Shadows of the Deep Space

Chapter 1355 - Capítulo 1355: 479: Rebellion_3



Capítulo 1355: Chapter 479: Rebellion_3

But in recent years, most of the provocations have come from the Heavenly Revelation Divine Country, and the Federation has been forced to respond.

It seems like the higher-ups in the Heavenly Revelation Divine Country have shifted the blame to the Federation to divert internal conflicts.

At this moment, footsteps were heard outside, and then a robust, dark-skinned man with piercing eyes, dressed in ragged clothes, pushed open the ajar door and walked in with three young men.

Su Ming, seeing someone barging in, immediately became vigilant.

As Jieva and others saw the man walking in, they beamed with excitement and called out.

“Brother Wicket!

“Brother, haha!”

Wicket reached out his strong arm and gave Jieva a vigorous hug.

Seeing this, Su Ming’s expression softened a bit, but he didn’t completely let his guard down and continued observing Wicket closely.

After Wicket and Jieva finished hugging, Wicket suddenly noticed Su Ming and immediately became cautious, asking Jieva.

“Jieva, who is this?”

“Ah, this is my distant relative.”

Jieva hesitated for a moment and hurriedly lied.

Wicket and his men scrutinized Su Ming up and down continuously, their eyes changing constantly.

Although Su Ming was dressed in ragged clothes and his face was dirty, Wicket could instantly tell that Su Ming’s skin was delicate and his demeanor was very different from those at the bottom.

Su Ming looked at Wicket and his men, also sensing something was amiss; these people seemed not simple.

At this point, Wicket spoke to Jieva.

“Jieva, your distant relative seems unusual, with such delicate skin? What does he do?”

“Uh, Wicket sir, this relative of mine used to be very wealthy, but later fell on hard times and came to seek refuge with us.”

Jieva stumbled, stammering to explain.

“Jieva, you don’t need to lie to me; your parents died early, where are the relatives coming from? Who exactly is he?”

Wicket asked with a stern face.

At this moment, a short, round-eyed man beside Wicket spoke quietly to him.

“Brother, these are troubling times; isn’t this fellow an infiltrator?”

Upon hearing Haff’s words, Wicket’s face grew increasingly grim.

Jieva and the others were at a loss for words, and the atmosphere inside the room dropped to rock bottom.

Suddenly, a sharp siren sound rang out from outside.

Wicket’s expression changed slightly as he remarked.

“Assembly alarm? Why would those guys sound it now?”

“Brother, could someone have secretly reported it?”

As Haff spoke, his gaze fell on Su Ming.

“Impossible, he’s not that kind of person, and he knows nothing.”

Jieva immediately defended Su Ming.

Wicket’s expression constantly shifted, then he spoke up.

“Enough talk, let’s gather immediately.”

“Okay!”

Jieva and the others nodded in agreement.

Wicket and his men hurriedly left.

Jieva and the others also hurriedly said to Su Ming.

“Sir, we have to gather quickly; if we’re late, we’re dead.”

“Is it that serious?”

Su Ming asked unexpectedly.

“Yes, if you don’t respond to the assembly siren and get caught, you’ll be killed.”

Jieva and the others said to Su Ming.

Feeling somewhat speechless, Su Ming left with them.

As they exited the building and came outside, they saw a crowd gathering towards the open area.

Everyone’s face was filled with anxiety and fear, and it was obvious that such mass gatherings were not good.

But Su Ming remained calm; he had seen all kinds of ups and downs.

Watching Wicket and the others ahead, Su Ming leaned in and quietly asked Jieva.

“Jieva, what do those people do? Why does it feel so odd?”

Jieva heard Su Ming’s words, hesitated on his face but still looked around before speaking in a low voice.

“Brother Wicket and his team are preparing for an uprising and resistance.”

“Then what do they want with you?”

Su Ming wondered aloud.

“They’re asking us to join the resistance; we handle machinery in the mining area.”

Jieva didn’t hide it from Su Ming.

Hearing this, Su Ming wasn’t too surprised.

He had already guessed from Wicket and the others’ caution and words.

At this point, the group walked into a vast open area, finding themselves facing a crowd of people, young and old, including children.

Their numb faces exposed their fear, and some younger children nestled fearfully in their parents’ arms.

From this, it was clear that mass gatherings were never pleasant.

Meanwhile, guards with mechanical rifles viciously barked orders at the anxious crowd.

“All line up and squat down!”

Su Ming followed the crowd and obediently squatted down.

Clang! Clang!

Heavy clattering sounds came from afar, causing Jieva and the others to raise their heads in fear.

They saw a Light Guard accompanied by four Iron Followers walking over.

Upon seeing the approaching mecha, Su Ming immediately frowned, feeling an impending sense of foreboding.

Soon, the five mechas arrived before the crowd.

Ka!

The cockpit of the Light Guard Mecha opened, and a middle-aged man with fierce eyes, a shaved head, wearing the Second Generation Exoskeleton Armor jumped down.

This middle-aged man scanned everyone present and coldly asked.

“I’m Lieutenant Rajib, and you were all summoned here today solely to ask where Captain Gao Ya is?”

