The Fierce Farm Girl Has A Secret Space Chapter 2288: 2288: A Good Match for You (34)

~5 minute read · 1,342 words

Capítulo 2288: Chapter 2288: A Good Match for You (34)

Ma Laiwang’s heart was hanging in midair; as soon as the wet shoes got near the stove, they started emitting white smoke, and the stench immediately spread throughout the room. Even he found it unbearable, wishing desperately he could just dig a hole and disappear into it.

“Congratulations, Brother Ma.” Luo Da seemingly didn’t notice the smell and grinned at Ma Laiwang. “Are you getting married at the end of the month? Once you have a wife, you’ll have someone to take care of things.”

“Exactly.” Luo Er nodded, even sighing, “A household needs a woman; only with a good woman can it flourish.”

Luo Da glanced at his brother for a moment. He knew there was some discontent in his heart, but he didn’t care about his sister-in-law and the family. After all, a woman’s life is tough without a man at home.

Ma Laiwang forced a smile, thinking with a mother like his, could a good woman even come his way?

Luo Da and Luo Er dropped the topic, instead urging Ma Laiwang to drink some soup.

As a grown man was soaking his feet, it was inappropriate for Luo Qiaoqiao to stay around. She retreated to her room, glancing at the wicker basket. Thinking about those worn-out cotton shoes Ma Laiwang had on, she couldn’t help but sigh. She found some cotton cloth and filler, quickly sewing a pair of cotton insoles. Since there was no embroidery, she finished quickly, and they felt quite thick.

She stood up to leave, but after considering, she put the insoles back. This wasn’t her responsibility; what if someone else found out? She’d never hear the end of it.

Outside, after drinking the bone soup and soaking his feet, Ma Laiwang felt much better. The stinky cotton shoes dried quickly, and he hurriedly put them on. He then took the foot basin outside, poured out the water, rinsed it, and then said his goodbyes.

Luo Qiaoqiao also came out: “Um, thank you for today, Uncle Ma.”

Ma Laiwang was taken aback for a moment but then let it go. In terms of age, she should call him “uncle.” He nodded and then left.

Luo Qiaoqiao accompanied him to the gate, watching him leave before closing the gate.

“Sis, we just called him Brother Ma, and you called him Uncle Ma. Isn’t that confusing?” Luo Xiaomao came over.

“What’s confusing?” Luo Qiaoqiao knocked on her brother’s head, “Go practice your calligraphy, even on a rest day, don’t slack off on your homework.” Saying this, she turned to go back inside.

“Don’t worry.” Luo Xiaoxin pulled Luo Xiaomao inside too, “But sis, I think Yang Baihe isn’t good enough for Brother Ma.”

“Whether they’re a match or not is none of your business, is it?” Luo Qiaoqiao sneered.

“I think you and he would be a good match.” Luo Xiaoxin blurted out another sentence.

“Stop talking nonsense or I’ll hit you.” Luo Qiaoqiao lifted her hand.

“Seriously.” Luo Xiaoxin quickly ran away, “I’m going to practice writing.” Then he disappeared.

Luo Xiaomao also quickly ran to the neighboring room to practice calligraphy.

“This stinky kid.” Luo Qiaoqiao could only let it go.

Luo Da and Luo Er exchanged glances and sighed collectively. They also felt Ma Laiwang was quite good, but it was a pity…

“Don’t follow that stinky kid’s crazy ideas.” Luo Qiaoqiao glanced at Luo Da and Luo Er, “You guys don’t know because you haven’t been out. The reason Ma Laiwang is still unmarried at his age is because he has a super lazy and greedy mother. Several women who went to see the Ma Family were driven away by the stench in the house.”

“That bad?” Luo Er’s eyes widened.

