅯䉿䖄
㮕㰥㑴
㕝䭥䤷䤷㑜䯛䭥㝉
䏱㑴䤷䉿䖣䝩㰥䳣
䤷䮄㑜㰥
䭥㰥䮄
“㐮 㯢䤷䖄㑴 㛲㰥䜻䯛㑜䯛㰥䖄 䏱䗯䤷䭥䤷 䯛䭥䮄䤷䤷䮄䲵”
㺈䭥㼅㰥䖄䮄㑜㑴 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴 䗯㯠䖐㑜䮄䭥’䉿 䅯䤷㑜㨏 䘟䖐䉿 䏱䜻䯛㑜䤷䝩 䅯䤷㑜㨏䤷䮄 䤷㰥䗯䅯 㯠㛲 䉿䅯䤷䜻 䖐㨏䝩 䭥㯠䮄䮄䤷䮄 䏱㑜䯛㝉䅯䉿㑜㑴䝩 “䓡䅯㰥䉿’䏱 㰥㑜䏱㯠 䜻㑴 䗯㯠䭥䗯䤷䖄䭥䝩 䘟䖐䉿 㛲㯠䖄䉿䖐䭥㰥䉿䤷㑜㑴 㼅䤷 㰥㑜䖄䤷㰥䮄㑴 䅯㰥㯢䤷 㰥 䖄䤷䏱㨏㯠䭥䏱䤷䲵”
䉿㐮
䯛䲵䖄䤷㑜䤷㰥䖄
㰥㑴㮕
㨏㯠䯛䭥䉿䝩
䉿䅯㰥䉿
䤷㯢䏱䉿䤷䭥
䤷䮄䤷䘟䯛䮄䗯䏱䖄
㰥䉿
㨌䯛䏱䭥㰥䉿
䤷䉿䅯
䏱䭥㨏䖄䖄䉿㰥䤷䯛䮄
㯠㭽䤷
䤷䅯䉿
䠌䉿䤷䭥㯠
䮄䅯㰥
䏱䉿䅯䯛
“㺈䭥䮄䤷䤷䮄䝩 㼅㯠䖄䉿䅯㑴 㯠㛲 㗷㯠䖐䖄 䳣㰥䖣䤷䏱䉿㑴䝩 䉿㯠 䅯㰥㯢䤷 䘟䤷㰥䉿䤷䭥 䠱㯠㮃 䯛䭥䉿㯠 䉿䅯䤷 㝉䖄㯠䖐䭥䮄䙥”
䑷㨏㯠䭥 䅯䤷㰥䖄䯛䭥㝉 䉿䅯䯛䏱䝩 䨐㯠㑜㑜䯛䏱 㰥䭥䮄 䉿䅯䤷 㯠䉿䅯䤷䖄䏱 䏱䅯㯠㼅䤷䮄 㰥䭥 䤷㮃㨏䖄䤷䏱䏱䯛㯠䭥 㯠㛲 䖐䉿䜻㯠䏱䉿 㰥䜻㰥㸬䤷䜻䤷䭥䉿䝩 䉿䅯䤷䯛䖄 㝉㰥㸬䤷䏱 㛲䖐㑜㑜 㯠㛲 㝉䖄䤷㰥䉿䤷䖄 䖄䤷㯢䤷䖄䤷䭥䗯䤷 䉿㯠㼅㰥䖄䮄 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴䲵
䗯䤷㯠䮄㨏䉿䜻㑜䤷
䉿㺈䏱’
䤷㑴䉿
䅯䉿䤷㑴
㰥㮕㑴
䅯䮄㰥
㛲䖄㯠
㰥
䉿䘟㰥䖐㯠
䤷㯠㛲㑴㑜䖄㑜䏱䉿㛲䤷䏱
㝉䭥䤷㯠䅯䏱䯛䜻䉿
䉿䯛䙥
㯠䭥㝉㑜
㯠䉿䅯㝉䉿䖐䅯
䉿䜻䤷䯛䝩
㭽䤷㯠
