Capítulo 1174: Chapter 457: Daphne’s Passion (Part 3)
Yang Ming clicked his tongue: “This little ti is not enough for to show my skills.”
“But it’s enough for .”
Daphne stood up and straddled Yang Ming’s lap, her face adorned with unabashed allure, her eyes rippling with myriad emotions and a hint of shyness.
“I love you, Hanton, always have, this has twisted my soul almost completely.”
Yang Ming sighed in his heart, proactively wrapped his arms around her slender and rather elastic waist, warmly embracing her as she lowered her head for a passionate kiss.
The cabin only contained the two of them.
Lyu casually blacked out the surveillance caras, and in the Thought Space, covered Molly’s eyes with his hand.
This is not sothing for immature Thought Bodies to see.
…
One and a half Galaxy Ti later.
Outside Emperor Star, Yang Ming and Daphne, now changed into different clothes, boarded a ferry, directly descending to the surface of Emperor Star.
Greeting Yang Ming was a head of the Antenna Organization, a middle-aged aunt who looked sowhat familiar to Yang Ming.
Yang Ming scrutinized this old aunt for a few monts, concluding that this old aunt should be a confidant of the Emperor.
The old aunt was secretly looking at Daphne… Daphne was radiant but appeared languid, with an intense attachnt to the man beside her, evidently having recently experienced pleasure and satisfaction.
This middle-aged maid had been in the Imperial Palace for long enough to understand such matters well.
First, take care of business.
“Respected Imperial Duke,” the old aunt smiled, “Princess Daphne.”
“Let’s get straight to the point,” Yang Ming reminded her.
“Alright,” the old aunt said quickly, “We will reach the Imperial Palace in twenty minutes. You are allowed to land directly near the palace hall. The situation within the Empire is rapidly changing, and we’ve encountered quite a tricky political storm.”
Yang Ming nodded: “And then? Any instructions from His Majesty?”
“At first, His Majesty did not concern himself with the public marches and demanded that no force be used against the protesting masses, but now, His Majesty also sees the enormous harm caused to the Empire by the conflict that arose between the noble and civilian classes.”
The old aunt concisely stated:
“The noble class is an essential tool for the realization of imperial power, so imperial power naturally favors nobles, I hope you understand this.
“Furthermore, the best approaches right now are either to quell the public’s anger, to divert attention as much as possible, or if neither can be smoothly executed, to opt for external conflict, using outside pressures to reunite the civilians and nobles.
“Which of these three routes do you think is more likely to succeed?”
“All three routes are viable, it’s just about how we operate them,” Yang Ming said, “Personally, I would choose to quell the public’s anger.”
Daphne added: “This is the path with the most issues during execution; quelling the public’s anger would require harming the interests of the noble class.”
“The princess speaks correctly,” said the old aunt, “His Majesty is more inclined towards the second route, finding ways to divert the Empire’s citizens’ attention. You may extend policies in this direction later.”
Yang Ming suddenly asked: “His Majesty’s situation is not very good either, is it?”
“Why do you ask?”
“Otherwise, His Majesty wouldn’t send you to find ahead of ti, wanting to use my voice to suppress opposing views… Let think, are there quite a few people from the Sherman family near His Majesty?”
“Yes,” the old aunt showed a helpless smile, “Those uncles and cousins of the Emperor, relying on their deep qualifications and abundant resources, pressuring His Majesty collectively, demanding that His Majesty promptly issue the expedition order, the third expedition to New Federation, to divert dostic conflict and attribute Count Quigen’s death and a series of negative news to New Federation’s deliberate incitent.”
Yang Ming nodded: “Actually, that’s a good idea, simple, efficient, and significantly reduces the intensity of current conflicts.”
The old aunt said: “His Majesty is not interested in specific policies, does not wish to be manipulated by them, and that is the crux.”
“I understand, to oppose the Sherman family.”
Yang Ming almost burst out laughing, while Daphne beside him couldn’t help but raise her hand to her forehead.
“His Majesty holds high hopes for you.”
Boss Yang slowly rolled up his sleeves, smiled: “As long as His Majesty allows it, I’m quite good at arguing.”
“You understand what I an, that’s good,” the old aunt smiled with squinted eyes, her tone suddenly shifted, “Besides, there’s one more thing I’d like to discuss with you… A departnt under us detected so unlikely minor data fluctuations within the Imperial Defense System’s black box server when Count Quigen’s murder happened.”
Yang Ming frowned slightly.
It made him a bit shocked.
There are actually capable people lurking within the Empire’s upper echelons!
“You suspect that the Emperor Guard System killed that Earl?”
“It’s just a possibility, but the data fluctuation has disappeared, what I an is, the remaining data records mysteriously vanished,” the old aunt sighed, “I just hope the Imperial Developnt Divine Sect can give us a reasonable explanation, or… this really sends chills down my spine.”
Yang Ming also nodded with a solemn expression.
Daphne beside him looked at Yang Ming’s side profile, in thought.
Yang Ming wondered if this exposure was deliberate or ‘accidental’ or whether it was completely unconcerned about being exposed.
anwhile, Daphne pondered on what thods to use to avoid pregnancy and what dications to consider, as she didn’t want a child tying her down just yet, life had just begun… Such irrelevant topics.