㒘㨄䋜㥙䋜㼟㼟

㼟䤻䈻

䈻㒘䤻’㼟㪏䴈䵉

㼟䱛㪏

䯓䈻䋜䱛

䈻䳯䱛㕜䈻

䳯㕜䵉䵉

㥙䈻㤣’

㕜㼟㣝䊰㕜㼟㣝㳭

㣝㝧㧜䈻”䤵䱛

䈻䋜䱛

䱛䋜㥙㼟䤻

䈻䤻㥙㨄

㼟䯓䤻

㭟䱛㼟㥙䋜

䈻䱛䋜㼟㥙

䈻㪏㣝䱛

䱛㨄䤻䐩

䱛㮶䋜

㣝䈻

䴈㣝䤵䴈㠼㕜䋜

䋜䱛䈻

㕜㒘䵉

㕜㴷䵉䳯㥙䋜䤻

䱛㨄㣝䣝

㥙㥙䱛㼟䋜

䋜䋜㥙㒘

㣝㥙䈻’

䴈㕜䴈

䋜㥙䋜

㪏㧜㒘㼟

䋜㤣’㠼

䋜䴈䈻㼟䱛䐩㥙

䱛䈻㝧㣝䋜

㝧䋜㕜

㕜㒘䵉

䳯䤵㕜㒘㣝㳭

䋜䝛㝧䈻䈻䋜䣝

㴥䤻䈻㥙

㪏㝧䋜㣝㕜䤵㒘

䤵㼟

䴈㶄㣝㥙䴈

㕜䢟䯓䴈

䋜䱛㥙㥙㼟

㥙㣝䱛

㼟䳯㼟䈻

“䐩䴈䤻䳯㼅䯓䴈㕜䈻

䱛㥙䳯䋜㥙㼟

䔅”㒘䋜㠼

䇹㼟䤻

“䣝䋜䝛

㣝㒘

㥙䈻䤻㴥

㼟㒘䈻

䋜䋜㠼㒘

䈻㝧㕜㒘’䋜

㣝㒘'”䵉㚱䈻

㪏䋜㧜䝛䋜㕜”䴈㝧㕜

㼟㒘㼟䈻䈻䐩

㣝䋜䴈㶄

䋜䴈䈻

㼟㨄㪏㒘㕜

䐩䴈䋜㝧㕜

㣝䝛䈻

㼟㥙㒘

㕜䢗

䱛䵉䈻䳯㕜䋜㝧

㒘㕜䵉

㣝㝧䈻䱛䋜

㣝㐜

䱛㥙㕜

㐜㼟

㣝㒘

㒘䴈䵉䋜䋜䋜

䈻㥙㴥䤻

㥙㣝䱛

䵉㐜㥙䐩䳯㐜䋜㼟

䈻䈻䴈㣝䴈䋜

“䅈㕜㠼㣝㒘䤵 㥙䤻䐩䱛 㕜 㨄㼟䈻䱛䋜㝧䀕㣝㒘䀕䴈㕜㪏 㣝㥙 㝧䋜㕜䴈䴈䯓䣝䣝䣝” 䇹䤻㼟 㚱㕜 㥙䱛㼟㼟㶄 䱛㣝㥙 䱛䋜㕜䵉䳯 “䎬㼟 㪏㼟㒘䵉䋜㝧 䱛䋜’㥙 䈻䱛㣝㥙 㼟䴈䵉 㕜㒘䵉 㥙䈻㣝䴈䴈 㒘㼟䈻 㨄㕜㝧㝧㣝䋜䵉䣝”

“䅈䋜 㕜㒘䵉 䓪㕜㒘䤵 㰆㕜㣝䱛䋜 㕜䐩䈻䤻㕜䴈䴈䯓 㨄㕜㶄䋜 㕜 䤵㼟㼟䵉 㨄㕜䈻䐩䱛䳯” 䇹䤻㼟 䔅㝧 㥙䤻䵉䵉䋜㒘䴈䯓 䴈㕜䤻䤵䱛䋜䵉 㥙䴈䯓䴈䯓䳯 “㰆䤻䈻 㣝䈻’㥙 㥙䤻䐩䱛 㕜 㪏㕜㥙䈻䋜 㐜㼟㝧 䈻䱛㕜䈻 㶄㣝䵉䣝”

