Chapter 1776: Chapter 1776: Meng Han Sets the Record Straight
The words of the Tao Family’s ten-year-old cousin pierced Ms. Tao like needles, leaving her utterly wounded.
Ms. Tao was indeed angry with Tao Feili for betraying Uncle Meng and causing her husband such harm. But she believed that Tao Feili acted out of cowardice and was forced to make such choices to save his life. She thought he had genuine feelings for his sister.
However, her nephew’s words shattered her long-held illusions; in the eyes of Tao Feili and his wife, she was merely a slave of the Tao Family. Her living a better life than Tao Feili was unacceptable. She was foolish and undeserving, worthy of being despised by her children, pleasing no one.
In her brother’s mind, Ms. Tao was less than the wild grass growing by the roadside, yet she cherished Tao Feili as if he were a treasure.
Meng Han said to Shu Yu, “My brother was furious at that time and immediately drew the Soft Sword from his waist, pressing it against the neck of the little ingrate. It was only then that the little ingrate dared not curse further and obediently apologized to my mother.”
Although Meng Qi disliked studying and often confronted Uncle Meng, he wasn’t an impulsive person. In a way, his temperament was rather mild.
This was the first time Meng Han had seen such a fierce brother, with the Soft Sword against a child barely ten years old, enough to show that Meng Qi had reached his limit.
Meng Han couldn’t tolerate the foul language, either, and saw the Tao family’s uncles and neighborhood people siding with the Tao family, criticizing Meng Qi for pointing a sword at a child’s neck, especially at Tao Feili’s funeral, and the child being Tao Feili’s only son.
Meng Han cursed aloud, recounting how Tao Feili, in order to survive, fabricated the story that the Meng family had treasures for the mountain bandits, which ultimately frightened him to death.
The people present were all stunned upon hearing this, then incredulously turned to look at the Zhang Clan.
Meng Han sneered, “It was only then I realized that the Zhang Clan was spreading rumors outside, claiming that the mountain bandits knew of the Meng family’s treasure and intentionally captured Uncle as bait to lure my father out. In the end, when Eldest Uncle and the cousins went to the black market to rescue Uncle, they intentionally left him there as bait, which led to his demise.”
Good heavens, not only had they blamed Tao Feili’s death on the Meng family, but they had also disclosed the matter of the Meng family possessing treasure, ensuring that the Meng family would face endless trouble in the future.
Luckily, Meng Han’s explanation helped many people e to their senses.
The Zhang Clan tried to argue, but Meng Han pointed at Tao Feili’s corpse, calling for them to summon a forensic doctor to determine the true cause of Uncle’s death.
The Zhang Clan, of course, refused. However, the elders of the Tao family believed Meng Han’s words, though it was truly a blemish on the Tao family. If others learned of Tao Feili’s true cause of death, the Tao family would lose all face.
Thus, using the excuse of not disturbing the deceased’s peace, the Tao elders dismissed the idea of summoning a forensic doctor.
Yet, in doing so, it created an air of guilt. The neighbors, familiar with Tao Feili’s nature, certainly believed in Meng Kuan’s good reputation. Naturally, they trusted him more.
“Later, we took my mother back, and we didn’t take part in arranging Uncle’s funeral.”
Meng Han sighed, “After ing back, my mother became even more dispirited.”
Shu Yu couldn’t offer her opinion on the matter and merely forted her with a few words.
Right at that moment, a ‘bang’ of something shattering came suddenly from the front.
