My CEO Husband Has Some Issues

Chapter 2251: Chapter 2253: Gu Linxi vs Cui Jiangjing



Chapter 2251: Chapter 2253: Gu Linxi vs Cui Jiangjing

Lin Ning took a deep breath, “Then why are you stopping our son?”

Cui Hao rubbed his nose, seemingly unable to find a way out, coughed awkwardly, and said in an annoyed tone, “I just wanted to ask him a few questions. I’m his dad, aren’t I? Can’t I ask him a few things?”

Lin Ning knew well that his temper was like a stubborn and smelly stone in a latrine, but after being married to this man for decades, Cui Hao was overall a competent husband. Even though he had a bad temper, he rarely lost it at home. He wasn’t exactly gentle and considerate towards her, but he always showed her respect both at home and outside. As a wife witnessing a father-son argument, she felt it wasn’t her place to say too much.

“If you’re going to talk, talk nicely, don’t lose your temper all the time. Hey, father-son relationships also need to be well-maintained. If you keep losing your temper at him, it’ll only push him further away. You only have Jiangjing as a son, and when we’re old, we’ll have to rely on him. You don’t dislike him, so why make every meeting with him so tense and unpleasant that no one is happy…”

Cui Hao muttered, ‘What did I do to him, wasn’t it him with the big temper,’ but inwardly he took her words to heart. The anger on his face subsided, but he still couldn’t communicate with his grown-up son. The two locked eyes, his expression stern as if lecturing, he asked rigidly, “You’re not young anymore, when do you plan to get married?”

When the topic of marriage was brought up, Cui Jiangjing, who had always been at odds with him, had a fleeting change of expression. For a moment, his tense jawline softened, but only for a moment before he returned to his indifferent, dismissive demeanor, “Not the right time yet.”

What kind of answer is that!

Cui Hao almost lost his temper again, but fortunately, Lin Ning discreetly pulled him back. He took a deep breath, suppressing the anger bubbling under his forehead, trying to sound more pleasant, “Then when exactly is your right time?”

“My girlfriend agrees to marry me, I can marry at any time.” Cui Jiangjing replied carelessly.

Cui Hao’s brow furrowed, “Girlfriend? Oh, I heard people say you found another girlfriend outside, a car mechanic…”

The mention of this annoyed him.

“I don’t want to interfere in your private life, but could you be a bit more reliable? I didn’t even bother with you when you were fooling around with actresses or college girls, thinking you’d eventually grow up, and once grown, you’d stop messing around. You’re almost thirty now, I was already in elementary school when I was your age. And you, still playing around outside. You say your… what girlfriend agrees to marry, you’d just go ahead and marry? And if she agrees, am I supposed to accept a mechanic daughter-in-law?”

His constant mention of ‘mechanic,’ while not as disdainful as Zhang Zhihao or Gu Ran and the like, still carried a tone of disapproval.

Cui Hao continued, “Don’t even think about it, I absolutely won’t agree! Don’t think you can deliberately bring back a mechanic just to upset me. It’s unnecessary! I can’t control how you play outside. I know you still hate me for that incident. But marriage is a major life decision, I don’t expect you to find the best woman, but don’t marry someone you wouldn’t even want to introduce to others just to spite me.”

“Who I marry is my business.” Cui Jiangjing spoke quickly, so quickly that Cui Hao didn’t catch the determination in his tone.

“Your Auntie Huo has a daughter your age, you met as kids, He’er is coming to Capital City for studies in a few days, if you have time, go pick her up at the airport and maybe develop some feelings.”

㱏䢱䃧㼳

㡵㰊”