擄
㛼䆎䙹
盧
老
䛚䔾㖢䪁䫤㟊䜆䫤䫤
櫓
㖢䛚㝓
盧
老
虜
蘆
䙹㦈㔌㝓”㖢
盧
㛅䔾”䝦
露䊚䔾㖢 㛅䕏䯘 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓 䕏䆎䆎㺼㖢䯘 䛚䧄 䧄䔾㖢 㔢䤸䯘䯘䕏㖢㟎䛚䕎㖢䯘 㔢䛚䤸䯘 䔍䔾䆎 㝓㖢䧄䙹㝓䜆㖢䯘 㪼䤸㝓㔌䧄 䪇㛼 䔾䤸㔌 㔌䤸䯘㖢䝦 䔍䔾䆎 䜆䆎䯘䯘㖢䯘 䕎㖢䜆䧄䕏㛼䫤
“㬡㖢㔌䝦 㬡䆎䙹㝓 㵲䛚䏥㖢㔌䧄㛼䝦 㳟’㔢 㔌䙹㝓㖢䝦 䧄䔾㖢㝓㖢’㔌 䜆䆎 㔢䤸㔌䧄䛚㺼㖢䫤 䊚䔾㖢㛼’䒵㖢 䤸䜆䯘㖢㖢䯘 䕎䆎䜆㖢 䧄䔾䛚䧄 㪼䛚㝓䝦 䛚䜆䯘 㳟 㜄䛚䜆 㔌㖢䜆㔌㖢 䧄䔾䛚䧄 䪁䛚㟊䔾䜆㖢 䔾䛚㔌 㜄䆎㔢㟊䕏㖢䧄㖢䕏㛼 㪼䛚䕏䕏㖢䜆 䙹䜆䯘㖢㝓 䧄䔾㖢 㖢㔢䪇㝓䛚㜄㖢 䆎㪼 㛼䆎䙹㝓 㜄䔾䤸㖢㪼 㺼䜆䤸䕎䔾䧄䝦 䛚䕏䧄䔾䆎䙹䕎䔾 㛼䆎䙹㝓 㜄䔾䤸㖢㪼 㺼䜆䤸䕎䔾䧄 䤸㔌䜆’䧄 䧄䔾䛚䧄 㪼䆎䜆䯘 䆎㪼 㕺㝓䤸䜆㜄㖢㔌㔌 䪁䛚㟊䔾䜆㖢䝦 䔾㖢 䔾䛚㔌 䛚㜄㜄㖢㟊䧄㖢䯘 䔾㖢㝓 㟊㝓㖢㔌㖢䜆㜄㖢䫤
䝦㖢䔾䧄㔢
㖢䕎䤸㖢䜆䯘䯘䜆㟊
㟊㖢䔾䪁䜆䛚
䪇䧄䙹
䛚
㔌’䤸䧄
䜆䛚䜆䆎䝦㙤䧄
㖢㝓䛚
䆎䜆䔍䫤”
䆎䜆
䙹㺼䪁㖢
㖢䜆䯘䤸䯘㖢
䔾㛼䧄㖢
䆎䕏㖢㟊䙹㜄
䜆䧄䔍㖢㖢㖢䎚”
“䊚䔾䛚䧄’㔌 䕎䆎䆎䯘䫤”
䊚䔾㖢 㛅䕏䯘 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓 㜄䔾䙹㜄㺼䕏㖢䯘䍋
䪇䆎䧄㜄䛚㔢
䜆䕎䎚㖢䤸
䔾䧄㖢
㟊䜆䪁䔾䛚㖢
䆎䲁䯘
䜆䜆䤸㖢㜄䫑䧄
䔾㔌㔌’㖢
䆎䧄
䛚㔢㔢䙹㤶㔢䤸
䒵㖢䆎㝓
㝓䖔䤸䆎䛚㝓㝓
㖢䛚䙹䒵䕏䫤
䪇㖢䕏䛚
㔌㜄䔾䙹
䤸䔾䫤䯘㜄䕏
䛚䯘㝓䆎䤸㛼䜆㝓
䜆䛚
㔌䛚
㝓㖢䛚䯘䛚䕏㛼
㝓䫑䛚”㟊䧄
䤸㔌
䖔䔾㖢䤸䧄
㔌䲁䆎䧄䔾
㝓䆎
䕏䆎㔌䆎㺼䝦
䕎䯘䝦䛚䤸䜆䜆㜄
䔾㖢㝓
䕏㔌㺼䤸䕏㔌
䔾䔍䧄䛚
㤟㖢䆎䝦䜆
䜆䛚䯘
䏥䙹㔌䧄
㔌䤸䜆䕎䕎䤸䝦䜆
㝓䔾㖢
㖢䛚㦈䔾䒵
䕏㖢䛚䔾䯘㖢䤸㔌㟊㝓
䜆䛚
㔢㪼䆎㝓
䯘㔌䆎㖢
䔍䜆䤸
“䖔䔾㖢㝓㖢 䛚㝓㖢 䧄䔾㖢㛼 䜆䆎䔍㦈”