㶡䩔㟉䨁䂗䡹㣼㞨㟉㴼䨁䟱䅣䩔䲻
䲻䡹䊀
㝩䂗䄗䩔䡹䨁
㶡䡹䡹㫾䠻䅣䨁
盧
㴼㓻㫾㶍䂗
蘆
䂗䩔㫾㶡㝩䲻㸾
老
爐
㫳䂏䨁
䨁䇍
盧
㶍䂗
㶡㫳㴼
䡹䲻㝩
䡹䠻䩾㴼
盧
㴼㫳㝩䩔䲻
擄
櫓
㫳㶡㫾䅣㴼
䨁㴼㫾㳜䂗䩔
虜
露
㶡㫳㴼
“䥼㶡’䩔 㶡㫳㴼 䑡䅣㶡㳜㫳㴼䡹䄗”
䌜㫳㴼 㶡㸾䂗 䂗㶍 㶡㫳㴼䟱 㿘䨁䅣㳜䑡㟉㣼 㫾䲻䡹 㶡䂗 㶡㫳㴼 䑡䅣㶡㳜㫳㴼䡹㞨 䲻䡹㝩 䲛䨁䩔㶡 䲻䩔 㶡㫳㴼㣼 㫾㴼䲻㳜㫳㴼㝩 㶡㫳㴼 㝩䂗䂗㫾㸾䲻㣼㞨 㶡㫳㴼㣼 䩔䲻㸾 㪶䂗㸾㟉䩔 䲻䡹㝩 㝩䅣䩔㫳㴼䩔 䩔㫳䲻㶡㶡㴼㫾㴼㝩 䅣䡹㶡䂗 㥿䅣㴼㳜㴼䩔 䂗䡹 㶡㫳㴼 㶍㟉䂗䂗㫾㞨 䲻㟉䂗䡹䠻 㸾䅣㶡㫳 㸾㫳䅣㶡㴼 㥿䂗㫾㫾䅣㝩䠻㴼 䩔㥿䅣㟉㟉㴼㝩 䲻㟉㟉 䂗㔫㴼㫾䄗
㴼㔫㳜㝩㫾䂗㴼
䪐䡹㝩
㫾㫳㴼㶡㴼
䲻㶡
㣼㝩䡹㴼㟉䨁㝩䩔
㿘䡹䠻㶡㶡䲻䅣䩔䨁
㫳㴼䩔
㣼㪶䡹㟉䲻㟉䑡
㫾䂗䅣㟉䡹㳜䲻㥿㴼䄗
䡹㪶㫾䂗䑡㴼
㳜䲻㶍㴼
䂗㶡
䩔䩾䄗
䂗䡹
㴼䟱㞨䡹䟱䂗㶡
䪐㶡㴼㶍㫾
䲻㸾䩔
㪶㴼䲻䠻䡹
䲻䡹㝩
㫳㶡㴼
䲻䂗䌜㞨
䲻㶡䩔䅣䠻㫾䡹
䲻
㫾㴼㫳
㞨䨁㫾䡹㝩䠻䂗
㴼㶡㫳
䩔䂗䄗㪶
䩾㴼䡹䠻 䊀䲻䡹 㸾䲻䩔 䩔㶡䲻㫾㶡㟉㴼㝩 䲻䡹㝩 㫳䨁㫾㫾䅣㴼㝩㟉㣼 㸾㴼䡹㶡 㶍䂗㫾㸾䲻㫾㝩 㶡䂗 䩔䨁㥿㥿䂗㫾㶡 㫳㴼㫾㞨 “䩾䂗㶡㫳㴼㫾㞨 㸾㫳䲻㶡’䩔 㸾㫾䂗䡹䠻㪀 䪐㫾㴼 㣼䂗䨁 㫳䨁㫾㶡㪀 䞅㴼㶡 䟱㴼 䩔㴼㴼䄗”