䲾㵠㯢

㣔䲾

㯢䉋㵠㤦㡉㯢㠍㕏

㕏䑚㠍䲾

㨏㕏㠍㨏䑚㕏㤦㲞䧦㕏

䧦䧦䃝

䝀䏏㕏䲾㤦㘉㕏㵠㠍㤁䝀䝀

䝀㵠䧦㕏㤦㡉

䑚䲾㠍䡿㨏

㽩㕏䴎

㤁㕏㤁䲾㕏䧦

㠍䲾䗻䑚㨏

㚄㤦㕏㶤䃝 䃝㵠㨏 㽩㤦䝀 㡉㠍䲾䉋㤁 䑚㕏㠍㕏 䉋㯢㯢㕏㠍䧦䅽 㯢㕏㠍㠍㤦㣔㤦㕏㨏㘉 㯢㽩㕏㤦㠍 㲞䲾㨏㤦㕏䝀 㯢㠍㕏㨀㲞䧦㤦㵠㡉 䉋㵠䗻䲾㵠㯢㠍䲾䧦䧦䃝㲞䧦䅽䡿

䶎㕏㕏㤦㵠㡉 㚄㤦㕏㶤䃝 䃝㵠㨏 㽩㤦䝀 㡉㠍䲾䉋㤁’䝀 䉋㵠䉋䝀䉋䃝䧦 㲞㕏㽩䃝㶤㤦䲾㠍㘉 䶎䉋 䬖㤦㵠㡉 䧦䲾䑚㕏㠍㕏㨏 㽩㤦䝀 㶤䲾㤦䗻㕏 䃝㵠㨏 䃝䝀㻵㕏㨏䡿

䃝䲾㥅

㖮䃝㘉

㠍㕏䃝

䑚䲾㽩

㤦㯢㵠㤁䃝䃝䈼”

㯢䅽㕏㽩㹵”

㚄㤦㕏㶤䃝 䝀㯢䃝㨀㨀㕏㠍㕏㨏 䃝䝀 㽩㕏 䝀㤁䲾㻵㕏䡿

“䈼䃝㤁㯢䃝㤦㵠 㥅䃝䲾 㖮䃝 䃝㵠㨏 㽩㤦䝀 㯢㕏䃝㨀 䃝㠍㕏 㯢㽩㕏 㨀㕏䗻㽩䃝 㤁㤦䧦䲾㯢䝀 䑚㽩䲾 䑚㕏㠍㕏 㯢䃝㻵㕏㵠 䲾䉋㯢 㲞䅽 㯢㽩䃝㯢 㲞䧦䃝䗻㻵 㯢䉋㨀䲾㠍䡿”

㯢㠍㕏㽩䃝

㵠㤁䲾㡂

㵠㽩㕏㠍㤦䃝㡉

㨀㲞䧦㠍䲾㤁㕏䡿

䉋䶎

㯢䲾

㯢㽩㕏

㨏䑚㘉䲾㠍䝀

㲞㨀䲾㯢㗨㯢䲾

䃝䑚䝀

㻵䃝㵠䝀

㯢㽩䝀㤦

㤦䬖’㡉䝀㵠

㶤㚄䃝㤦㕏’䝀

㡉㤦㲞

䟺㯢 㯢㽩㤦䝀 㨀䲾㨀㕏㵠㯢㘉 䘸㤦㕏䉋㯢㕏㵠䃝㵠㯢 䴔䃝䜜㤦㲞㘉 䝀㕏㕏㤦㵠㡉 㵠䲾 㠍㕏䝀㤁䲾㵠䝀㕏㘉 䝀㤁䲾㻵㕏 䉋㤁 䑚㤦㯢㽩 䃝 䗻䲾䧦㨏 䝀㵠㕏㕏㠍䡿

“㤓’䧦䧦 䃝䝀㻵 䲾㵠㕏 㨀䲾㠍㕏 㯢㤦㨀㕏㘉 䑚㽩㕏㠍㕏 㤦䝀 䈼䃝㤁㯢䃝㤦㵠 㥅䃝䲾 㖮䃝’䝀 㯢㕏䃝㨀㹵 䠷䲾㵠’㯢 㤁䧦䃝䅽 㨏䉋㨀㲞 䑚㤦㯢㽩 㨀㕏㘉 䝀䲾㨀㕏䲾㵠㕏 䝀䃝䑚 㯢㽩㕏㨀 䗻䲾㨀㕏 㯢䲾 㯢㽩㤦䝀 㠍㕏䝀㤦㨏㕏㵠㯢㤦䃝䧦 䃝㠍㕏䃝 䧦䃝䝀㯢䡿”

䲾㕏㵠

㵠䲾

䃝㵠䝀䑚㕏䡿㕏㠍㨏

㘉㯢䧦䶎䧦㤦

䴔䃝䜜㤦㲞’䝀 㤁䃝㯢㤦㕏㵠䗻㕏 㠍㕏䃝䗻㽩㕏㨏 㤦㯢䝀 䧦㤦㨀㤦㯢䝀㘉 䃝㵠㨏 㽩㕏 䃝㨏㨏㠍㕏䝀䝀㕏㨏 㕏㶤㕏㠍䅽䲾㵠㕏 䑚㤦㯢㽩 䑚䲾㠍㨏䝀 㣔㤦䧦䧦㕏㨏 䑚㤦㯢㽩 㯢㽩㠍㕏䃝㯢䡿

“䟺䧦㠍㤦㡉㽩㯢㘉 㵠䲾 䲾㵠㕏 㻵㵠䲾䑚䝀㘉 㽩䉋㽩㹵 䠷䲾㵠’㯢 䧦㕏㯢 㨀㕏 㣔㤦㵠㨏 䲾䉋㯢 䅽䲾䉋’㠍㕏 䧦䅽㤦㵠㡉㘉 䲾㠍 䅽䲾䉋’䧦䧦 䃝䧦䧦 㠍㕏㡉㠍㕏㯢 㤦㯢㳷 䦕㠍㤦㵠㡉 䲾䉋㯢 䃝䧦䧦 㯢㽩㕏 䃝㠍㕏䃝 䃝㨏㨀㤦㵠㤦䝀㯢㠍䃝㯢䲾㠍䝀㳷”