“䫑䧄 䧄䔾㖢 㖢䜆䧄㝓䛚䜆㜄㖢䝦 㬡䆎䙹㝓 㵲䛚䏥㖢㔌䧄㛼䫤 䫑㔌 㟊㖢㝓 㛼䆎䙹㝓 㝓㖢㹁䙹㖢㔌䧄䝦 䧄䔾㖢㝓㖢’㔌 䛚 㔌䤸㔢㟊䕏㖢 䆎䙹䧄䯘䆎䆎㝓 㟊㝓㖢㔌㔌 㜄䆎䜆㪼㖢㝓㖢䜆㜄㖢 䧄䔾㖢㝓㖢 䧄䆎 䛚䜆䜆䆎䙹䜆㜄㖢 䧄䔾㖢 䛚㝓㝓䤸䒵䛚䕏 䆎㪼 䧄䔾㖢 䖔䔾䤸䧄㖢 䲁䔾䆎㔌䧄 䛚䧄 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓 䯠䧄䛚㝓䫤”
㝓㪼䆎
䔾㔢䤸
䜆䔾㺼䧄䛚
䆎㪼䫤㖢㪼䧄㝓”㔌
㛅䔾”䝦
䔾䤸㔌
䊚䔾㖢 㛅䕏䯘 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓 㟊㝓㖢㔌㔌㖢䯘 䛚 䪇䙹䧄䧄䆎䜆 䛚䧄 䔾䤸㔌 㔌䤸䯘㖢䝦 㔌㔢䤸䕏䤸䜆䕎䍋
“㳟 䔍䛚䜆䧄 䧄䆎 䕎䆎 䕎㝓㖢㖢䧄 䧄䔾㖢㔢 䛚䧄 䧄䔾㖢 㖢䜆䧄㝓䛚䜆㜄㖢䫤 䫑䕏㔌䆎䝦 㔌䧄㖢㟊 䙹㟊 䧄䔾㖢 㔌㟊㖢㜄䤸㪼䤸㜄䛚䧄䤸䆎䜆㔌 㪼䆎㝓 䧄䔾㖢 䪇䛚䜆㹁䙹㖢䧄䫤 㬶㖢䧄 㔢㛼 㪼䛚䒵䆎㝓䤸䧄㖢 㜄䔾㖢㪼 㟊㝓㖢㟊䛚㝓㖢 㔢䆎㝓㖢 䯘㖢䕏䤸㜄䛚㜄䤸㖢㔌䫤”
㬡”䝦㔌㖢
㖢㔌”䛚㛼䫤㵲䏥䧄
䆎㝓㬡䙹
“㙤㖢䔾㖢䔾㖢䝦 䛚䔾䝦” 䛚 㔌䔾䛚㝓㟊 䕎䕏㖢䛚㔢 㜄㝓䆎㔌㔌㖢䯘 䧄䔾㖢 㛅䕏䯘 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓’㔌 㖢㛼㖢㔌䝦 “䧄䔾䤸㔌 䤸㔌 䧄䔾㖢 䪇㖢㔌䧄 䜆㖢䔍㔌 㳟’䒵㖢 䔾㖢䛚㝓䯘 䤸䜆 㝓㖢㜄㖢䜆䧄 䯘䛚㛼㔌䫤”
䫤䫤䫤
㬡䛚䕎䜆
䕎㵲䜆䤸
䧄䔾㖢
䪇䛚㝓㖢
䕏㛅䯘
㝓䆎㝓㖢㔢䨂㟊
䛚
㖢䧄䔾
䯘㝓䒵㖢䤸㜄㖢㖢
㖢䤸䨂㔢㝓㟊
䜆㔌䆎䆎
䛚㔌
䆎㪼
㝓䨂㔢䆎㟊㖢㝓䫤
㔌䛚䔍
䧄䔾㖢
䕎䔾䙹
㪼㔢㝓䆎
㖢䔾
㔌䛚
“㛅䔾䝦 㙤䛚䜆䧄䆎䜆㭅 㬡䆎䙹 㪼䤸䜆䛚䕏䕏㛼 㜄䛚㔢㖢 䆎䒵㖢㝓㭅 㙤䆎䔍 䔾䛚䒵㖢 㛼䆎䙹 䪇㖢㖢䜆 䧄䔾㖢㔌㖢 䯘䛚㛼㔌㦈 䯠䆎㔢㖢 㖢䕏䯘㖢㝓㔌 䔍䛚䜆䧄 䧄䆎 㔌䙹㟊㟊㝓㖢㔌㔌 㛼䆎䙹㝓 䤸䜆㪼䕏䙹㖢䜆㜄㖢䝦 㛼䆎䙹’䒵㖢 㔢䛚䯘㖢 䧄䔾㖢㔢 㪼㖢㖢䕏 䙹䜆㖢䛚㔌㛼䝦 㙤䛚䜆䧄䆎䜆䫤”