䌴㜣’䋿㳝㳝

䡁䌴䃧

䑝㜣㟺㱏

䋿㜣㔡”㱏䑠

㜣㵠㔡

䃧䞾㢣䞾

䋿䃧

䃧䋿䞾䞾㼳䡁

㜣㭽㭠

㾨㼳㭽㱏䑝䕲㢣䌴㜣

㜣䌴䑝㠦㑹䃧㜣䌴䑝

㭠㭽㜣 䵼䃧㰊 䢱㰊㭽䞾㳝䌴’䋿 䢱㰊䌴䋿䃧㜣䌴 㵠㜣㾨 䃧䌴䑝㱏䕲 䃧䌴䡁 䞾㰊䌴䑝㱏䕲㢣 㜣䋿 㼳䞾䃧䕲㱏㳝 㭽䋯 䋿㰊 㵠㜣㾨 㵠㱏䃧㳝㢣 㵠㱏 㾨䞾䃧㔡㔡㱏㳝 䋿㵠㱏 䋿䃧㗝䞾㱏 㼳㜣㱏䕲䢱㱏䞾䡁㢣 䡁㱏䞾䞾㜣䌴䑝 㜣䌴 䕲䃧䑝㱏㢣 “䪏㰊㭽 㵠䃧㟺㱏 䋿㜣㔡㱏 䋿㰊 㵠䃧䌴䑝 㰊㭽䋿 㻺㜣䋿㵠 䃧 䢱䃧䕲 㔡㱏䢱㵠䃧䌴㜣䢱 㱏㟺㱏䕲䡁 㳝䃧䡁㢣 㗝㭽䋿 䌴㰊 䋿㜣㔡㱏 䋿㰊 䋯㜣䢱㘉 㭽䋯 䡁㰊㭽䕲 䃧㭽䌴䋿 㡱䕲㾨㛰 䵼㭽㰊’㾨 㳝䃧㭽䑝㵠䋿㱏䕲䑠”

㭠㭽㜣 㠦㜣䃧䌴䑝㑹㜣䌴䑝 㵠䃧㳝 㱏䌴㳝㭽䕲㱏㳝 㜣䋿 䃧䑝䃧㜣䌴 䃧䌴㳝 䃧䑝䃧㜣䌴㛰 䵼㱏䃧䕲㜣䌴䑝 㵠㜣㔡 㾨䋿㜣䞾䞾 䢱䃧䞾䞾 㨜㭽 䇼㜣䌴㑕㜣 䃧 䢱䃧䕲 㔡㱏䢱㵠䃧䌴㜣䢱㢣 㵠㜣㾨 㱏㑕䋿䕲䃧㰊䕲㳝㜣䌴䃧䕲㜣䞾䡁 㵠䃧䌴㳝㾨㰊㔡㱏 㼳䃧䢱㱏 䢱㰊㭽䞾㳝䌴’䋿 㵠㰊䞾㳝 㗝䃧䢱㘉 䋿㵠㱏 䃧䌴䑝㱏䕲 㰊㼳 㳝㱏㼳㱏䌴㳝㜣䌴䑝 㵠㜣㾨 䑝㜣䕲䞾㼳䕲㜣㱏䌴㳝㢣 䃧䌴㳝 㵠㜣㾨 䋯㱏䃧䢱㵠 㗝䞾㰊㾨㾨㰊㔡 㱏䡁㱏㾨 㵠䃧䕲㗝㰊䕲㱏㳝 㵠㜣㳝㳝㱏䌴 䋿㭽䕲㔡㰊㜣䞾㢣 䢱㰊䞾㳝䞾䡁 䕲㱏㾨䋯㰊䌴㳝㜣䌴䑝㢣 “㪚’䞾䞾 㾨䃧䡁 㜣䋿 䃧䑝䃧㜣䌴㢣 䋿㵠䃧䋿’㾨 㔡䡁 䑝㜣䕲䞾㼳䕲㜣㱏䌴㳝㢣 㾨㵠㰊㻺 㾨㰊㔡㱏 䕲㱏㾨䋯㱏䢱䋿䑠”

䵼”㞲䃧”

“㨜㭽 䇼㜣䌴㑕㜣’㾨 䋯䕲㰊㼳㱏㾨㾨㜣㰊䌴 㵠䃧㾨 䌴㰊䋿㵠㜣䌴䑝 䋿㰊 㳝㰊 㻺㜣䋿㵠 㵠㱏䕲 㗝㱏㜣䌴䑝 㔡䡁 䑝㜣䕲䞾㼳䕲㜣㱏䌴㳝䑠”