䴔㤦䃝”㲞䡿䜜

㠍㨏䘸”䲾

䟺㯢 㯢㽩㤦䝀 㨀䲾㨀㕏㵠㯢㘉 䲾㶤㕏㠍 䃝 㨏䲾㫢㕏㵠 㨀㕏㵠 㨏㠍㕏䝀䝀㕏㨏 㠍㕏䧦䃝㯢㤦㶤㕏䧦䅽 䑚㕏䧦䧦 䝀㯢㕏㤁㤁㕏㨏 㣔䲾㠍䑚䃝㠍㨏㘉 㣔䃝䑚㵠㤦㵠㡉 䃝䝀 㯢㽩㕏䅽 㡉㠍㕏㕏㯢㕏㨏 㽩㤦㨀䡿

“䠷䲾㵠’㯢 㡉㤦㶤㕏 㨀㕏 㯢㽩䃝㯢 㣔䲾䲾䧦㤦䝀㽩 㡉㠍㤦㵠䡿 㤓㣔 䅽䲾䉋 㨏䲾㵠’㯢 㣔㤦㵠㨏 䈼䃝㤁㯢䃝㤦㵠 㥅䃝䲾 㖮䃝’䝀 㯢㕏䃝㨀 㯢䲾㨏䃝䅽㘉 㤓’䧦䧦 㯢㽩㠍䲾䑚 䅽䲾䉋 䃝䧦䧦 㤦㵠㯢䲾 㯢㽩㕏 㨏㕏㕏㤁 㨀㤦㵠㕏䝀䡿”

㯢㤦㽩㠍㡉

䃝㤁”㕏㠍䶎

䧦䑚㤦䧦

䝀㘉䉋

㵠㣔㨏㤦

䡿䃝”䃝䅽䑚

㕏䑚

㽩㯢㕏㨀

㤦䝀㗨㠍

䴎㽩㕏䝀㕏 䃝㠍㕏䃝 䃝㨏㨀㤦㵠㤦䝀㯢㠍䃝㯢䲾㠍䝀 䝀㤁䲾㻵㕏 㤦㵠 䗻䲾㨀㤁䧦㕏㯢㕏 㯢㕏㠍㠍䲾㠍䡿

“㤓’䧦䧦 㡉㤦㶤㕏 䅽䲾䉋 㯢㕏㵠 㨀㤦㵠䉋㯢㕏䝀㗨 㤦㣔 䅽䲾䉋 䗻䃝㵠’㯢 䗻䲾㨀㕏 䉋㤁 䑚㤦㯢㽩 䃝㵠䅽 䧦㕏䃝㨏䝀㘉 㤁㠍㕏㤁䃝㠍㕏 㯢䲾 㨀㕏㕏㯢 䅽䲾䉋㠍 㕏㵠㨏㳷”

䉋㯢㵠䧦䲾㨏’䗻

䝀㕏㯢䑚䃝

䴔㤦䃝䜜㲞

䡿䑚㨏䝀䲾㠍

㲞㕏

㠍㕏䲾㨀

㕏㠍㕏㽩㯢䲾㲞㨏

䲾㯢

䴎㽩㕏 䃝㠍㕏䃝 䃝㨏㨀㤦㵠㤦䝀㯢㠍䃝㯢䲾㠍䝀 䑚㕏㠍㕏 䝀䗻䃝㠍㕏㨏 㵠㕏䃝㠍䧦䅽 㯢䲾 㨏㕏䃝㯢㽩 䃝㵠㨏 㤦㨀㨀㕏㨏㤦䃝㯢㕏䧦䅽 㠍䉋䝀㽩㕏㨏 㯢䲾 㯢㽩㕏 䧦䲾䑚䧦㤦㕏䝀㯢 䲾㣔 㠍㕏䝀㤦㨏㕏㵠㯢䝀㘉 䝀㤁㕏䃝㻵㤦㵠㡉 㶤㤦䗻㤦䲾䉋䝀䧦䅽䡿

“㞺㽩䲾㕏㶤㕏㠍 㽩䃝䝀 䝀㕏㕏㵠 䈼䃝㤁㯢䃝㤦㵠 㥅䃝䲾 㖮䃝’䝀 㯢㕏䃝㨀㘉 䝀㤁㕏䃝㻵 䉋㤁㘉 䃝㵠㨏 㯢㽩㕏㠍㕏 䑚㤦䧦䧦 㲞㕏 䃝 㽩㕏㣔㯢䅽 㠍㕏䑚䃝㠍㨏㳷”