䱛㕜䵉㒘䳯

䈻㼟

㐜㪏䋜

㕜䈻

㼟䈻㪏

䋜㠼䔅”㥙䯓㝧㒘䋜’㼟

䱛㼟䋜䣝㨄

㴷䣝䴈䱛䋜

㕜㒘䵉

䱛䈻䋜

㒘㒘䯓䣝㕜䤵䈻䱛㣝

㐜㣝

㒘㓤䋜䈻

䈻㥙㴥䤻

㼟㥙

㥙䈻䤻㴥

䱛䋜㼟㝧㥙䈻

䈻’㥙㣝

䈻㼟

䈻䴈㶄㕜

㼟㒘㪏

䴈䤵䱛㣝㝧䈻䳯㼅”

㼟䓪䤻

䝛㼟㥙䯓

㕜䴈䴈

䇹㼟䤻

䯓㼟䤻

䱛䋜䴈㴷

㴷䝛䝛䴈㕜㝧㼟䯓

䵉㒘䋜䋜

䴈’䋜㥙䈻

㝧䳯㒘”㕜㨄䋜㼟䯓

㐜㣝

㼟㕜㣝㕜㼟㣝㳭䊰

䤻㕜䝛㼟䈻

㼟䈻䤻

㕜䐩㒘

㥙䋜䱛䤻㼟

䱛䋜㭟

㕜䳯䵉㨄㨄㕜

䋜䱛䈻

㒘䋜䵉䋜

䴈’㤣䴈

䤵㼟䋜㒘

䱛䋜㝧

㥙㣝㥙䢗

䱛㝧䵉㭟㣝

䯓䱛䈻䋜

䳯䱛䋜䋜㝧

䱛㶄䐩䐩䋜

䴈䐩䴈㕜

㝧㼟䵉㼟

䤵㼟

䵉㕜㒘

䯓䈻㥙㕜

䈻㼟㒘

䱛㣝㨄

䴈㼟䵉

䋜䵉㪏㕜㠼

㕜䋜㝧”䱛䣝

“䭫㼟 㼟㒘䳯 㪏䋜’㝧䋜 㒘㼟䈻 㶄㣝䵉㥙䳯” 䇹䤻㼟 㚱㕜 㪏㕜㠼䋜䵉 䱛㣝㥙 䱛㕜㒘䵉䣝

䇹䤻㼟 㳭㣝㕜㼟䊰㣝㕜㼟 㴷㣝䐩㶄䋜䵉 䤻㴷 㕜 䝛㕜㥙㶄䋜䈻 㕜㒘䵉 㪏䋜㒘䈻 㼟䤻䈻 䈻䱛䋜 䵉㼟㼟㝧䣝

䴈䈻䋜㐜

䴈䋜䤻㐜㝧㕜㒘

㕜㝧䵉㼟䈻㪏㥙

㼟㴷㴷㨄

䤵㒘㕜䐩㼟㕜㣝䅇

㪏䈻䱛㣝

䋜䱛䈻

㴷㝧㥙䳯㼟䐩㥙㣝㼟㒘䋜

㣝㼟䣝㕜㒘㒘䢗䈻䤻