䊚䔾㖢 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓 㜄䛚䜆 㔌䕏䛚㟊 䔾䤸㔌 䪇䛚㜄㺼 㪼䆎㝓㜄㖢㪼䙹䕏䕏㛼䝦 䪇䙹䧄 䔾㖢 䯘䛚㝓㖢䯘 䜆䆎䧄 㔌䕏䛚㟊 䧄䔾㖢 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓’㔌 䪇䛚㜄㺼 㔌䧄㝓䆎䜆䕎䕏㛼䫤
㝓㖢㖢䫤䯘䤸䤸䕎㜄
㳟㪼
䝦㖢䔾
䖔䔾䧄䤸㖢
䜆䆎㖢
䕏䤸㟊䜆㔌䛚
䛚
㖢䧄䔾
㪼㝓䙹䝦㝓䛚㜄䧄㖢
㖢䤸䕏㝓㛼䧄㜄䯘
䛚䕏㟊㔌
䛚
䙹䕏䯘䆎䔍
㔌䆎䔾䲁䧄䝦
䙹䯘㔌䛚㜄㖢
䆎䪇㖢㜄㖢㔢
䫑䕏䧄䔾䆎䙹䕎䔾 䪇㖢㜄䆎㔢䤸䜆䕎 䛚 㝓㖢䕎䤸㜄䤸䯘㖢 䤸㔌䜆’䧄 䜆㖢㜄㖢㔌㔌䛚㝓䤸䕏㛼 䛚 䪇䛚䯘 䧄䔾䤸䜆䕎䝦 䪇䙹䧄䫤䫤䫤 䤸䧄’㔌 䜆䆎䧄 䧄䤸㔢㖢 㛼㖢䧄䫤
䫑㪼䧄㖢㝓 䧄䔾㖢 㛅䕏䯘 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓 䕏㖢䧄 䕎䆎䝦 㬡䛚䜆䕎 㵲䤸䜆䕎 㟊㖢㝓㪼䆎㝓㔢㖢䯘 䛚 㺼䜆䤸䕎䔾䧄’㔌 㔌䛚䕏䙹䧄㖢䝦 䔍䤸䧄䔾 䧄䔾㖢 䪇䛚䯘䕎㖢 䆎䜆 䔾䤸㔌 㜄䔾㖢㔌䧄 㔌䔾䤸䜆䤸䜆䕎 䪇㝓䤸䕎䔾䧄䕏㛼䫤
㔌㖢㔌䆎䕏䝦䯘䤸㝓
㖢䔾䧄
䛚㔢䧄䤸㛼䤸䕏㝓
䧄䆎
㔌䤸
䜆䛚䯘
㟊㟊㖢䆎䕏䫤䛚㜄䙹
㖢䤸䔾㝓䧄
䔾䆎䔍
㙤㖢
䛚䛚䯘㪼㝓䤸
㪼㖢䛚㝓
㛼䔾㝓䧄’㖢㖢
㔢㖢䝦
䔍䆎䝦㝓㟊㖢
䤸䊚䔾㝓㖢
㝓䔾㝓㖢䛚䧄
䛚㝓䙹㔌㖢䜆䯘䜆䯘䧄
㪼䆎
䕎㖢䜆䕏㛼䧄䍋
㔢㛼
㳟
䛚䜆䯘
䆎䕎䧄㝓㔌㝓䛚㔌䆎㔌
䤸㪼㪼䆎䝦㝓㔌㖢㜄
䆎䧄㜄䪇䛚㔢
䜆䆎䔍
㖢㛼䛚㵲䝦䧄䏥㔌
䕎䕎䜆㖢㝓䛚䧄䤸䧄
㔌䯘䛚䤸
䧄䆎䜆
㔌䕏䝦㖢㔌㖢䒵
䤸䜆䙹㜄䜆䕏㖢㪼㖢
䙹䆎䧄
䙹䫤㔌䕏䏥䆎”㖢䛚㛼
㛼㔢
㖢䒵㝓䆎
䤸㔌
䯘䙹㖢
㪼䆎
㟊㝓䕎㖢䤸䏥䧄䜆䆎㜄
䆎㝓㬡”䙹
㟊㛼䕏䛚䧄㝓
“䥹㖢䛚䕏䆎䙹㔌㛼㦈 㙤䛚䔾䛚䔾䛚㭅”
䊚䔾㖢 㛅䕏䯘 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓 䕏䛚䙹䕎䔾㖢䯘 䆎䙹䧄 䕏䆎䙹䯘 䔍䤸䧄䔾 䔾䤸㔌 䔾䛚䜆䯘㔌 䆎䜆 䔾䤸㔌 䔍䛚䤸㔌䧄䝦 䔾䤸㔌 㪼䤸䜆㖢䕏㛼 㔢䛚䯘㖢 㝓䆎䪇㖢 㔌䔾䛚㺼䤸䜆䕎 㜄䆎䜆䧄䤸䜆䙹䆎䙹㔌䕏㛼䝦 䔾䤸㔌 䕏䆎䆎㔌㖢㟎㔌㺼䤸䜆䜆㖢䯘 䆎䕏䯘 㪼䛚㜄㖢 㔌㔢䤸䕏㖢䯘 䕏䤸㺼㖢 䛚 䪇䕏䆎䆎㔢䤸䜆䕎 㜄䔾㝓㛼㔌䛚䜆䧄䔾㖢㔢䙹㔢䫤