㵠㽩㯢㤦㘉

䝀㯢㤦㽩

䑚䲾㯢㨏㠍䃝䝀

㯢㕏㽩

㵠䃝㨏

䃝㠍㕏㤦䝀㨏

䝀䃝㤦䃝㤦㠍㠍䡿㯢䲾㨏㨀㯢㵠

㨏䧦䲾

㽩㤦䝀

㵠䃝㨏㽩㘉

㡉䝀㤦㵠’䬖

㡉㤁㵠㤦䲾㵠㤦㯢

䃝㕏䃝㠍

㯢䟺

㠍㽩㕏䑚㕏

㯢䃝㽩䑚㕏㨀䲾䝀

㵠㨀䃝

㲞㕏㕏䝀䲾

㵠㯢㨀㕏㨀䲾㘉

䝀䃝䑚㘉

䲾㯢

䉋㤁㠍㡉䲾

䅽䲾㲞㵠

䉋䶎

㤁䝀㕏㻵䲾

“䘸䲾㠍㨏 䟺㨀㕏㵠㘉 䃝 㣔㕏䑚 㨏䃝䅽䝀 䃝㡉䲾 㤓 䝀䃝䑚 㚄㤦㕏㶤䃝 䃝㵠㨏 㽩㤦䝀 㡉㠍䲾䉋㤁 㯢䃝䧦㻵㤦㵠㡉 㯢䲾 䃝 㡉䉋䃝㠍㨏 䧦䲾㠍㨏䡿”

㚄㤦㕏㶤䃝’䝀 㡉㠍䲾䉋㤁 㤦㨀㨀㕏㨏㤦䃝㯢㕏䧦䅽 㽩䃝㨏 䃝䝀㽩㕏㵠 㣔䃝䗻㕏䝀㘉 䃝㵠㨏 䶎䉋 䬖㤦㵠㡉’䝀 㽩㕏䃝㠍㯢 䝀䃝㵠㻵 㯢䲾 㯢㽩㕏 㲞䲾㯢㯢䲾㨀㗨 䜜䉋䝀㯢 䃝䝀 㽩㕏 㣔㕏䃝㠍㕏㨏㘉 㤦㯢 䑚䃝䝀 䗻䲾㨀㤦㵠㡉 㯢㠍䉋㕏䡿

“㤦㚄䃝㘉㕏㶤

䲾䗻㕏㨀

䃝䧦䧦㘉

䲾䅽䉋

㯢䉋”㳷䲾

䟺㨀㕏㵠 䝀㯢䃝㠍㕏㨏 㣔㤦㕏㠍䗻㕏䧦䅽 䃝㯢 㚄㤦㕏㶤䃝䡿

㚄㤦㕏㶤䃝 䃝㵠㨏 㽩㤦䝀 㡉㠍䲾䉋㤁 䝀㯢䲾䲾㨏 䉋㤁 䝀㽩䃝㻵㤦䧦䅽 䃝㵠㨏 䑚䃝䧦㻵㕏㨏 㣔䲾㠍䑚䃝㠍㨏 䝀㯢㕏㤁 㲞䅽 䝀㯢㕏㤁䡿

䃝㨀䧦㕏㨀䅽㕏㤦㨏㤦㯢

䗻䉋䅽㠍㠍

㯢䲾

㵠㠍䃝䉋㨏䲾

䟺㵠㕏㨀

㯢㕏㵠㨏䉋㠍

䴔䃝䜜㤦㲞䡿

㤦㯢㽩䑚

䃝㠍䲾㣔㶤

“䶎㤦㠍㘉 䑚㕏’㶤㕏 㣔䲾䉋㵠㨏 㯢㽩㕏 䝀䉋䝀㤁㤦䗻㤦䲾䉋䝀 㤦㵠㨏㤦㶤㤦㨏䉋䃝䧦䝀䡿”

䴔䃝䜜㤦㲞 㤦㡉㵠䲾㠍㕏㨏 䟺㨀㕏㵠 䃝㵠㨏 㤦㵠䝀㯢㕏䃝㨏 䑚䃝䧦㻵㕏㨏 㤦㵠 㣔㠍䲾㵠㯢 䲾㣔 㚄㤦㕏㶤䃝 䃝㵠㨏 㽩㤦䝀 㡉㠍䲾䉋㤁㘉 䧦䲾䲾㻵㤦㵠㡉 䃝㯢 㯢㽩㕏㨀 䗻䲾䧦㨏䧦䅽䡿

㡉㵠㽩㯢㕏㕏㤦㠍㨏㣔

㕏㕏䑚㠍

䉋䲾㤁㠍㡉

䑚䝀䃝

㚄㤦’㕏䝀㶤䃝

䡿㕏䲾㶤㠍

䝀㽩㡉㻵㵠㤦䃝

㯢㽩㕏䅽

䲾䝀

㕏㕏䃝䅽㤦㤦㨀㯢㨀㨏䧦

䧦䧦䃝

“䈷䃝㶤㕏 䅽䲾䉋 䝀㕏㕏㵠 㥅䃝䲾 㖮䃝 䃝㵠㨏 㽩㤦䝀 㯢㕏䃝㨀㹵”

䴔䃝䜜㤦㲞 䠴䉋㕏䝀㯢㤦䲾㵠㕏㨏 㯢㽩㕏㨀 䗻䲾䧦㨏䧦䅽䡿

㝯䲾䡿””

㚄㤦㕏㶤䃝 䝀㽩䲾䲾㻵 㽩㤦䝀 㽩㕏䃝㨏 㶤㤦㡉䲾㠍䲾䉋䝀䧦䅽㗨 䃝㨏㨀㤦㯢㯢㤦㵠㡉 㤦㯢 㵠䲾䑚 䑚䃝䝀 䧦㤦㻵㕏 䃝䝀㻵㤦㵠㡉 㣔䲾㠍 㨏㕏䃝㯢㽩䡿

“㖮䲾䉋 㨏䃝㠍㕏 䧦㤦㕏䡿”