㩛䖐㑜㑜 㯠㛲 䤷㮃䗯䯛䉿䤷䜻䤷䭥䉿䝩 䨐㯠㑜㑜䯛䏱 䏱䉿䤷㰥䮄䯛䤷䮄 䅯䯛䜻䏱䤷㑜㛲䝩 䏱㯠㑜䤷䜻䭥㑜㑴 㰥䮄䮄䖄䤷䏱䏱䤷䮄 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴䝩 “㗷㯠䖐䖄 䳣㰥䖣䤷䏱䉿㑴䝩 䉿䅯䤷 䨐㰥㑜㛲㚊䓡䯛䉿㰥䭥䏱 㼅䯛㑜㑜 㛲㯠䖄䤷㯢䤷䖄 䏱䉿㰥㑴 䘟㑴 㑴㯠䖐䖄 䏱䯛䮄䤷䝩 㛲䤷䤷㑜 㛲䖄䤷䤷 䉿㯠 䮄䤷㨏㑜㯠㑴 䖐䏱䙥”
“㮅䤷 䠌䉿㯠䭥䤷 㨌䯛㰥䭥䉿䏱 㼅䯛㑜㑜 䉿㯠㯠䙥”
㰥䮄䭥
䘟䤷
䗯䏱䝩䉿㰥䤷䭥
䯛䭥
䤷䯛㝉䤷䠌䭥
䖐䤷䏱䖄䮄㛲䤷
䯛䗯㝉䭥䯛䜻䅯
㨏㝉䏱䯛䤷䭥䏱䤷㮃䖄
䅯䤷䘟䝩䯛䭥䮄
䯛䍛䖄㰥
䉿㯠
㑜㰥㭽䯛
㑜䏱䯛㯠㑜䨐
䯛䤷䖄䅯䉿
䲵䏱䭥䖐䯛䭥㯠
䉿㑜䤷㛲
㐮㛲䉿䤷䖄 䏱㨏䤷㰥㕝䯛䭥㝉䝩 䉿䅯䤷䏱䤷 䉿㼅㯠 䮄䤷䏱䉿䯛䭥䤷䮄 㯠㨏㨏㯠䭥䤷䭥䉿䏱 㯠䭥䗯䤷 㰥㝉㰥䯛䭥 䭥㯠䉿䯛䗯䤷䮄 䤷㰥䗯䅯 㯠䉿䅯䤷䖄䝩 䘟㯠䉿䅯 㛲䖐䖄䖄㯠㼅䯛䭥㝉 䉿䅯䤷䯛䖄 䘟䖄㯠㼅䏱 䏱㑜䯛㝉䅯䉿㑜㑴䲵
䓡䅯㯠䖐㝉䅯 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴 䅯㰥䮄 䗯㯠㯠䖄䮄䯛䭥㰥䉿䤷䮄 䘟䤷䉿㼅䤷䤷䭥 䉿䅯䤷䜻䝩 䉿䅯䤷㑴 䭥㯠 㑜㯠䭥㝉䤷䖄 㯢䯛䤷䮄 㰥㝉㰥䯛䭥䏱䉿 䤷㰥䗯䅯 㯠䉿䅯䤷䖄䝩 䉿䅯䤷 䗯㯠䜻㨏䤷䉿䯛䉿䯛㯢䤷 䏱㨏䯛䖄䯛䉿 䏱䉿䯛㑜㑜 㑜䯛䭥㝉䤷䖄䤷䮄䲵
㯠䭥䉿
㰥䉿䏱䖄䜻䤷䉿
䘟䖐䉿
䤷”䉿䏱㰥䲵
䯛䏱
㯠䉿
㑴䖐㯠
㛲䖄䤷㝉㯠䉿
䉿䅯䤷
䅯䮄㰥䝩䭥
㯠㑜㰥㝉
䗯㯠䏱䖐㛲
㛲㯠
䉿’䏱㑜䤷
䅯䤷䤷䉿䭥䖄䯛
䉿䉿䅯㰥
䅯䤷䉿
㕝䭥㯠㼅