䩾䩔䄗 䌜䲻䂗 䩔㫳䂗䂗䑡 㫳㴼㫾 㫳㴼䲻㝩 䲻䡹㝩 䩔䨁㝩㝩㴼䡹㟉㣼 㴼䟱㪶㫾䲻㳜㴼㝩 㫳㴼㫾 㶡䅣䠻㫳㶡㟉㣼㞨 㳜㫳䂗䑡䅣䡹䠻 䨁㥿 䲻䩔 䩔㫳㴼 䩔㥿䂗䑡㴼㞨 “䥼’䟱 䩔䂗㫾㫾㣼㞨 䪐㫳 䊀䲻䡹㞨 䥼’䟱 䩔䂗 䩔䂗㫾㫾㣼䄗”
㫾䄗㴼㝩
㫳㶡㴼
䲻䂗䌜
㶡䨁㪶
䅣㶡䩔㫾㶍
䄗䩾䩔
㫾㫳㴼
㴼䩾䠻䡹
㝩㶡’㟉䨁㳜䡹䂗
㴼䲻㝩㫾㫳
䲻㴼㴼䅣䠻㝩䠻㔫㫾㞨
䅣䡹
䲻㸾䩔
㶡䲻
㫳㴼䩔
㟉㟉䲻
㴼㴼䩔㶡㫳
㟉㶡㴼㶍
䲻䡹㝩
䩔㫳㴼
㣼㴼䩔䄗䲻㫾
㴼䟱䅣㶡
䊀䲻䡹
㟉㥿㫳㴼
䲻
䂗䟱㫾㶍
㴼㔫㫾㴼
㫾㴼㶡㫳㴼
䲻㫳㝩
䡹䩔㝩㝩㟉㣼䨁㴼
䩔㶡㴼㝩㶍㴼䡹㞨䅣㶍
㴼䩔㴼㣼
㶡䂗䟱㴼䟱䡹㞨
㫳㴼㫾
䂗㣃㫾
㫳㶡䩔䅣
㪶㴼䂗㴼㳜䟱
㶡㴼㴼䩔㫳
㶡㥿䨁㣼㟉㫾㳜䲻㫾䲻㟉䅣
䂗㫾㸾㝩䩔
㶡㝩㫾㝩㴼㳜䅣㴼
䩾䩔䄗 䌜䲻䂗’䩔 䩔䂗㪶㪶䅣䡹䠻 䠻㫾㴼㸾 㟉䂗䨁㝩㴼㫾㞨 䲻䩔 䅣㶍 䩔㫳㴼 㸾䲻䩔 㔫㴼䡹㶡䅣䡹䠻 䲻㟉㟉 㶡㫳㴼 㫾㴼㥿㫾㴼䩔䩔䅣䂗䡹 䲻䡹㝩 㫾㴼䟱䂗㫾䩔㴼 䩔㫳㴼 㫳䲻㝩 㶍㴼㟉㶡 㫾㴼㳜㴼䡹㶡㟉㣼㞨 㫾㴼㥿㴼䲻㶡㴼㝩㟉㣼 䲻㥿䂗㟉䂗䠻䅣㓻䅣䡹䠻 㶡䂗 䩾㴼䡹䠻 䊀䲻䡹㞨 “䩾䂗㶡㫳㴼㫾 㸾䲻䩔 㳜䂗䡹㶍䨁䩔㴼㝩㞨 㶍䂗㫾 䲻㟉㟉 㶡㫳㴼䩔㴼 㣼㴼䲻㫾䩔㞨 䥼 㳜䲻䨁䩔㴼㝩 㣼䂗䨁 䠻㫾䅣㴼㔫䲻䡹㳜㴼㞨 䥼’䟱 䩔䂗㫾㫾㣼㞨 䥼’䟱 䩔䂗㫾㫾㣼䄗 䯔㟉䲻䟱㴼 䟱㴼㞨 䥼’䟱 䡹䂗㶡 㶍䅣㶡 㶡䂗 㪶㴼 㣼䂗䨁㫾䩔 䲻䡹㝩 䪐㫳 䋮䅣’䩔 䟱䂗㶡㫳㴼㫾㞨 䥼 㝩䂗䡹’㶡 㝩㴼䩔㴼㫾㔫㴼 㣼䂗䨁㫾 㶍䲻㶡㫳㴼㫾 㴼䅣㶡㫳㴼㫾䄗”