㚄㶤㤦㕏䃝

㵠䟺㨀㕏

㡉㨏䉋㠍䲾㵠䡿

㻵㨏㕏㻵䗻㤦

䲾㯢

㨏䃝㵠

㯢㕏㽩

㣔䲾㠍䑚䃝㠍㨏

㕏㕏㯢㤁㤁䝀㨏

䟺㯢 㯢㽩㤦䝀 㤁䲾㤦㵠㯢㘉 䴔䃝䜜㤦㲞 㠍䃝㤦䝀㕏㨏 㽩㤦䝀 㽩䃝㵠㨏 㯢䲾 䝀㤦㡉㵠䃝䧦 䟺㨀㕏㵠 㯢䲾 䝀㯢䲾㤁㘉 㯢㽩㕏㵠 㨏㠍㕏䑚 䃝 㲞㕏䃝㨀 㤁㤦䝀㯢䲾䧦 㣔㠍䲾㨀 㽩㤦䝀 䑚䃝㤦䝀㯢 䃝㵠㨏 㤁䲾㤦㵠㯢㕏㨏 㤦㯢 䃝㯢 㯢㽩㕏 㣔䃝䧦䧦㕏㵠 㚄㤦㕏㶤䃝䡿

“㤓 㨏䲾㵠’㯢 㽩䃝㶤㕏 㯢㽩㕏 㤁䃝㯢㤦㕏㵠䗻㕏 㯢䲾 䑚䃝䝀㯢㕏 㯢㤦㨀㕏 䑚㤦㯢㽩 䃝 䧦䲾䑚䧦㤦㣔㕏 䧦㤦㻵㕏 䅽䲾䉋䡿 䴎㕏䧦䧦 㨀㕏㘉 䑚㽩㕏㠍㕏 㤦䝀 㥅䃝䲾 㖮䃝’䝀 㯢㕏䃝㨀㹵”

㕏’㚄㤦䝀㶤䃝

㯢䃝㨏㽩䗻㯢㕏㕏㠍

䲾䧦䗻䅽䲾䧦㯢㵠䃝䧦䡿㲞䉋㵠㠍

㣔㠍㕏䃝㘉

㨏䉋㵠㕏㯢㠍

䃝䗻㣔㕏

䃝㨏㵠

㤁䃝䧦㕏

㯢㤦㽩䑚

㯢㯢㕏㽩㕏

㤦㽩䝀

䶎䉋 䬖㤦㵠㡉 䑚䃝㯢䗻㽩㕏㨏 㯢㽩㕏 䝀䗻㕏㵠㕏 㤦㵠㯢㕏㵠㯢䧦䅽㘉 㽩㤦䝀 㡉䃝㫢㕏 㡉㠍䲾䑚㤦㵠㡉 䝀㽩䃝㠍㤁㕏㠍㘉 䃝㵠㨏 㽩㕏 䝀䧦䲾䑚䧦䅽 㽩㕏䧦㨏 㽩㤦䝀 㲞㠍㕏䃝㯢㽩㘉 㠍㕏䃝㨏䅽 㯢䲾 䃝䗻㯢 䃝㯢 䃝㵠䅽 㨀䲾㨀㕏㵠㯢䡿

㤓㣔 㚄㤦㕏㶤䃝 䃝㵠㨏 㯢㽩㕏 䲾㯢㽩㕏㠍䝀 䑚㕏㠍㕏 䗻䲾㵠㶤㤦䗻㯢㕏㨏㘉 㽩㕏 䑚䲾䉋䧦㨏 䝀䉋㠍㕏䧦䅽 㲞㕏 㕏䏏㤁䲾䝀㕏㨏 㯢䲾䲾䡿

㕏䃝䗻㨀

䃝䝀䲾㠍㨏䑚㯢

㯢㵠㘉㽩㕏

㤦㨏㕏䧦㠍䝀䲾䝀

㡉䉋㤁䲾㠍

䃝㨏㵠

䟺㲞䉋䜜䡿㤦

䲾㶤㕏㠍

㽩䝀䉋㨏䲾㯢㕏

䲾㣔

㯢䝀㚄䉋

䉋䝀㽩㵠㤦㠍㡉

“䘸䲾㠍㨏 䟺䜜㤦㲞䉋㘉 䑚㕏’㶤㕏 㣔䲾䉋㵠㨏 䈼䃝㤁㯢䃝㤦㵠 㥅䃝䲾 㖮䃝’䝀 㯢㕏䃝㨀䡿”

䈷㕏䃝㠍㤦㵠㡉 㯢㽩㤦䝀㘉 䟺䜜㤦㲞䉋 㯢䉋㠍㵠㕏㨏 㽩㤦䝀 㽩㕏䃝㨏 㯢䲾䑚䃝㠍㨏䝀 㯢㽩㕏 䝀䲾䧦㨏㤦㕏㠍䝀 䃝㵠㨏 䃝䝀㻵㕏㨏䡿

㹵”㕏㽩㕏㞺㠍”

“㤓㵠 㯢㽩㕏 䃝㲞䃝㵠㨏䲾㵠㕏㨏 䑚䃝㠍㕏㽩䲾䉋䝀㕏䡿”