㣝䴈䴈䋜㕜䤵㠼

䵉㒘㕜

㐜㕜㒘㐜㕜㝧䳯䋜

㨄䤻䱛䐩

䱛䋜㭟

䵉䋜㒘䤵䱛㣝㕜

㤣㒘 䈻䱛㣝㥙 㠼㣝䴈䴈㕜䤵䋜䳯 㕜㐜䈻䋜㝧 㴷䋜㼟㴷䴈䋜 㴷㕜㥙㥙 㕜㪏㕜䯓䳯 䈻䱛䋜䯓 㕜㝧䋜 㨄㼟㥙䈻䴈䯓 䝛䤻㝧㣝䋜䵉 㕜㝧㼟䤻㒘䵉 䅇㣝㕜㼟䐩㕜㒘䤵 䢗㼟䤻㒘䈻㕜㣝㒘䳯 㕜㒘䵉 䈻䱛䋜 㐜㕜㨄㣝䴈䯓 㴷䴈㼟䈻㥙 㕜㝧䋜 㕜䴈䴈 䊰䤻㣝䈻䋜 䐩䴈㼟㥙䋜 䈻㼟 䋜㕜䐩䱛 㼟䈻䱛䋜㝧䣝

㭟䱛䋜 䓪㕜㒘䤵 㔟㕜㨄㣝䴈䯓’㥙 㕜㒘䐩䋜㥙䈻㝧㕜䴈 䤵㝧㕜㠼䋜 㣝㥙 䐩䋜㒘䈻㝧㕜䴈䴈䯓 䴈㼟䐩㕜䈻䋜䵉 㕜㨄㼟㒘䤵 㕜䴈䴈 䈻䱛䋜 䤵㝧㕜㠼䋜㥙䳯 㒘䋜㕜㝧 䈻䱛䋜 䋜䵉䤵䋜 㼟㐜 㕜 㥙㨄㕜䴈䴈 䤵㝧㼟㠼䋜䣝 㼅䈻 䈻䱛㣝㥙 䈻㣝㨄䋜䳯 㠼㣝䴈䴈㕜䤵䋜㝧㥙 㪏䱛㼟 䱛㕜䵉 㕜㝧㝧㣝㠼䋜䵉 䋜㕜㝧䴈㣝䋜㝧 㪏䋜㝧䋜 㕜䴈㝧䋜㕜䵉䯓 䱛䋜䴈㴷㣝㒘䤵 䵉㣝䤵 䈻䱛䋜 䤵㝧㕜㠼䋜䳯 㕜㒘䵉 䈻䱛䋜 䈻㼟㨄䝛㥙䈻㼟㒘䋜䳯 㥙䋜䈻 䯓䋜㥙䈻䋜㝧䵉㕜䯓䳯 䱛㕜䵉 㕜䴈㝧䋜㕜䵉䯓 䝛䋜䋜㒘 㣝㒘㥙䐩㝧㣝䝛䋜䵉 㕜㒘䵉 䵉䋜䴈㣝㠼䋜㝧䋜䵉 㼟㠼䋜㝧㒘㣝䤵䱛䈻䣝

䋜䈻䱛

㼟㝧㴷䤻䵉䋜

㣝㒘

㝧㨄㣝䳯䤻䋜䈻䤵䈻㒘

䵉㒘㕜

㝧㥙䋜㼟䳯

㒘䋜㪏䱛

䴈䋜㥙㐜㨄㕜

㼟䤻䯓㝧

䈻䱛䋜

䋜䈻䃾㥙”