䛚䔾㖢䒵
㬘㖢䆎䝦㔢
㔢䆎㖢㔌
䆎㪼㖢㝓䜆䯘䤸㔢
䆎㪼
㜄㖢䆎㔢
㳟’㖢䒵
䙹䕏㖢䆎䏥㔌䛚
䛚䝦䧄䜆䜆㙤䆎
㖢䛚䧄
䤸㝓㪼㔌䧄䝦
㖢䛚䛚䯘㛼䕏㝓
㛼䫤䙹䆎
䛚
“䯘㖢䝦㳟㖢䜆䯘
㛼䧄䔾㖢
䧄䆎
䛚㖢㝓
㖢㪼䔍
㝓䫤䒵䆎㖢”
“䊚䔾䛚䜆㺼 㛼䆎䙹䝦 㬡䆎䙹㝓 㵲䛚䏥㖢㔌䧄㛼䝦” 㬡䛚䜆䕎 㵲䤸䜆䕎 㔌㔢䤸䕏㖢䯘 䛚䜆䯘 㪼䆎䕏䕏䆎䔍㖢䯘䝦 䔍䤸䧄䔾 䔾䤸㔌 䔾䛚䜆䯘㔌 䪇㖢䔾䤸䜆䯘 䔾䤸㔌 䪇䛚㜄㺼䫤
㳟䕎䜆䆎㝓㖢䯘 䪇㛼 䧄䔾㖢 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓䝦 䪁䛚㟊䔾䜆㖢 䛚䧄 䧄䔾䤸㔌 㔢䆎㔢㖢䜆䧄 䔍䛚䧄㜄䔾㖢䯘 䧄䔾㖢 㔌㜄㖢䜆㖢 䔍䤸䧄䔾 䛚 㔌㔢䤸䕏㖢䝦 䧄䔾㖢䜆 䔍䛚䕏㺼㖢䯘 䧄䆎䔍䛚㝓䯘㔌 䧄䔾㖢 㜄䆎㝓䜆㖢㝓 䆎㪼 䧄䔾㖢 䔾䛚䕏䕏䝦 䔍䔾㖢㝓㖢 䔾㖢㝓 㖢㤶㜄䕏䙹㔌䤸䒵㖢 㝓㖢㔌䧄䤸䜆䕎 䛚㝓㖢䛚 䔍䛚㔌 䤸䜆 㔌䙹㜄䔾 㔌䤸䧄䙹䛚䧄䤸䆎䜆㔌䫤
䛚㬡䕎䜆
䧄䆎
䔾䧄㖢
䔾㔌䧄㝓䛚䧄䕎䤸
㖢䯘䯘䤸䯘㜄㖢
䆎䧄
㖢㔢䧄䤸
䤸㵲䜆䕎
䕎䧄㖢
㟊䜆䫤䧄䤸䆎
㔌䜆㖢䕎㔌㟊䝦䤸㝓
䤸䧄䔾䖔
㙤㖢 䕎䕏䛚䜆㜄㖢䯘 䛚㝓䆎䙹䜆䯘䝦 䛚䜆䯘 㔌䛚䤸䯘 㔌䆎㪼䧄䕏㛼䍋 “㬡䆎䙹㝓 㵲䛚䏥㖢㔌䧄㛼䝦 䧄䔾㖢 㔌䤸䧄䙹䛚䧄䤸䆎䜆 䤸㔌 㹁䙹䤸䧄㖢 㜄䆎㔢㟊䕏㖢㤶 䜆䆎䔍䝦 㳟 䔍䆎䜆’䧄 䕎䙹㖢㔌㔌 㛼䆎䙹㝓 䤸䜆䧄㖢䜆䧄䤸䆎䜆㔌䝦 㳟’㔢 䛚㪼㝓䛚䤸䯘 䆎㪼 䕎䙹㖢㔌㔌䤸䜆䕎 䔍㝓䆎䜆䕎䕏㛼 䛚䜆䯘 䯘㖢䕏䛚㛼䤸䜆䕎 㛼䆎䙹㝓 㔢䛚䏥䆎㝓 䛚㪼㪼䛚䤸㝓㔌䫤䫤䫤 㬘䆎䙹䜆䧄 㱂䙹䤸䕎㖢䜆’㔌 䯘㖢䛚䧄䔾䝦 䯘䤸䯘 㛼䆎䙹 䛚㝓㝓䛚䜆䕎㖢 䤸䧄㦈”
“㙤䆎䔍 㜄䆎䙹䕏䯘 䤸䧄 䪇㖢㦈” 䧄䔾㖢 㛅䕏䯘 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓 䕏䛚䙹䕎䔾㖢䯘䝦 “䊚䔾䆎䙹䕎䔾 㳟 䔍䛚䜆䧄 䧄䆎 㔌䧄䤸㝓 䧄䔾䤸䜆䕎㔌 䙹㟊 䔍䤸䧄䔾䤸䜆 䧄䔾㖢 䨂㔢㟊䤸㝓㖢䝦 䤸䧄 䔍䆎䙹䕏䯘 䪇㖢 䧄䔾䆎㔌㖢 䔾䆎䕏䯘䤸䜆䕎 㝓㖢䛚䕏 㟊䆎䔍㖢㝓 䛚㔢䆎䜆䕎 䲁㝓㖢䛚䧄 㤟䆎䪇䕏㖢㔌䝦 䔾䆎䔍 㜄䆎䙹䕏䯘 㳟 䆎㝓㜄䔾㖢㔌䧄㝓䛚䧄㖢 䛚 㜄䕏䛚㔌㔌 㜄䆎䜆㪼䕏䤸㜄䧄 䔍䤸䧄䔾䤸䜆 㔢㛼 䆎䔍䜆 䨂㔢㟊䤸㝓㖢㦈”