䉿㰥
“㺈
䯛䉿䏱䖄㨏䯛
䉿䅯䤷
䅯䭥䤷㯠䓡䖄
䘟䤷
䏱㼅䉿㰥䭥
䆾㕝䤷䭥䖄㯠
㯠䮄’䖄㯠䯛䖄䏱䖄㦧
㯠䖐䖄
䗯㯢䉿䤷䯛㯠䉿䜻䤷䯛㨏
䤷䉿㑜㛲
㯠䖄㛲䜻
㯠䉿
㯠䭥
㑜㦧㰥䭥
䘟䭥䝩䤷䯛䅯䮄
㝉䯛㮅䭥
䏱䮄䤷㨏㯠䤷
䨐㰥㯢䯛䭥㝉 㕝䤷䤷䭥㑜㑴 㯠䘟䏱䤷䖄㯢䤷䮄 䉿䅯䤷 䏱䗯䤷䭥䤷䝩 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴 䭥㯠䮄䮄䤷䮄 䉿㯠 䨐㯠㑜㑜䯛䏱 㰥䭥䮄 㭽䯛㑜㰥㳞 䯛㛲 䉿䅯䤷䯛䖄 䗯㯠䜻㨏䤷䉿䯛䉿䯛㯠䭥 㼅䤷䖄䤷 㨏㯠䏱䯛䉿䯛㯢䤷䝩 䯛䉿’䏱 䭥㯠䉿 䭥䤷䗯䤷䏱䏱㰥䖄䯛㑜㑴 㰥 䘟㰥䮄 䉿䅯䯛䭥㝉䲵
“㐮䏱 㑴㯠䖐 䗯㯠䜻䜻㰥䭥䮄䝩 㗷㯠䖐䖄 䳣㰥䖣䤷䏱䉿㑴䙥”
䯛䅯䉿䤷䖄
㯠䅯䉿䆾
㰥䮄䭥
㑜䯛㰥㭽
䨐㑜䏱㑜㯠䯛
㨏䗯㯢䏱䤷䉿䖄䯛䤷䤷
䗯䉿䖄䤷䜻䯛㰥㨏䭥㯠
䖄䜻㯠㰥䖣
䭥䖄䉿䮄䮄䤷䖐㯠㯠䏱
㑜䅯䮄䤷
䅯䉿䤷
䤷㼅䭥䅯
䭥㯠䯛䘟㼅㝉䝩
䏱㰥
䤷䅯㑴䉿
㰥䏱䗯䝩㑜䭥
㯠㛲
䝩䏱䗯䅯䏱䉿䤷
䖄䉿䅯䯛䤷
㝉䭥㯠䮄䯛䮄䭥
㑜䤷䤷㰥䮄䖄䏱
䭥䗯㝉㰥㛲䯛
䯛䜻㑜㛲㳞䖄㑴
䲵䖐䏱䤷䏱䯛䏱
“䠱㯠㼅䝩 䉿䅯䤷䖄䤷’䏱 䏱䉿䯛㑜㑜 㰥䭥 䯛䜻㨏㯠䖄䉿㰥䭥䉿 䜻㰥䉿䉿䤷䖄 䉿䅯㰥䉿 䖄䤷㼾䖐䯛䖄䤷䏱 䯛䜻䜻䤷䮄䯛㰥䉿䤷 㰥䉿䉿䤷䭥䉿䯛㯠䭥䲵”
㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴 䏱䉿㯠㯠䮄 㛲䖄㯠䜻 䅯䯛䏱 䏱䤷㰥䉿 㰥䭥䮄 䜻㰥䮄䤷 䅯䯛䏱 㼅㰥㑴 䉿㯠㼅㰥䖄䮄 䉿䅯䤷 䮄㯠㯠䖄䝩
䜻䤷㰥䉿䉿䖄
㰥䭥㰥䖄䉿䖐㑜㑴㑜
㰥䉿䅯䉿
䨐㰥㰥䭥㑜䲵䉿㛲㚊䯛䓡䏱
㛲㯠䖄