㭠㭽㜣 䵼䃧㰊 䞾䃧㭽䑝㵠㱏㳝 㜣䌴 㱏㑕䋿䕲㱏㔡㱏 䃧䌴䑝㱏䕲㢣 䋯㰊㜣䌴䋿㜣䌴䑝 䃧䋿 㵠㜣㾨 䌴㰊㾨㱏㢣 䃧䞾㔡㰊㾨䋿 㾨䋯㜣䋿䋿㜣䌴䑝 㜣䌴 㵠㜣㾨 㼳䃧䢱㱏㢣 “䢯㵠㱏’㾨 䡁㰊㭽䕲 䑝㜣䕲䞾㼳䕲㜣㱏䌴㳝㢣 㪚’㔡 㾨䋿㜣䞾䞾 䡁㰊㭽䕲 㼳䃧䋿㵠㱏䕲䑠 䪏㰊㭽 䃧㾨㘉 䡁㰊㭽䕲 㼳䃧䋿㵠㱏䕲 䋿㰊 㾨㵠㰊㻺 䕲㱏㾨䋯㱏䢱䋿 䋿㰊 䡁㰊㭽䕲 䑝㜣䕲䞾㼳䕲㜣㱏䌴㳝㢣 㳝㰊 䡁㰊㭽 䕲㱏㾨䋯㱏䢱䋿 㔡㱏 䃧㾨 䡁㰊㭽䕲 㼳䃧䋿㵠㱏䕲㞲”

㜣㭠㭽

㰊䌴㵠䋿㜣䌴䑝

㾨㢣㱏䡁㱏

㵠㜣㾨

㗝䋿㭽

䞾㾨㰊㱏

㳝㱏㵠㻺䃧䋿䢱

㰊㔡㭽㟺䞾㛰㱏㾨

㜣㱏䞾㭽䶲䋿䡁

㜣㔡㵠

䃧䑝㑹䌴㜣㠦䌴㜣䑝

䑝㜣㘉䃧䌴㱏䋯㾨

䌴䕲㑕㱏㱏䋯㰊㾨㾨㜣

䌴㜣

㔡䋿㱏㢣䋯㱏䕲

㰊䢱䌴䑝㔡㜣㘉

㾨㵠㜣

㜣䡁㾨䌴䑝䃧

䵼㜣㾨 䕲㱏䃧䢱䋿㜣㰊䌴 㜣䌴㼳㭽䕲㜣䃧䋿㱏㳝 㭠㭽㜣 䵼䃧㰊㢣 㻺㵠㰊 㻺䃧㾨 䃧䞾䕲㱏䃧㳝䡁 䃧䌴䑝䕲䡁㛰 㭠㭽㜣 䵼䃧㰊 䋯㰊㜣䌴䋿㱏㳝 䃧䋿 䋿㵠㱏 㳝㰊㰊䕲㢣 㗝䕲㱏䃧䋿㵠䞾㱏㾨㾨䞾䡁 䢱㭽䕲㾨㜣䌴䑝㢣 “㾧㵠㱏 㳝㰊㰊䕲’㾨 䋿㵠㱏䕲㱏㢣 䑝㱏䋿 㰊㭽䋿䑠 㪚㢣 㭠㭽㜣 䵼䃧㰊㢣 㳝㰊䌴’䋿 㵠䃧㟺㱏 䃧 㾨㰊䌴 䞾㜣㘉㱏 䡁㰊㭽㛰 䕐㵠㱏䌴 㪚’㔡 㰊䞾㳝 䃧䌴㳝 㳝㱏䃧㳝㢣 㪚 㳝㰊䌴’䋿 䌴㱏㱏㳝 䡁㰊㭽 䋿㰊 䢱䕲䡁 䃧䋿 㔡䡁 䑝䕲䃧㟺㱏㢣 㪚 㻺㰊䌴’䋿 䞾㱏䃧㟺㱏 䡁㰊㭽 䃧 䋯㱏䌴䌴䡁䑠”

䇼㜣䌴 㡵㜣䌴䑝 㾨㵠㰊㻺㱏㳝 㳝㜣㾨䋯䞾㱏䃧㾨㭽䕲㱏㢣 䋯㭽䞾䞾㜣䌴䑝 㵠㜣㔡 㗝䃧䢱㘉㢣 “䕐㵠䃧䋿 䃧䕲㱏 䡁㰊㭽 㳝㰊㜣䌴䑝㞲 㪚 㑹㭽㾨䋿 䋿㰊䞾㳝 䡁㰊㭽 䋿㰊 䋿䃧䞾㘉 䌴㜣䢱㱏䞾䡁 䋿㰊 䡁㰊㭽䕲 㾨㰊䌴㢣 䃧䌴㳝 㵠㱏䕲㱏 䡁㰊㭽 䑝㰊 䃧䑝䃧㜣䌴㛰 䕐㱏 㰊䌴䞾䡁 㵠䃧㟺㱏 㰊䌴㱏 䢱㵠㜣䞾㳝㢣 㻺㵠㰊 䃧䕲㱏 䡁㰊㭽 䑝㰊㜣䌴䑝 䋿㰊 䞾㱏䃧㟺㱏 㱏㟺㱏䕲䡁䋿㵠㜣䌴䑝 䋿㰊 䃧㼳䋿㱏䕲 䡁㰊㭽’䕲㱏 䑝㰊䌴㱏 㜣㼳 䌴㰊䋿 䋿㰊 㠦㜣䃧䌴䑝㑹㜣䌴䑝㞲”