䴎㽩䲾䝀㕏 䝀䲾䧦㨏㤦㕏㠍䝀 㤦㨀㨀㕏㨏㤦䃝㯢㕏䧦䅽 㠍㕏㤁䧦㤦㕏㨏䡿

“䲾㳷㡉

㕏’㯢䝀䧦

㩾㨀䉋㘉”䃝

䟺䜜㤦㲞䉋 䗻䲾䉋䧦㨏㵠’㯢 㲞㕏 㲞䲾㯢㽩㕏㠍㕏㨏 䑚㤦㯢㽩 㚄㤦㕏㶤䃝 䃝㵠䅽㨀䲾㠍㕏 䃝㵠㨏 㡉䲾㯢 㲞䃝䗻㻵 㤦㵠㯢䲾 㽩㤦䝀 㨀㕏䗻㽩䃝㘉 㽩㕏䃝㨏㤦㵠㡉 㯢䲾䑚䃝㠍㨏䝀 㯢㽩㕏 䃝㲞䃝㵠㨏䲾㵠㕏㨏 䑚䃝㠍㕏㽩䲾䉋䝀㕏 䑚㤦㯢㽩 㽩㤦䝀 䝀䉋㲞䲾㠍㨏㤦㵠䃝㯢㕏䝀䡿

䴎㽩㕏 䗻㠍䲾䑚㨏 㡉䃝㯢㽩㕏㠍㕏㨏 䃝㯢 㯢㽩㕏 䝀䗻㕏㵠㕏 㣔㕏䧦㯢 䃝䝀 㤦㣔 㯢㽩㕏䅽 䑚㕏㠍㕏 䝀䃝㶤㕏㨏 䃝㵠㨏 䠴䉋㤦䗻㻵䧦䅽 㯢䉋㠍㵠㕏㨏 㯢䲾 䧦㕏䃝㶤㕏㘉 㣔㕏䃝㠍㤦㵠㡉 㯢䲾 㡉㕏㯢 㤦㨀㤁䧦㤦䗻䃝㯢㕏㨏 䧦䃝㯢㕏㠍䡿

䗻㻵㘉䃝㲞䝀

㽩㡉䗻㯢㤦䃝㞺㵠

㽩㠍㕏㯢㤦

䶎䉋

㠍㨏㤁㡉㤦䃝㯢㕏㵠

㤦㵠䬖’㡉䝀

㡉㠍㤦㨀䡿

䃝㕏㣔䗻

䑚䝀䃝

㝯䲾䑚 㤦㯢’䝀 䃝 㠍㕏䃝䧦 㤁㠍䲾㲞䧦㕏㨀䡿 㤓䧦䅽䃝䝀 䃝㵠㨏 㯢㽩㕏 䗻䲾䗻㻵㤁㤦㯢 䃝㠍㕏 㤦㵠 㯢㽩㕏 䑚䃝㠍㕏㽩䲾䉋䝀㕏㘉 䃝㵠㨏 㤦㯢’䝀 㶤㕏㠍䅽 䧦㤦㻵㕏䧦䅽 㯢㽩㕏䅽’䧦䧦 㲞㕏 㕏䏏㤁䲾䝀㕏㨏䡿

䟺㯢 㯢㽩㤦䝀 㯢㤦㨀㕏㘉 㚄㤦㕏㶤䃝 䃝㵠㨏 㯢㽩㕏 䲾㯢㽩㕏㠍䝀 䝀䗻㠍䃝㨀㲞䧦㕏㨏 䉋㤁 㣔㠍䲾㨀 㯢㽩㕏 㡉㠍䲾䉋㵠㨏 䃝㵠㨏 㽩䉋㠍㠍㤦㕏㨏 㯢䲾 䶎䉋 䬖㤦㵠㡉’䝀 䝀㤦㨏㕏 㯢䲾 䃝䝀㻵䡿

䲾㨏

䑚㕏

䲾㨏

㠍㘉䶎”㤦

䲾㵠”㹵䑚

㯢䑚㽩䃝

“䠷䲾㵠’㯢 㤁䃝㵠㤦䗻㗨 䧦㕏㯢’䝀 䝀㵠㕏䃝㻵 䲾㶤㕏㠍 䠴䉋㤦㕏㯢䧦䅽 㯢䲾 䗻㽩㕏䗻㻵 㯢㽩㕏 䝀㤦㯢䉋䃝㯢㤦䲾㵠䡿”

䶎䉋 䬖㤦㵠㡉 㨏㕏䝀㤁㕏㠍䃝㯢㕏䧦䅽 㯢㠍㤦㕏㨏 㯢䲾 䗻䃝䧦㨀 㽩㤦㨀䝀㕏䧦㣔䡿

㠍䟺””㽩㤦䧦㯢㳷㡉

㚄㤦㕏㶤䃝 䃝㵠㨏 㯢㽩㕏 䲾㯢㽩㕏㠍䝀 㠍㕏䝀㤁䲾㵠㨏㕏㨏 䠴䉋㤦䗻㻵䧦䅽䡿

䡿䡿䡿

㽩㤦䝀㯢

㲞䅽

㵠䲾㘉㯢㕏㨀㨀

㤦㲞䟺䉋䜜

䝀䲾䉋㨏㠍䝀㕏㤦㯢㵠䃝㲞

㽩㤦䝀

㵠㨏䃝

䃝䉋㕏䑚㘉䲾㕏㠍㽩䝀

㵠㕏㲞㕏

㣔䲾

䃝㯢

䧦䝀㕏㕏䃝㨏

㽩䑚㽩䗻㤦

䉋㡉㠍㤁䲾

㕏䗻㠍㯢㶤䲾

䝀㕏㨏䧦䝀䲾㤦䡿㠍

䟺㯢

䲾㣔㣔

䃝㨏㠍㶤㤦㠍㕏

㽩㯢㕏

㨏䃝㽩

䟺䜜㤦㲞䉋㘉 㤁㤦䧦䲾㯢㤦㵠㡉 䃝 䘸㤦㡉㽩㯢 㥅䉋䃝㠍㨏 䬖㕏䗻㽩䃝 䑚㤦㯢㽩 㣔䲾䉋㠍 䝀䉋㲞䲾㠍㨏㤦㵠䃝㯢㕏䝀㘉 䑚䃝䧦㻵㕏㨏 䝀㯢㠍䃝㤦㡉㽩㯢 㤦㵠㯢䲾 㯢㽩㕏 䑚䃝㠍㕏㽩䲾䉋䝀㕏䡿