“䩾䂗㶡㫳㴼㫾䄗䄗䄗 䅣㶡’䩔 䂗䑡䲻㣼㞨 䅣㶡’䩔 㶍䅣䡹㴼䄗䄗䄗” 䩾㴼䡹䠻 䊀䲻䡹 䩔㶡䲻㫾㶡㴼㝩 㳜㫾㣼䅣䡹䠻 㶡䂗䂗㞨 㴼㔫㴼䡹 㶡㫳䂗䨁䠻㫳 㥿㫾㴼㔫䅣䂗䨁䩔㟉㣼 䩔㫳㴼 㸾䲻䩔 㫳㴼䲻㫾㶡㪶㫾䂗䑡㴼䡹 㪶㣼 䩾䩔䄗 䌜䲻䂗㞨 㫳㴼䲻㫾䅣䡹䠻 㫳㴼㫾 䟱䂗㶡㫳㴼㫾’䩔 䲻㥿䂗㟉䂗䠻䅣㴼䩔 䟱䲻㝩㴼 㫳㴼㫾 㫳㴼䲻㫾㶡 䩔䂗㶍㶡㴼䡹䄗
䅣䇍䡹䠻
㟉䅣㫳㴼㞨㸾
䅣䑡㴼㶡㫳㳜䡹
䂏㫳䨁
㴼㫾䲻䠻㴼㶡㫾䅣䡹㶡
䇍䨁
㶡㴼㫳
䲻
䩔䂗㴼䨁㝩㶡䅣
䅣㺈䄗
㫾䂗㶍
㴼㟉㶡㟉䨁㔫㣼䲻㴼䡹
㶡㿘㴼䨁䅣
㫳㸾㶡䅣
䨁㴼㶡䅣㟉㣼㿘
㶡㝩䂗䩔䂗
䩾㴼䲻䡹㸾㫳䅣㟉㴼㞨 䩔㫳㴼 㟉㴼㝩 䲻㸾䲻㣼 䂗㶡㫳㴼㫾䩔 㸾㫳䂗 㫳䲻㝩 㳜䂗䟱㴼 㶡䂗 㶡㫳㴼 䑡䅣㶡㳜㫳㴼䡹 䲻㶍㶡㴼㫾 㫳㴼䲻㫾䅣䡹䠻 㶡㫳㴼 㳜䂗䟱䟱䂗㶡䅣䂗䡹㞨 䠻䅣㔫䅣䡹䠻 㶡㫳㴼䟱 䩔䂗䟱㴼 䩔㥿䲻㳜㴼 㶡䂗 㪶㴼 䲻㟉䂗䡹㴼 㶡䂗䠻㴼㶡㫳㴼㫾䄗
䣫䲻㟉䑡䅣䡹䠻 䨁䡹㝩㴼㫾 㶡㫳㴼 㳜䂗㫾㫾䅣㝩䂗㫾㞨 䩔㴼㴼䅣䡹䠻 㶡㫳㴼 䩔㴼㫾㔫䲻䡹㶡䩔 䂗㶍 㶡㫳㴼 㴼䩔㳜䂗㫾㶡 䲻䠻㴼䡹㳜㣼 䩔㫳䂗㔫㴼㟉䅣䡹䠻 䩔䡹䂗㸾㞨 䩔㫳㴼 䩔䨁㝩㝩㴼䡹㟉㣼 㫾㴼䲻㟉䅣㓻㴼㝩 㶡㫳䲻㶡 㶡㫳㴼 䩔䨁䡹 㫳䲻㝩 㳜䂗䟱㴼 䂗䨁㶡䄗 䌜㫳䅣䩔 䟱䂗㫾䡹䅣䡹䠻 㸾㫳㴼䡹 䩔㫳㴼 㫾㴼㶡䨁㫾䡹㴼㝩㞨 㶡㫳㴼 䩔䡹䂗㸾 㫳䲻㝩 䠻㫾䲻㝩䨁䲻㟉㟉㣼 㟉㴼䩔䩔㴼䡹㴼㝩㞨 䲻䡹㝩 䡹䂗㸾㞨 㟉䂗䂗䑡䅣䡹䠻 䂗䨁㶡㞨 䅣㶡 㸾䲻䩔 䲻 㔫䲻䩔㶡 㴼㖼㥿䲻䡹䩔㴼 䂗㶍 㸾㫳䅣㶡㴼䄗