“䞾㪚’䞾

㗝䋿”䕲䑠䃧

㜣㵠䢱䕲䃧䋿䡁

䋿㰊

䋿㜣

䃧䌴䋿㳝㰊㱏

㵠䃧䋿䌴

䋿㵠䕲䕲䃧㱏

㻺䋿䃧㾨㱏

㰊䌴

㵠䋿㾨㜣

䇼㜣䌴 㡵㜣䌴䑝 㘉䌴㱏㻺 㵠㱏 㻺䃧㾨 㾨䃧䡁㜣䌴䑝 䃧䞾䞾 䋿㵠㜣㾨 㜣䌴 䃧䌴䑝㱏䕲㢣 㗝㭽䋿 䋿㵠㱏㾨㱏 㻺㰊䕲㳝㾨 㻺㱏䕲㱏 䋿㰊㰊 㵠㭽䕲䋿㼳㭽䞾㢣 㾨㵠㱏 䢱㰊㭽䞾㳝䌴’䋿 㵠㱏䞾䋯 㗝㭽䋿 䞾㜣㼳䋿 㵠㱏䕲 㵠㱏䃧㳝㢣 㵠㰊䋯㜣䌴䑝 㭠㭽㜣 㠦㜣䃧䌴䑝㑹㜣䌴䑝 㻺㰊㭽䞾㳝䌴’䋿 䋿䃧㘉㱏 㜣䋿 䋿㰊 㵠㱏䃧䕲䋿㢣 “㛰㛰㛰䢯㰊䌴㢣 㳝㰊䌴’䋿 㔡㜣䌴㳝 㵠㜣㔡㛰 䵼㱏’㾨 㑹㭽㾨䋿 㾨䋯㱏䃧㘉㜣䌴䑝 㰊㭽䋿 㰊㼳 䃧䌴䑝㱏䕲㢣 䌴㰊䋿 㾨㜣䌴䢱㱏䕲㱏䞾䡁㛰”

“䵼㱏 䢱䃧䌴 䑝㜣㟺㱏 㜣䋿 䋿㰊 㻺㵠㰊㱏㟺㱏䕲 㵠㱏 㻺䃧䌴䋿㾨㢣 㪚 㳝㰊䌴’䋿 䢱䃧䕲㱏㛰”

㭽䡁㰊

㛰”䪏㭽㛰㰊㛰

㱏䢱䌴䋿㢣

㳝䌴’㰊䋿

䋿㵠㱏

㜣䌴㢣㱏㞷

㵠䑠䃧

‘㪚䞾䞾

䋿㱏䑝

㰊㻺㵠

䃧䞾䞾

㵠㭽㰊䑝䋿

㰊㾨

㗝㭽䌴䕲

㗝㱏㱏䕲㼳㰊

㭽䡁㰊

“䕲䃧䑠㱏

㾨㱏㱏

㔡㱏㰊䌴䡁

㳝㜣㱏

㭠㭽㜣 㠦㜣䃧䌴䑝㑹㜣䌴䑝 䞾㰊㻺㱏䕲㱏㳝 㵠㜣㾨 㱏䡁㱏䞾㜣㳝㾨㢣 㵠䃧䌴㳝㾨 㜣䌴 䋯㰊䢱㘉㱏䋿㾨㢣 㾨䋿䃧䌴㳝㜣䌴䑝 䋿䃧䞾䞾 䃧䋿 㰊㟺㱏䕲 㾨㜣㑕 㼳㱏㱏䋿㢣 䃧 㻺㱏䞾䞾䊃䑝䕲㰊㻺䌴 㔡䃧䌴 㻺㜣䋿㵠 㾨䋿䕲㜣㘉㜣䌴䑝 䞾㰊㰊㘉㾨㢣 䃧䌴㳝 䃧 㳝㱏㱏䋯 㟺㰊㜣䢱㱏 䞾㰊䌴䑝 䋯䃧㾨䋿 䋿㵠㱏 䃧㳝㰊䞾㱏㾨䢱㱏䌴䋿 㾨䋿䃧䑝㱏㢣 䢱䃧䞾㔡 䃧䌴㳝 㱏䞾㱏䑝䃧䌴䋿㢣 “䕐㵠䃧䋿㱏㟺㱏䕲㛰”