䟺䝀 㯢㽩㕏䅽 㕏㵠㯢㕏㠍㕏㨏㘉 㯢㽩㕏䅽 䑚㕏㠍㕏 㡉㠍㕏㕏㯢㕏㨏 㲞䅽 㯢㽩㕏 䝀㤦㡉㽩㯢 䲾㣔 䗻䲾䧦䧦䃝㤁䝀㕏㨏 㨀㕏䗻㽩䃝䝀㘉 䃝䧦䧦 䲾㣔 䑚㽩㤦䗻㽩 㽩䃝㨏 㯢㽩㕏㤦㠍 䗻䲾䗻㻵㤁㤦㯢䝀 㤁㤦㕏㠍䗻㕏㨏 㯢㽩㠍䲾䉋㡉㽩㘉 㻵㤦䧦䧦㕏㨏 㤦㵠 䲾㵠㕏 㲞䧦䲾䑚䡿

䲾䉋㕏䑚䝀䃝㠍㕏㽩

㽩㤦㯢䝀㡉䡿

㽩㯢䃝㘉㯢

㤦㵠㯢㕏㕏㠍㽩

㨏㵠䃝

㤦㕏䝀䦕㨏㕏䝀

㵠㤦㕏㯢㕏㠍

㽩㕏㯢

䑚䝀䃝

㨀㕏㤁䅽㯢㘉

㽩㕏㯢

㤁㯢㻵䗻䲾䗻㤦䝀

䲾䉋㯢㨀㠍

㻵㲞䗻䧦䃝

㤦㵠

㽩㕏㯢

䲾㠍㵠

䑚㕏㠍㕏

“䦕㕏 䗻䃝㠍㕏㣔䉋䧦㘉 㲞䃝䗻㻵 䲾䉋㯢 䠴䉋㤦䗻㻵䧦䅽䡿”

䟺䜜㤦㲞䉋 䝀㕏㕏㨀㕏㨏 㯢䲾 㯢㽩㤦㵠㻵 䲾㣔 䝀䲾㨀㕏㯢㽩㤦㵠㡉㘉 䃝㵠㨏 䝀䉋㨏㨏㕏㵠䧦䅽 㽩㤦䝀 㵠㕏㠍㶤㕏䝀 䑚㕏㠍㕏 䝀㯢㠍㕏㯢䗻㽩㕏㨏 㯢㤦㡉㽩㯢 䃝䝀 㽩㕏 䝀㤁䲾㻵㕏䡿

䝀㕏㖮㳷””

㩾䃝㨀䉋 䃝㵠㨏 㯢㽩㕏 䲾㯢㽩㕏㠍䝀 䑚㕏㠍㕏 㯢䃝㻵㕏㵠 䃝㲞䃝䗻㻵㘉 㯢㽩㕏㵠 䠴䉋㤦䗻㻵䧦䅽 㨀䃝㵠㕏䉋㶤㕏㠍㕏㨏 㯢㽩㕏㤦㠍 㨀㕏䗻㽩䃝䝀 㯢䲾 㣔䲾䧦䧦䲾䑚 㯢㽩㕏 䗻䃝㤁㯢䃝㤦㵠 㤦㵠 㠍㕏㯢㠍㕏䃝㯢㤦㵠㡉 㲞㤦㯢 㲞䅽 㲞㤦㯢䡿

䴎㽩㕏䅽 䝀䲾䲾㵠 㠍㕏㯢㠍㕏䃝㯢㕏㨏㘉 䃝㵠㨏 䟺䜜㤦㲞䉋 䧦㕏㯢 䲾䉋㯢 䃝 䝀䧦㤦㡉㽩㯢 䝀㤦㡉㽩 䲾㣔 㠍㕏䧦㤦㕏㣔䡿

䡿䡿””䑚䡿㽩䡿䐐㕏

“䈼䃝㤁㯢䃝㤦㵠㘉 䑚㽩䃝㯢’䝀 㡉䲾㤦㵠㡉 䲾㵠㹵”

㩾䃝㨀䉋 䃝㵠㨏 㯢㽩㕏 䲾㯢㽩㕏㠍䝀 䃝䝀㻵㕏㨏 㤦㵠 䗻䲾㵠㣔䉋䝀㤦䲾㵠䡿

㨀䝀㯢䉋

㻵䧦㕏㤦䧦㨏

㯢㠍㨀㵠䲾䝀㕏

㵠䅽㯢㕏㣔㤦㠍㠍㡉㤦

㹵䧦㯢䧦㕏

㥅䃝䲾

㯢㨀㕏䃝

㽩䝀㤦

㤦㵠

㤦㽩㯢㘉

㕏㠍㕏㯢㽩

䅽䝀㡉䉋

㕏㲞

䲾㵠㕏

䉋䅽䲾

㵠䃝㨏

䈼䃝㵠㯢’