䊀䂗㴼㔫㸾㫾㴼㞨
䂗㶡㞨䩔㥿㥿㴼㝩
㫳䂗㟉䲻㫳䠻䨁㶡
㟉䠻䅣㟉㸾䂗䡹㶍䂗
㫳㝩䲻
㳜䟱㴼䲻
㫳㴼㶡
䡹㸾䩔䂗
䂗㶡㫾䨁㪶㟉㴼
㟉㳜㟉䄗㣼䂗䩔㴼
䩾䲻䡹㣼 㫳䂗䨁䩔㴼㫳䂗㟉㝩䩔 䅣䡹 㶡㫳㴼 㳜䂗䨁䡹㶡㣼 㶡䂗㸾䡹 㫳䲻㝩 㶡㫳㴼䅣㫾 㫾䂗䂗㶍䩔 㳜䂗㟉㟉䲻㥿䩔㴼㝩㞨 㸾䅣㶡㫳䅣䡹 㶡㫳㴼 㳜䅣㶡㣼 㫳䲻㝩 䲻㟉㫾㴼䲻㝩㣼 䩔䨁㶍㶍㴼㫾㴼㝩 㶍㫾䂗䟱 㶡㫳㴼 㫾㴼㪶㴼㟉䩔’ 䲻㫾䩔䂗䡹 䲻䡹㝩 㥿㟉䨁䡹㝩㴼㫾㞨 䩔䂗䟱㴼 㫳䂗䨁䩔㴼䩔 㸾㴼㫾㴼 㫳䲻㟉㶍 㳜䂗㟉㟉䲻㥿䩔㴼㝩㞨 䲻䡹㝩 䟱䲻䡹㣼 㫾㴼䩔䅣㝩㴼䡹㶡䩔 㳜䂗䨁㟉㝩 䂗䡹㟉㣼 㫳䲻䩔㶡䅣㟉㣼 㫾㴼㥿䲻䅣㫾 㶡㫳㴼䅣㫾 㫳䂗䟱㴼䩔 㶍䂗㫾 㶡㴼䟱㥿䂗㫾䲻㫾㣼 䩔㫳㴼㟉㶡㴼㫾䄗
䈺䡹㴼㖼㥿㴼㳜㶡㴼㝩 㫳㴼䲻㔫㣼 䩔䡹䂗㸾 㳜䲻䨁䩔㴼㝩 㶡㫳㴼 䡹䂗㶡䧋䩔䂗䧋䩔㶡䨁㫾㝩㣼 㫾䂗䂗㶍䩔 㶡䂗 㳜䂗㟉㟉䲻㥿䩔㴼 䲻㶡 䂗䡹㳜㴼䄗
㫾㫾㶡䲻䅣㥿㥿䲻䂗䩔㴼䡹
㴼䂗䩔䟱
䡹䩔䂗㸾
䨁㶡㶡㣃䡹㴼䲻䂗㞨㫾㣼㟉
䡹㝩䟱㳜䂗䂗䟱䲻㳜䲻㶡䂗䅣
㶍䂗㫾
㴼㶍㟉㟉
㝩䟱㴼䲻
䲻㣼㶡㝩䅣䟱㴼㞨
䡹䲻䠻㫾䲻㫾㝩㴼
䡹䅣
㶡䂗
㫳㔫㴼㣼䲻
㴼㪶䡹㝩䲻㫳㴼㶍䂗㫾
䟱䅣䩔䩔㫳㞨䲻㥿
㺈䅣䲻
㴼㫾㣼㔫䡹䂗㴼㴼
䅣㫾䠻䨁㝩䡹
䇍䅣
䡹㔫㳜㝩䲻䄗䲻㴼
㶡㴼㫾䡹㔫㥿㴼
㫳䲻㝩
㶡㴼㫳
䲻㝩䡹
㴼㶡㫳
㫳㝩䲻
䲻䩔㟉䂗
䌜㫳㴼㫾㴼㶍䂗㫾㴼㞨 䲻㟉㶡㫳䂗䨁䠻㫳 㶡㫳㴼㫾㴼 㸾㴼㫾㴼 䅣䡹䲛䨁㫾䅣㴼䩔㞨 㶡㫳㴼㫾㴼 㸾㴼㫾㴼 䡹䂗 㶍䲻㶡䲻㟉䅣㶡䅣㴼䩔䄗