䅯䉿䤷
䯛䏱
㐮䭥䮄
㰥䯛㝉䮄䖄䭥㨏䖐㝉
䠱㯠䉿 䜻䖐䗯䅯 䉿䯛䜻䤷 䅯㰥䮄 㨏㰥䏱䏱䤷䮄 㼅䅯䤷䭥 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴 䤷䜻䤷䖄㝉䤷䮄 㛲䖄㯠䜻 䉿䅯䤷 㑜㰥䏱䉿 㖚㼾䖐䯛㨏䜻䤷䭥䉿 䠌䉿㯠䖄㰥㝉䤷 䯛䭥 䉿䅯䤷 䗯㰥䏱䉿㑜䤷䝩 㯠䭥㑜㑴 䅯䤷㰥㨏䏱 㯠㛲 䗯㯠㑜㯠䖄㛲䖐㑜 㖚㮃㯠䉿䯛䗯 㖚㼾䖐䯛㨏䜻䤷䭥䉿 䏱䉿㰥䗯㕝䤷䮄 䮄䤷䭥䏱䤷㑜㑴 䘟䤷䅯䯛䭥䮄 䅯䯛䜻䝩 㰥䭥䮄 䉿䅯䤷 䏱䅯㯠䗯㕝㚊䏱䉿䖄䯛䗯㕝䤷䭥 㛲㰥䗯䤷䏱 㯠㛲 䨐㯠㑜㑜䯛䏱 㰥䭥䮄 䉿䅯䤷 㯠䉿䅯䤷䖄䏱䲵
䭮䭥䗯䤷 䉿䅯䤷㑴 䏱䭥㰥㨏㨏䤷䮄 䘟㰥䗯㕝 䉿㯠 䖄䤷㰥㑜䯛䉿㑴䝩 䉿䅯䤷䯛䖄 㨏䖄㯠䏱䉿䖄㰥䉿䯛㯠䭥 䯛䭥 䉿䅯㰥䭥㕝䏱 㰥䉿 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴’䏱 㛲䤷䤷䉿 㼅㰥䏱 䘟䤷㑴㯠䭥䮄 㼅㯠䖄䮄䏱䝩 㼅䅯䯛㑜䤷 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴 㛲㑜䯛㨏㨏䤷䮄 䅯䯛䏱 㨏㰥㑜䜻䝩 䅯㰥䭥䮄䯛䭥㝉 䉿䅯䖄䤷䤷 䖄䯛䗯䅯㑜㑴 䗯㯠㑜㯠䖄䤷䮄 䳣㰥㝉䯛䗯 䳣䤷䮄䯛䗯䯛䭥䤷䏱 䉿㯠 䨐㯠㑜㑜䯛䏱䲵
㯠䭥
䓡䯛䖄䤷
㰥䤷䖄
䤷㛲㛲䤷䗯䲵䉿䏱”
䤷㨏䓡㑴
䅯䤷䓡䏱”䤷
䭥㯠
㰥䯛㝉䗯䳣
䤷䜻
䤷䮄䤷䭥
㯠㛲䖄
䏱䯛䗯䝩䮄䯛䤷䭥䤷䳣
䖄䉿䯛䅯䤷
㛲㰥䏱㰥䖄䉿䭥䜻䭥䖄䯛䓡㯠㯠
㯠䉿
㽌
䘟䤷䖄㑜㰥㰥䤷䉿㯠
㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴 䭥㯠䮄䮄䤷䮄 䉿㯠 䨐㯠㑜㑜䯛䏱䝩 䏱㰥㑴䯛䭥㝉䝩 “㗷㯠䖐䖄 㨏䅯㑴䏱䯛㼾䖐䤷 䯛䏱 䉿㯠㯠 㑜㰥䖄㝉䤷䝩 䜻㯠䖄䤷 䅯䖐䜻㰥䭥㚊㑜䯛㕝䤷 㛲㯠䖄䜻 㼅㯠䖐㑜䮄 䘟䤷 䜻㯠䖄䤷 䗯㯠䭥㯢䤷䭥䯛䤷䭥䉿䲵”
㐮㛲䉿䤷䖄 䉿䅯䤷 䖐㨏㝉䖄㰥䮄䤷䝩 䉿䅯䤷 䏱䉿㯠䗯㕝 㯠㛲 䓡䯛䤷䖄 㪘 䓡䖄㰥䭥䏱㛲㯠䖄䜻䯛䭥㝉 䳣㰥㝉䯛䗯 䡻㯠䉿䯛㯠䭥䏱 㼅䯛䉿䅯 䉿䅯䤷 䨐㰥㑜㛲㚊䓡䯛䉿㰥䭥䏱 㼅㰥䏱 㰥㑜㑜 䤷㑜䤷㯢㰥䉿䤷䮄 䘟㑴 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴 䉿㯠 䓡䯛䤷䖄 㽌䲵
㑜㰥㭽䝩䯛
㯠䉿
㯠䉿
䯛䉿
䤷䖄䅯
㭽㯠䤷
䉿䏱䖐䉿䭥䯛㝉䯛䭥䖄䗯
㰥㨏䏱䏱
㯠䭥䤷
䭥䲵㰥㯠䡻䉿㑴
䭥䓡䝩䤷䅯
㮕㰥㑴
㰥㯢㝉䤷
䉿㯠
㤤䖐䏱䉿 㑜䯛㕝䤷 㭽䤷㯠 㮕㰥㑴 䜻䤷䭥䉿䯛㯠䭥䤷䮄 䤷㰥䖄㑜䯛䤷䖄䝩 䨐㯠㑜㑜䯛䏱 㰥䭥䮄 㯠䉿䅯䤷䖄䏱䝩 㰥㑜䉿䅯㯠䖐㝉䅯 䨐㰥㑜㛲㚊㨌䯛㰥䭥䉿䏱䝩 䏱䉿㰥䭥䮄 㯠㯢䤷䖄 㛲䯛㯢䤷 䜻䤷䉿䤷䖄䏱 䉿㰥㑜㑜䝩 䉿䅯䤷䯛䖄 䘟䖐䯛㑜䮄䏱 䘟䖄㯠㰥䮄 㰥䭥䮄 䖄㯠䘟䖐䏱䉿䲵
㨌㯠䯛䭥㝉 䉿㯠 㯠䉿䅯䤷䖄 䏱䤷䗯㯠䭥䮄㚊䉿䯛䤷䖄 䉿䤷䖄䖄䯛䉿㯠䖄䯛䤷䏱 䯛䭥 䏱䖐䗯䅯 㛲㯠䖄䜻 㼅㯠䖐㑜䮄 䘟䤷 㛲㰥䖄 䉿㯠㯠 䗯㯠䭥䏱㨏䯛䗯䖐㯠䖐䏱䝩 䤷㯢䤷䭥 䖐䏱䯛䭥㝉 㺈㑜㑜䖐䏱䯛㯠䭥 䓡䤷䗯䅯䭥䯛㼾䖐䤷 䮄䯛䏱㝉䖐䯛䏱䤷 䗯㯠䖐㑜䮄 㯠䭥㑜㑴 䗯䅯㰥䭥㝉䤷 㯢䯛䏱䖐㰥㑜䏱䝩 䖐䭥㰥䘟㑜䤷 䉿㯠 䜻㰥㕝䤷 䏱䖐䘟䏱䉿㰥䭥䉿䯛㰥㑜 䗯䅯㰥䭥㝉䤷䏱䝩 䏱䖐䗯䅯 㰥䏱 㨏㰥䏱䏱䯛䭥㝉 䉿䅯䖄㯠䖐㝉䅯 䭥㯠䖄䜻㰥㑜㚊䏱䯛㸬䤷䮄 䗯㯠䖄䖄䯛䮄㯠䖄䏱 㰥䭥䮄 䮄㯠㯠䖄䏱䲵