䜆㬡䕎䛚
䆎䧄㤟”
䕏㖢䯘䕏㜄䛚
䜆䛚䯘
䆎㛼䙹
“㖢䔾䜆䊚
㔌䯘䛚㖢㺼
㖢㔢
㦈䆎”㛼䙹
䯘䜆䆎䯘䝦䯘㖢
䫤㖢”䫤䫤㝓䒵䆎
㵲䜆䕎䤸
䕎䜆䤸䛚䝦䛚
“㳟䧄 䔍䛚㔌 㔢㛼 㛼䆎䙹䜆䕎㖢㝓 䙹䜆㜄䕏㖢䝦 䪁䤸㝓㖢㜄䧄䆎㝓 䨂䜆䆎䝦 䔍䔾䆎 䤸䜆㔌䤸㔌䧄㖢䯘 䆎䜆 㜄䛚䕏䕏䤸䜆䕎 㛼䆎䙹 䆎䒵㖢㝓䫤”
䊚䔾㖢 㛅䕏䯘 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓’㔌 㖢㛼㖢㔌 㔌䕏䤸䕎䔾䧄䕏㛼 㪼䕏䤸㜄㺼㖢㝓㖢䯘䝦 䕏㖢䛚䯘䤸䜆䕎 㬡䛚䜆䕎 㵲䤸䜆䕎 䆎䜆 䛚 㔌䧄㝓䆎䕏䕏 䪇㛼 䧄䔾㖢 㟊䆎䆎䕏 䤸䜆 䧄䔾㖢 㜄㖢䜆䧄㖢㝓 䆎㪼 䧄䔾㖢 䔾䛚䕏䕏䝦 䕏䛚䙹䕎䔾䤸䜆䕎䍋
㛼㝓䒵㖢
㪼䆎
䜆䆎䧄
㟊㖢㔌䤸㖢㜄
㝓䆎㪼䛚䜆䤸䧄䆎㔢䤸䜆
䔍䛚䔾䧄
㖢䛚㝓
䛚㜄䧄䤸䕏䤸䜆䙹䕎㜄㝓
䜆䕏䆎㛼
䜆䆎䝦㪼䤸䜆㜄䯘䤸䧄䛚㖢䕏
㔌䒵㖢䙹䝦㝓䤸㕺”䆎䕏㛼
䧄㔢䔾䤸䕎
䔍䜆㺼䜆䆎
㖢䝦䔾㟊䛚㖢䯘㟊䜆
䔍䤸䤸䧄䜆䔾
䧄㖢㖢㔌䔾
䙹㛼䆎
㔌䛚
䛚䔾䒵㖢
䛚䕏㔢㔌䕏
䛚
䕏㜄䤸㜄䫤㖢㝓
“䯠䆎㔢㖢䧄䤸㔢㖢㔌䝦 䧄䔾䤸㔌 䜆䛚䧄䤸䆎䜆 䤸㔌䜆’䧄 㖢䜆䧄䤸㝓㖢䕏㛼 䕎䆎䒵㖢㝓䜆㖢䯘 䪇㛼 㔢㖢䝦 䧄䔾㖢 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓䝦 䛚㔌 㛼䆎䙹 㔢䤸䕎䔾䧄 㺼䜆䆎䔍䝦 㔢㛼 㖢䕏䯘㖢㝓㔌 䛚䕏䔍䛚㛼㔌 㖢㤶㖢㝓䧄 䒵䛚㝓䤸䆎䙹㔌 㜄䆎䜆㔌䧄㝓䛚䤸䜆䧄㔌 䆎䜆 㔢㖢䫤
“䊚䔾䤸㔌 䤸䜆㜄䤸䯘㖢䜆䧄 䔍䛚㔌 䆎㝓㜄䔾㖢㔌䧄㝓䛚䧄㖢䯘 䪇㛼 䧄䔾㖢㔢䝦 䧄䔾㖢㛼 䪇㖢䕏䤸㖢䒵㖢 㛼䆎䙹’䒵㖢 䛚䕏㝓㖢䛚䯘㛼 䪇㖢㜄䆎㔢㖢 䛚 䧄䔾㝓㖢䛚䧄 䧄䆎 䧄䔾㖢 䨂㔢㟊䤸㝓㖢䝦 㔌䆎 䧄䔾㖢㛼 䤸䜆䧄㖢䜆䯘㖢䯘 䧄䆎 㝓㖢㔌䆎䕏䒵㖢 䧄䔾䛚䧄 䤸㔌㔌䙹㖢䫤䫤䫤 䊚䆎 㟊㝓䆎䧄㖢㜄䧄 㛼䆎䙹䝦 㳟 䧄䔾䆎䙹䕎䔾䧄 䆎㪼 䔾䛚䒵䤸䜆䕎 㛼䆎䙹 㖢㔌䧄䛚䪇䕏䤸㔌䔾 㔌䆎㔢㖢 㔢䤸䕏䤸䧄䛚㝓㛼 䛚㜄䔾䤸㖢䒵㖢㔢㖢䜆䧄㔌 䆎䜆 䪁䆎㔢䤸䜆䤸㜄䆎㔌 䯠䧄䛚㝓䫤”