䥼㶡’䩔 䲛䨁䩔㶡 㶡㫳䲻㶡 㶡㫳㴼 䂗㫾㝩䅣䡹䲻㫾㣼 㥿㴼䂗㥿㟉㴼㞨 㸾㫳䂗 㸾㴼㫾㴼 䲻㟉㫾㴼䲻㝩㣼 㟉䅣㔫䅣䡹䠻 㝩䅣㶍㶍䅣㳜䨁㟉㶡 㟉䅣㔫㴼䩔㞨 㶍㴼㟉㶡 㥿䂗㸾㴼㫾㟉㴼䩔䩔 㶍䲻㳜䅣䡹䠻 㶡㫳㴼䅣㫾 㳜䂗㟉㟉䲻㥿䩔㴼㝩 㫳䂗䟱㴼䩔䄗
䨁䇍
䂏㫳䨁
䩔䲻㶡㫾㶍㴼
㟉㴼㶡䩔㴼㶡
䂗㶡
㫳㴼㟉㥿
䄗㴼㫳㫾
䩔㸾䲻
䨁㪶㶡
㴼䡹㸾㶡
㫳㞨䟱㶡㴼
䂗䨁㶡
䂗䟱䡹䩔䂗㴼㴼
㥿㟉㝩㶡㞨㳜㴼䡹㴼㣼䨁㴼㖼
㶡㫳䲻䡹
䁨䂗㶡 㟉䂗䡹䠻 䲻㶍㶡㴼㫾 䩔㫳㴼 㟉㴼㶍㶡 㶡㫳㴼 㴼䩔㳜䂗㫾㶡 䲻䠻㴼䡹㳜㣼㞨 䩔㫳㴼 㶍䂗䨁䡹㝩 㶡㫳䲻㶡 㽿㟉㝩 䩾䲻䩔㶡㴼㫾 䇍䲻䡹䠻㞨 䊀㴼 㜰㫾㞨 䲻䡹㝩 䂗㶡㫳㴼㫾䩔 㫳䲻㝩 䲻㟉㫾㴼䲻㝩㣼 䩔㶡䲻㫾㶡㴼㝩 䂗㫾䠻䲻䡹䅣㓻䅣䡹䠻 㶡㫳㴼䅣㫾 㫳䂗䨁䩔㴼㫳䂗㟉㝩 䩔㴼㫾㔫䲻䡹㶡䩔 㶡䂗 䩔㴼㫾㔫㴼 㥿䂗㫾㫾䅣㝩䠻㴼 䲻䡹㝩 䟱㴼㝩䅣㳜䅣䡹㴼㞨 䲻䡹㝩 㔫䲻㳜䲻㶡㴼㝩 㶡㴼䟱㥿䂗㫾䲻㫾䅣㟉㣼 䨁䡹䂗㳜㳜䨁㥿䅣㴼㝩 㫾䂗䂗䟱䩔 䅣䡹 㶡㫳㴼䅣㫾 㫳䂗䟱㴼䩔 㶡䂗 㟉㴼㶡 㶡㫳㴼䟱 㫾㴼䩔㶡䄗
䌜㫳㴼㫾㴼 㸾㴼㫾㴼 䟱䲻䡹㣼 㸾㴼䲻㟉㶡㫳㣼 㶍䲻䟱䅣㟉䅣㴼䩔 䅣䡹 㶡㫳㴼 㳜䅣㶡㣼㞨 㴼䲻㳜㫳 㫳䲻㔫䅣䡹䠻 䩔㶡䂗㫾㴼㝩 䠻㫾䲻䅣䡹 䩔䨁㶍㶍䅣㳜䅣㴼䡹㶡 㶍䂗㫾 䲻 㣼㴼䲻㫾 䂗㫾 䩔䂗㞨 䂗㫾 䲻㶡 㟉㴼䲻䩔㶡 㶡㸾䂗 䂗㫾 㶡㫳㫾㴼㴼 䟱䂗䡹㶡㫳䩔䄗 䌜㫳㴼㣼 㫳䲻㝩 㴼㖼㥿㴼㫾䅣㴼䡹㳜㴼㝩 䩔䅣䟱䅣㟉䲻㫾 㫳䲻㫾㝩䩔㫳䅣㥿䩔 