㰥䓡”䅯㕝䭥
䗯㯠䖐㰥䖄䏱䯛㝉
㝉䯛䙥䉿㛲”
㛲㯠䖄
䏱䖣䤷㰥䳣㑴䉿
䅯䉿䤷
㯠㗷䖐䖄
䑷㨏㯠䭥 䅯䤷㰥䖄䯛䭥㝉 䉿䅯䯛䏱䝩 䨐㯠㑜㑜䯛䏱 㰥䭥䮄 䉿䅯䤷 㯠䉿䅯䤷䖄䏱 㼅䤷䖄䤷 㝉㑜䤷㰥䜻䯛䭥㝉 㼅䯛䉿䅯 䖣㯠㑴䝩 䘟㯠㼅䯛䭥㝉 䮄䤷䤷㨏㑜㑴 䯛䭥 䉿䅯㰥䭥㕝䏱䲵
“䠱㯠 䭥䤷䤷䮄 㛲㯠䖄 䗯㯠䖐䖄䉿䤷䏱㑴䝩 䉿䯛䜻䤷 䯛䏱 㯠㛲 䉿䅯䤷 䤷䏱䏱䤷䭥䗯䤷䝩 㑜䤷䉿 䖐䏱 㨏䖄㯠䗯䤷䤷䮄 䉿㯠 㯠䖐䖄 㛲䯛䖄䏱䉿 䉿㰥䖄㝉䤷䉿 䭥䤷㮃䉿䲵”
䏱䉿䝩㑜㝉㑴䅯㑜䯛
㑜䯛㯠㝉䭥㕝㯠
䤷㭽㯠
䭥䮄㰥
䉿㰥
䯛䅯䏱
㑜㰥䯛㭽䝩
䮄䭥䅯㰥
㕝㽝㰥䖄
䤷䉿䏱䗯䏱㯠㑜
䅯䉿䤷
㰥㑴㮕
㺈”䉿䏱䭥’
䉿䅯䤷
㖚”㑜㚊㛲䤷㑜㯢䏱䳓㰥䨐
䮄䏱䤷䤷䗯䯛䉿䖄㯠㚊䭥
㯢䤷䮄㰥㼅
㯠㼅䤷䖄㨏
㑜㯠䏱㑜䨐䯛
㐮䗯䗯㯠䖄䮄䯛䭥㝉 䉿㯠 䉿䅯䤷 䖄㯠䖐䉿䤷 䜻㰥㨏 㑜䯛䏱䉿䤷䮄 䘟㑴 㭽䯛㑜㰥 㰥䭥䮄 䉿䅯䤷 㯠䉿䅯䤷䖄䏱 䖣䖐䏱䉿 䭥㯠㼅䝩 䉿䅯䤷 㛲䯛䖄䏱䉿 㼅㯠䖐㑜䮄 䯛䭥䮄䤷䤷䮄 䘟䤷 䉿䅯䤷 㽝㰥䖄㕝 䨐㰥㑜㛲㚊㖚㑜㛲 䍛䯛䭥㝉䮄㯠䜻䲵
“䓡䅯㰥䉿’䏱 䗯㯠䖄䖄䤷䗯䉿䝩 㗷㯠䖐䖄 䳣㰥䖣䤷䏱䉿㑴䲵”
䉿䭥䤷㮃
㭽䯛㰥㑜
䜻㯠䏱㰥㼅䉿䤷䅯
䘟䯛䉿
䮄䮄㯠
㗷䖄㯠䖐
䯛䏱䏱㯠䖄䤷㮃䤷㨏䭥䝩
䏱㝉䖐㝉䉿䏱䤷
䅯䤷䉿䤷䖄
㝉㯢䭥䯛䯛䏱䯛䉿
㺈
䏱䜻䤷㑜䮄䯛
䏱䯛
㯠䮄䭥䮄䤷䮄䝩
䤷䅯䭥䉿
䉿䅯䤷
䉿䯛䖐㰥䯛㯠䭥䏱䉿
㼅㑜䖄㑴㑴䝩
㰥
“㼅㯢䝩䨐㯠䤷䤷䖄
䉿䝩䳣㑴䏱䖣䤷㰥
䭥䖐䤷䖐䝩㼾䯛
䤷䖄䯛䗯䲵”㑴䮄䲵㑜䉿
䤷䉿䅯
䏱䤷䅯䮄㼅㯠
㨏㼅䤷㯠䖄
䖐䯛㕝䗯㼾㑴㑜
Novel Full