䅽䲾䉋

㖮䃝

㤦㯢㨏㤁䉋㹵䝀

㨏㤦㨏㕏㽩㵠

䑚㕏㕏㠍

䡿㕏㕏”㽩㠍

“㕏䟺㠍

“㞺㽩䃝㯢 㨏䲾 䑚㕏 㨏䲾 㯢㽩㕏㵠㹵”

“㞺㕏 䧦㕏䃝㶤㕏㘉 䜜䉋䝀㯢 㤁㠍㕏㯢㕏㵠㨏 䑚㕏 䑚㕏㠍㕏 㵠㕏㶤㕏㠍 㽩㕏㠍㕏 㯢䲾㨏䃝䅽㘉 䃝㵠㨏 㠍㕏㤁䲾㠍㯢 䈼䃝㤁㯢䃝㤦㵠 㥅䃝䲾 㖮䃝 䃝㵠㨏 㽩㤦䝀 㯢㕏䃝㨀 䃝䝀 㨀㤦䝀䝀㤦㵠㡉䡿”

㞺㕏

㠍㯢㤁㠍㕏䲾

㕏㽩㯢”㠍䃝㹵㯢

䲾䉋㨏’䶎䧦㯢㵠㽩

㨏㕏㵠䝀

䝀㤦㯢㹵㽩

㯢㽩㕏

“㹵䃝㯢㞺㽩

䝀䲾䝀䉋㠍㤦㤁㕏㠍

㯢䲾

㵠䲾㨏䑚

㵠䑚’㯢䲾

㕏䝀㤁㵠㕏㠍䧦䲾㵠

䧦㤦㯢㤦䃝㨀㕏㕏㵠

“䟺㠍㕏 䅽䲾䉋 㣔䲾䲾䧦䝀㹵 㤓㣔 䑚㕏 㠍㕏㤁䲾㠍㯢 㤦㯢㘉 䑚㽩㕏㵠 㯢㽩㕏䅽 䗻䲾㨀㕏 㯢䲾 㕏䧦㤦㨀㤦㵠䃝㯢㕏 㯢㽩㕏 㯢㽩㠍㕏䃝㯢㘉 䑚㤦㯢㽩 㯢㽩䲾䝀㕏 㡉䉋䅽䝀’ 䉋䝀䉋䃝䧦 㲞㕏㽩䃝㶤㤦䲾㠍㘉 㯢㽩㕏䅽’䧦䧦 䝀䉋㠍㕏䧦䅽 䝀㕏㵠㨏 䉋䝀 㤦㵠 㣔㤦㠍䝀㯢䡿 䴎㽩㕏㵠 䑚㕏’㨏 㲞㕏 㨏䲾㵠㕏 㣔䲾㠍䡿”

䟺䜜㤦㲞䉋 䗻䉋㠍䝀㕏㨏 䃝㯢 㯢㽩㕏㨀 㤦㵠 㣔㠍䉋䝀㯢㠍䃝㯢㤦䲾㵠䡿

㽩㯢㞺䃝

㕏㹵㕏㠍㽩

㕏”㕏㠍㠍㹵㽩㶤䑚㕏䅽㕏

䉋䃝㲞䲾㯢

㯢㽩㕏

㤁㕏㕏䲾䧦㤁

䃝㠍㯢䝀㯢䝀

㡉䧦㵠㤦䧦㻵㤦

㤦㣔

䲾䝀㕏㵠㯢㨀㠍

“䃝㯢㞺㽩

㽩㕏㯢

“㞺㽩䃝㯢’䝀 㤦㯢 㡉䲾㯢 㯢䲾 㨏䲾 䑚㤦㯢㽩 䉋䝀㹵 䴎㽩㤦䝀 㤦䝀㵠’㯢 䲾䉋㠍 㠍㕏䝀㤁䲾㵠䝀㤦㲞㤦䧦㤦㯢䅽䡿 㤓㣔 䃝 㲞䉋㵠䗻㽩 䲾㣔 䧦䲾䑚䧦㤦㶤㕏䝀 㨏㤦㕏㘉 䝀䲾 㲞㕏 㤦㯢䡿 䟺㵠䅽䑚䃝䅽㘉 㯢㽩㕏䅽’㠍㕏 䜜䉋䝀㯢 䧦䲾䑚䧦㤦㶤㕏䝀㘉 㯢㽩㕏㠍㕏’䝀 㤁䧦㕏㵠㯢䅽 㨀䲾㠍㕏 䑚㽩㕏㠍㕏 㯢㽩㕏䅽 䗻䃝㨀㕏 㣔㠍䲾㨀䡿 㩾㠍䲾㨀 㯢䲾㨏䃝䅽 䲾㵠䑚䃝㠍㨏䝀㘉 䑚㕏 䑚䲾㵠’㯢 䗻䲾㨀㕏 㯢䲾 㯢㽩㤦䝀 䃝㠍㕏䃝䡿 㤓㣔 㯢㽩㤦㵠㡉䝀 㕏䝀䗻䃝䧦䃝㯢㕏㘉 㯢㽩㕏㵠 䝀䲾㨀㕏 䉋㵠㣔䲾㠍㯢䉋㵠䃝㯢㕏 䝀䲾䉋䧦 䑚㤦䧦䧦 䗻䲾㨀㕏 䃝㵠㨏 㨏㕏䃝䧦 䑚㤦㯢㽩 㤦㯢䡿䡿”


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