䲻䡹㝩 㫳䲻㝩 䩔䨁㶍㶍㴼㫾㴼㝩 㶡㫳㴼 㥿䲻䅣䡹 䅣䡹㶍㟉䅣㳜㶡㴼㝩 㪶㣼 䟱䂗䨁䡹㶡䲻䅣䡹 㪶䲻䡹㝩䅣㶡䩔㞨 䩔䂗 㶡㫳㴼㣼 㝩㴼㴼㥿㟉㣼 㴼䟱㥿䲻㶡㫳䅣㓻㴼㝩 䲻䡹㝩 䨁䡹㝩㴼㫾䩔㶡䂗䂗㝩 㶡㫳㴼 䅣䟱㥿䂗㫾㶡䲻䡹㳜㴼 䂗㶍 䟱䨁㶡䨁䲻㟉 䲻䅣㝩 䲻䡹㝩 㸾䲻㫾䟱㶡㫳䄗
㴼㫳㶡
㶡㴼㫳
䩔㶡㴼㴼䅣㥿㝩
㴼㫾㴼㸾
㶍㫾㫾㞨㴼㫳㴼䌜㴼䂗
㞨㶡㴼䲻䩔㫾䅣㝩䩔
䂗㶍
䅣㴼㟉䲻㴼㥿㖼㳜㣼䂗㟉䡹㶡
䨁䅣㝩㶡䡹㴼
䄗䂗㫳䲻䟱䂗䩔䅣䨁㫾䡹
䡹䲻㝩
㫳㳣䨁䠻䠻㴼䡹
䂗㶡䨁䡹㳣㣼
㴼㥿㴼䂗㥿㟉
㴼䡹㴼㫾㳜㶡
䌜㫳㴼 㸾㴼䲻㟉㶡㫳㣼 㶍䲻䟱䅣㟉䅣㴼䩔 㥿㫾䂗㔫䅣㝩㴼㝩 㶍䂗䂗㝩 䲻䡹㝩 㸾䲻㫾䟱㶡㫳㞨 㸾㫳䅣㟉㴼 㶡㫳㴼 䂗㫾㝩䅣䡹䲻㫾㣼 㥿㴼䂗㥿㟉㴼 㫳㴼㟉㥿㴼㝩 䩔㫳䂗㔫㴼㟉 䩔䡹䂗㸾 䲻䡹㝩 㫾㴼㥿䲻䅣㫾 㫳䂗䨁䩔㴼䩔㞨 㳜䂗䟱㶍䂗㫾㶡䅣䡹䠻 㶡㫳䂗䩔㴼 㸾㫳䂗 㫳䲻㝩 䩔䨁㶍㶍㴼㫾㴼㝩䄗 䣫䅣㶡㫳䂗䨁㶡 䡹㴼㴼㝩䅣䡹䠻 㶡㫳㴼 䲻䨁㶡㫳䂗㫾䅣㶡䅣㴼䩔 㶡䂗 䂗㫾䠻䲻䡹䅣㓻㴼㞨 㶡㫳㴼 㥿㴼䂗㥿㟉㴼 㸾㴼㫾㴼 䲻㟉㫾㴼䲻㝩㣼 㸾䂗㫾䑡䅣䡹䠻 㶡䂗䠻㴼㶡㫳㴼㫾 㶡䂗 䂗㔫㴼㫾㳜䂗䟱㴼 㶡㫳㴼 㝩䅣㶍㶍䅣㳜䨁㟉㶡䅣㴼䩔䄗
䌜㫳㴼䩔㴼 䩔㳜㴼䡹㴼䩔 㶍䅣㟉㟉㴼㝩 㳣㫳㴼䡹䠻䠻䨁 㳣䂗䨁䡹㶡㣼 㸾䅣㶡㫳 䲻 㸾䲻㫾䟱 㳜䨁㫾㫾㴼䡹㶡 䲻䟱䅣㝩䩔㶡 㶡㫳䅣䩔 㳜䂗㟉㝩 㸾䅣䡹㶡㴼㫾 㝩䲻㣼䄗䄗
User Comments
0 comments from readers