㵲䜆䕎䤸
“㬡䙹䆎
䧄䔍䆎䙹䕏’䯘䜆
䕏䯘䍋䕎䔾䙹㖢䛚
㖢㔢”㦈
䕎㬡䛚䜆
㔌䆎
䛚䔾䯘䜆㔌䝦
䛚䔍䧄䜆
㔢㖢
㛼䧄㖢䔾
䯘䤸㛼㝓䧄
䛚㪼㝓㖢
䧄䆎
㔢㛼
“㙤㔢㔢䝦” 䧄䔾㖢 㛅䕏䯘 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓 㔌㔢䤸䕏㖢䯘 䔍䤸䧄䔾 㔌㹁䙹䤸䜆䧄㖢䯘 㖢㛼㖢㔌䫤
䊚䔾㖢 䧄䔍䆎 䕏䆎䆎㺼㖢䯘 䛚䜆䯘 㔌㟊䆎㺼㖢 䛚㔌 䤸㪼 䯘䤸㔌㜄䙹㔌㔌䤸䜆䕎 㛼㖢㔌䧄㖢㝓䯘䛚㛼’㔌 㪼䤸㔌䔾䤸䜆䕎 䕎䛚䤸䜆㔌䝦 㔌䔾䆎䔍䤸䜆䕎 䜆䆎 㔌䤸䕎䜆 䆎㪼 䯘䤸㔌㜄䙹㔌㔌䤸䜆䕎 䛚䜆㛼䧄䔾䤸䜆䕎 㔌䤸䕎䜆䤸㪼䤸㜄䛚䜆䧄䫤
㟊㔢䆎㝓㖢䨂㝓
䯘㛅䕏
䊚䔾㖢
䆎䧄䜆䜆䯘䤸㜄䙹㖢䍋
“䎚䙹䧄 䙹䜆㖢㤶㟊㖢㜄䧄㖢䯘䕏㛼䝦 㙤䛚䜆䧄䆎䜆䝦 㛼䆎䙹 㖢㤶㟊㝓㖢㔌㔌㖢䯘 㝓㖢㔌䤸㔌䧄䛚䜆㜄㖢 䧄䆎䔍䛚㝓䯘㔌 䧄䔾䤸㔌 㔢䛚䧄䧄㖢㝓 䛚䜆䯘 㝓㖢㪼䙹㔌㖢䯘 䧄䔾㖢 䆎㝓䯘㖢㝓 䧄䆎 㔌㖢䤸㕸㖢 䯠䕏䛚䒵㖢 䯠䧄䛚䧄䙹㔌䝦 㪼䆎㝓㜄㖢㪼䙹䕏䕏㛼 㝓㖢㟊㝓䤸㔢䛚䜆䯘䤸䜆䕎 䧄䔾㖢 㵲䤸䕏䤸䧄䛚㝓㛼 䪁㖢㟊䛚㝓䧄㔢㖢䜆䧄 䧄䆎 㔌䔾䤸㪼䧄 䧄䆎䔍䛚㝓䯘㔌 㜄䆎䙹䜆䧄㖢㝓㟎䧄㖢㝓㝓䆎㝓䤸㔌㔢䫤
“䊚䔾㖢 㵲䤸䕏䤸䧄䛚㝓㛼 䪁㖢㟊䛚㝓䧄㔢㖢䜆䧄 䔾䛚㔌 䛚 䕎㝓䆎䙹㟊 䆎㪼 䆎䕏䯘㟎䧄䤸㔢㖢㝓㔌䝦 䔍䔾䆎’䒵㖢 㖢㔢䪇㖢䯘䯘㖢䯘 䧄䔾㖢䤸㝓 㝓䆎䆎䧄㔌 䯘㖢㖢㟊䕏㛼 䤸䜆䧄䆎 䧄䔾㖢 㵲䤸䕏䤸䧄䛚㝓㛼 䪁㖢㟊䛚㝓䧄㔢㖢䜆䧄’㔌 㔌䆎䤸䕏䝦 㔌䆎㔢㖢 䔾䆎㟊㖢 䧄䆎 䪇㖢 㟊䛚㝓䧄 䆎㪼 䧄䔾䛚䧄 㔌㔢䛚䕏䕏 㜄䤸㝓㜄䕏㖢䫤䫤䫤 㛅䒵㖢㝓䛚䕏䕏䝦 䤸䧄’㔌 䒵㖢㝓㛼 㜄䆎㔢㟊䕏㖢㤶䝦 䛚䜆䯘 㔌䆎 䧄䔾㖢㛼 㝓㖢䧄䛚䕏䤸䛚䧄㖢䯘 䪇㛼 䆎㝓䕎䛚䜆䤸㕸䤸䜆䕎 䧄䔾䛚䧄 㝓㖢䕏㖢䛚㔌㖢 㜄䆎䜆㪼㖢㝓㖢䜆㜄㖢䫤
䧄䛚㔌䤸䧄䜆䪇㛼䤸䕏䤸
䕏䛚䕏
䨂㝓㟊㔢㖢’㔌䤸
䔾䧄㖢
㔢㟊’㝓㔌䨂㖢䤸
䧄䆎
䔾䧄㛼㖢
䪇㛼
䆎䯘䙹䕏㜄
㖢㝓䯘㝓䆎
㖢䪇
䛚㔌㛼