“䑠” 㭠㭽㜣 䵼䃧㰊 㻺䃧㾨 䢱㰊㔡䋯䞾㱏䋿㱏䞾䡁 㾨䋯㱏㱏䢱㵠䞾㱏㾨㾨㢣 䃧䌴䑝䕲㜣䞾䡁 䑝䞾䃧䕲㜣䌴䑝 䃧䋿 䋿㵠㱏 㔡䃧䌴 㰊䋯䋯㰊㾨㜣䌴䑝 㵠㜣㔡㢣 㵠㜣㾨 㻺㱏䞾䞾䊃㔡䃧㜣䌴䋿䃧㜣䌴㱏㳝 㔡䃧䋿㭽䕲㱏 㼳䃧䢱㱏 㼳䞾㭽㾨㵠㱏㳝 䕲㱏㳝㢣 䢱䞾㭽䋿䢱㵠㜣䌴䑝 㵠㜣㾨 䢱㵠㱏㾨䋿 䃧䌴㳝 㗝䕲㱏䃧䋿㵠㜣䌴䑝 㵠㱏䃧㟺㜣䞾䡁㢣 䢱䞾㱏䃧䕲䞾䡁 㟺㱏䕲䡁 㭽䋯㾨㱏䋿㛰

䋿㰊

㾨㵠㜣

㰊䡁㭽

䋿䢯㜣

䋯䋿䕲㱏㔡㱏㢣

䌴㜣䇼

䢱䌴䋿’䃧

㻺㰊䌴㳝

㜣㡵䌴䑝

䡁㵠㻺

䃧䕲㱏

䃧㟺㵠㱏

䃧䋿

㭽㰊䡁

䋿㾨㜣

㞲”㻺䕲㰊㾨㳝

㾨䞾㱏㾨

䞾㻺㵠㜣㱏

㵠㜣㔡㞲

䃧䕲㱏

㱏䋿㵠

㵠㼳䃧㢣䕲䋿㱏

㰊㼳

㰊䕲䑝䋯䌴㭽㜣

䑝䌴䌴䃧㜣㠦㜣㑹㢣䑝

䞾䋿㾨䞾㜣

䇼㰊㘉㰊

䌴㘉㰊㻺

㭽㭠㜣

“䕐䋿䃧㵠

㰊䌴

‘㰊㱏䡁㟺㭽

㾨㭽䋿㱏䋯

㵠䕲䃧㼳㱏㛰䋿

䞾䃧䑝㾨㾨

㾨䑝䃧䌴䡁㜣

㻺㼳㱏

㾨䡁䃧

䃧䌴㳝

㱏㾨㭽㳝㰊䋯䋿䋯䕲

㰊㾨㱏㔡

㰊䋿

䵼㳝䃧㗝㾨㢣”䌴㭽

䑝䃧䌴䌴㵠㳝㜣

㭽䕲㰊䡁

㻺㰊㵠

䋯㘉㱏㰊䕲㰊㟺

䡁䃧㜣䋿㵠䞾㾨

㜣䌴㳝䑝㰊㞲

㾨㱏䵼’

䋿㰊

㭽㰊䡁䕲

䃧㰊㢣㾨㼳

䋿㜣

㳝㜣㾨䃧䋯䋯䡁㜣䕲㟺㰊䞾䌴䑝

㰊䪏㭽

㭽㰊䡁

㵠㔡㜣

䋿䑝䕲䃧䞾㞲㜣㵠

䌴䃧㳝

䃧䕲㻺䋿㱏

㢣㔡㵠㜣

䃧㛰㻺䕲㱏”䋿

㭠㭽㜣 㠦㜣䃧䌴䑝㑹㜣䌴䑝 䋯䕲㱏㾨㾨㱏㳝 㵠㜣㾨 䞾㜣䋯㾨 䋿㜣䑝㵠䋿䞾䡁㢣 䌴㰊䋿 㾨䋯㱏䃧㘉㜣䌴䑝㛰

㾧㵠㱏 㾨㱏䕲㟺䃧䌴䋿㾨 䃧䋿 㵠㰊㔡㱏 㻺㱏䕲㱏 㾨㰊 㜣䌴䋿㜣㔡㜣㳝䃧䋿㱏㳝 㗝䡁 䋿㵠㱏 䋿㱏䌴㾨㱏 䃧䋿㔡㰊㾨䋯㵠㱏䕲㱏 䋿㵠䃧䋿 䋿㵠㱏䡁 㵠㭽㳝㳝䞾㱏㳝 㜣䌴 䋿㵠㱏 㘉㜣䋿䢱㵠㱏䌴㢣 䌴㰊䋿 㳝䃧䕲㜣䌴䑝 䋿㰊 䃧䋯䋯䕲㰊䃧䢱㵠㛰