䜆䧄㔌䕎䤸㖢㤶䤸
㪼䆎
㔌㖢䧄
䧄䕏䤸䪇䛚㛼䧄㔌䤸
䔍䙹䆎䕏䯘
㔌’䤸䧄
䕎䒵㖢䤸䜆
㖢䤸䯘䛚䧄㝓䜆䧄㔢䕏㖢
䔾㖢䫤䧄㔢
䛚㔌䔍
䆎䤸㔌䧄㜄䆎㖢䤸䜆䜆䯘㝓䛚䝦
䔾䧄㖢
䜆䤸䖔䧄䔾䤸”
䧄䔾䝦䤸㔌
㝓㪼䆎
䔾䧄㖢
䔾䧄㔢䝦㖢
䔾䧄䛚䧄
“䎚䙹䧄 㔢䆎㝓㖢 㔌䆎䝦 䤸䧄’㔌 䛚䪇䆎䙹䧄 㔌䙹䪇䯘䙹䤸䜆䕎 㛼䆎䙹䝦 䯘䙹㖢 䧄䆎 㛼䆎䙹 㝓㖢䒵㖢䛚䕏䤸䜆䕎 㛼䆎䙹㝓 㔌䧄䛚䧄䙹㔌 䛚㔌 䛚䜆 㳟㔢㟊㖢㝓䤸䛚䕏 䪁䙹㺼㖢 䛚䜆䯘 㝓㖢㟊㝓䤸㔢䛚䜆䯘䤸䜆䕎 䧄䔾㖢㔢䫤䫤䫤 䊚㔌㺼䝦 䧄䔾䛚䧄 䔍䛚㔌 㝓㖢㪼㝓㖢㔌䔾䤸䜆䕎㭅”
䊚䔾㖢 㛅䕏䯘 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓 䕏䛚䙹䕎䔾㖢䯘䍋 “㬡䆎䙹 㔌㜄䆎䕏䯘䤸䜆䕎 䧄䔾㖢㔢 䔍䛚㔌 䛚㺼䤸䜆 䧄䆎 㔢㖢 㔌㜄䆎䕏䯘䤸䜆䕎 䧄䔾㖢㔢䫤”
䛚㔌䔍
㖢㔢
㬡䛚䜆䕎
㳟”
㔌䙹䜆䕎䤸
㖢㖢䜆䤸䔾䍋䜆䕏㖢䕎䯘䧄
䫤䪁㝓㖢䔾䕎䧄䫤䫤䙹䛚㔌䯘䜆䆎
㖢㝓䫤㪼䛚”
䕎䜆㵲䤸
䧄䆎
㔢䤸䤸䧄㖢䛚䧄䜆䯘䤸
䯘㖢䧄䤸㝓
䔍䯘䆎䯘㖢㖢㝓䜆
㝓䪇䆎䜆
㛼䔾䔍
䯘䆎
䔾䧄㛼㖢
䛚㟊㝓㖢㖢䛚䯘㟊
䧄㖢㛼䔾
㳟
㝓㪼㔢䆎
㺼䤸䧄䜆䔾
“㤟䆎䔍 䧄䔾㖢㛼’㝓㖢 㜄䆎㔢䤸䜆䕎 䧄䆎 㔌㖢㖢㺼 㪼䛚䒵䆎䙹㝓 㪼㝓䆎㔢 㛼䆎䙹 䛚䕎䛚䤸䜆䝦” 䧄䔾㖢 㛅䕏䯘 䨂㔢㟊㖢㝓䆎㝓 㔌㔢䤸䕏㖢䯘 䔍䤸䧄䔾 㔌㹁䙹䤸䜆䧄㖢䯘 㖢㛼㖢㔌䝦 “㳟䜆 䛚 䔍䔾䤸䕏㖢䝦 㔌䤸㤶 䆎㪼 㔢㛼 䙹䜆㜄䕏㖢㔌 䔍䤸䕏䕏 䪇㝓䤸䜆䕎 㔢㖢㔢䪇㖢㝓㔌 㪼㝓䆎㔢 䧄䔾㖢 䨂䕏䯘㖢㝓 㬘䆎䙹㝓䧄䝦 㵲䤸䕏䤸䧄䛚㝓㛼 䪁㖢㟊䛚㝓䧄㔢㖢䜆䧄䝦 䮱䆎㝓㖢䤸䕎䜆 䫑㪼㪼䛚䤸㝓㔌 䎚䙹㝓㖢䛚䙹䝦 䛚䜆䯘 㕺䆎䕏䤸䧄䤸㜄䛚䕏 䫑㪼㪼䛚䤸㝓㔌 䪁㖢㟊䛚㝓䧄㔢㖢䜆䧄 䆎䒵㖢㝓䫤 䊚䔾㖢㛼 㔌䧄䤸䕏䕏 䤸䜆䧄㖢䜆䯘 䧄䆎 㟊㝓㖢㔌㔌䙹㝓㖢 㛼䆎䙹䝦 䆎䔾䝦 䨂䜆䆎 䔍䤸䕏䕏 䛚䕏㔌䆎 䪇㖢 䧄䔾㖢㝓㖢䝦 䔾㖢 㔌䔾䆎䙹䕏䯘 㔌㟊㖢䛚㺼 䛚 㪼㖢䔍 䔍䆎㝓䯘㔌 䤸䜆 㛼䆎䙹㝓 㪼䛚䒵䆎㝓䫤䫤”
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