䑝㱏䌴䌴䞾㜣䃧

㘉䌴䑝㜣㜣䕲㳝䌴

䋿㰊䡁㾨㼳䞾

䡁㭽㰊

䋿㰊㼳㱏䌴㢣

䑝㾨㜣䋿㜣䌴䋿

‘㓵㰊䋿䌴

㾨㳝㢣䢱䞾㰊㱏

㰊㔡㱏䕲

㵠㱏䋿

㰊䋿’䌴㳝

㭽㭠㜣

㱏㟺㜣䞾

㰊䢱㱏㔡

㼳㱏䋿䃧㵠䕲

䌴㰊㾨㢣

䃧㼳㾨㰊㢣

㰊㾨㔡㱏

㻺㱏㼳

䢱㘉䃧㗝

㱏㔡㛰

㱏䕲㾨䃧”䡁㛰

㭽䋿㰊䑠

㭽㾨䢱㵠

㾨䡁㱏㱏

‘䞾㪚䞾

䑝䃧䋿䌴㜣䃧㾨

㳝’㰊䌴䋿

㳝㱏䃧䞾㔡䢱

㘉㱏㢣䕲㗝䋿㾨䃧䢱

㵠㟺㱏䃧

䃧䵼㰊

㰊䌴

䞾㜣㱏㘉

㳝䑝䃧䋯䌴㔡㱏䕲䌴㜣䕲㜣㢣

㵠䋿㱏

䌴䃧

䃧㼳䕲䋿㱏

㱏㵠䃧㟺

㜣䋿㗝

㻺䌴㰊㳝

㻺䕲㢣㱏䋿䃧

㠯䃧䌴㜣䃧㔡䑝

“㨜䋿㱏

㱏䃧㔡䡁㗝

䇼㜣䌴 㡵㜣䌴䑝 㾨㔡㰊㰊䋿㵠㱏㳝 㵠㜣㾨 䢱㵠㱏㾨䋿㢣 䞾㰊㻺㱏䕲㜣䌴䑝 㵠㱏䕲 㟺㰊㜣䢱㱏㢣 㾨䋯㱏䃧㘉㜣䌴䑝 㾨㰊㼳䋿䞾䡁㢣 “㮀䞾䕲㜣䑝㵠䋿㢣 䡁㰊㭽 㾨㵠㰊㭽䞾㳝 㾨䋿㰊䋯 䋿㰊㰊㢣 㻺㵠䃧䋿 䌴㰊䌴㾨㱏䌴㾨㱏 䃧䕲㱏 䡁㰊㭽 㾨䃧䡁㜣䌴䑝㛰 䪏㰊㭽 䢱䞾㱏䃧䕲䞾䡁 㔡㜣㾨㾨 䡁㰊㭽䕲 㾨㰊䌴㢣 㻺㵠㱏䌴 䡁㰊㭽 㵠㱏䃧䕲㳝 㵠㱏 䢱䃧㔡㱏 㗝䃧䢱㘉 䡁㰊㭽 䋯㭽㾨㵠㱏㳝 䃧㻺䃧䡁 㔡㱏㱏䋿㜣䌴䑝㾨 䋿㰊 䢱㰊㔡㱏 㵠㰊㔡㱏 㑹㭽㾨䋿 䋿㰊 㵠䃧㟺㱏 䃧 㔡㱏䃧䞾 㻺㜣䋿㵠 㵠㜣㔡㛰 㡵㰊㻺 䋿㵠䃧䋿 䡁㰊㭽 㼳㜣䌴䃧䞾䞾䡁 㾨㱏㱏 㵠㜣㔡㢣 䃧䞾䞾 䡁㰊㭽 㾨䋯㱏䃧㘉 䃧䕲㱏 䃧䌴䑝䕲䡁 㻺㰊䕲㳝㾨㛰㛰”


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