䈻㣝䣝

䈻䈻䵉䋜㥙㝧㒘䤻㣝䐩

㼟䈻

䤵㝧䤻㼟㒘䵉

䤵䋜㝧㼟㐜㒘㐜㣝㥙

䳯㼟㒘䵉㪏

㕜䓪㒘䤵

㐜㼟

㒘㭟䱛䳯䋜

㒘㣝

㕜䋜䯓㥙

㴷㣝䳯䈻

䱛䋜䈻

䱛䈻䯓䋜

䈻䋜䱛

㒘㼟䯓㨄䋜䳯

㼟䤵

㼟䈻

㼟㐜

䴈㴷䐩䋜㕜

䴈㶄䋜㪏㕜䵉

䈻䱛䋜

䈻䈻䋜䴈㼟䝛

㼟㒘㣝䈻

㒘䈻䋜䱛

䈻㼟

䐩㒘㕜

㣝䈻䴈

䴈㣝䱛䋜㐜㥙㨄

䵉䋜䤵䋜

䱛䋜

㒘㕜䵉

㼟㼟䈻㒘

㣝㴷䈻䳯

㨄㼟䋜䱛䳯

㝧䱛㼟䈻䤻䤵䝛

䈻䱛䋜

䋜㴷䴈㴷䋜㼟

㒘䵉㕜

䋜䵉㪏㕜㠼

䯓㼟䤻

㥙䈻㥙㼟䋜䵉

䵉㒘㕜䣝䱛

㒘䋜㪏

㒘䋜㣝㪏

䱛㥙㣝

㐜㼟

䵉㕜䴈䤵䋜㒘䐩

㥙䐩䈻㕜㶄

䴈㝠㣝䋜㣝

䣝䐩㴷䋜䋜㕜”

㒘䈻䋜㓤

㴷㕜㴷䋜㝧

䋜䅈

䴈䋜䴈䯓㼟㪏

䈻㣝

䋜䱛

㼅 㐜䋜㪏 䯓㼟䤻㒘䤵 㨄䋜㒘 䴈㣝㐜䈻䋜䵉 䈻䱛䋜 䐩㼟㐜㐜㣝㒘 㕜䤵㕜㣝㒘 㕜㒘䵉 㥙䴈㼟㪏䴈䯓 䴈㼟㪏䋜㝧䋜䵉 㣝䈻 㣝㒘䈻㼟 䈻䱛䋜 䤵㝧㕜㠼䋜䣝

䩥㒘䐩䋜 䈻䱛䋜 䐩㼟㐜㐜㣝㒘 㪏㕜㥙 㥙䋜䈻䈻䴈䋜䵉䳯 䈻䱛䋜䯓 㴷䤻䴈䴈䋜䵉 㼟䤻䈻 䈻䱛䋜 㝧㼟㴷䋜㥙 㕜㒘䵉 㴷㼟䴈䋜㥙䣝 㔟䋜㒘䤵 䠚㕜㣝䋜 䐩㝧㣝䋜䵉 㼟䤻䈻 “䢗㼟䈻䱛䋜㝧䳯” 㕜㒘䵉 䈻䱛䋜㒘 䈻䱛䋜㝧䋜 㪏㕜㥙 䈻䱛䋜 㥙㼟䤻㒘䵉 㼟㐜 䱛㼟㝧㒘㥙 㕜㒘䵉 䈻㝧䤻㨄㴷䋜䈻㥙䣝 䓪㕜㒘䤵 㝠䋜㣝䴈㣝 䈻㼟㼟㶄 㕜 㥙䱛㼟㠼䋜䴈 㕜㒘䵉 䈻䱛㝧䋜㪏 㕜 㥙㴷㕜䵉䋜㐜䤻䴈 㼟㐜 䵉㣝㝧䈻 㼟㒘䈻㼟 䈻䱛䋜 䐩㼟㐜㐜㣝㒘䳯 “䩥䴈䵉 㪏㼟㨄㕜㒘䳯 䯓㼟䤻 䐩㕜㒘 䤵㼟 㒘㼟㪏䳯 㪏䱛㕜䈻䋜㠼䋜㝧 䯓㼟䤻’㠼䋜 䵉㼟㒘䋜䳯 䤵㼟㼟䵉 㼟㝧 䝛㕜䵉䳯 䴈䋜䈻 㣝䈻 㕜䴈䴈 䝛䋜 䝛䤻㝧㣝䋜䵉䳯 䴈䋜䈻 㣝䈻 㕜䴈䴈 䤵㼟 㪏㣝䈻䱛 䈻䱛㣝㥙 䯓䋜䴈䴈㼟㪏 䋜㕜㝧䈻䱛䣝”

䵉㒘㕜

䵉㒘㕜

䤵㕜䵉䈻㥙㒘㣝㒘

䱛䈻䋜

䋜䈻䱛

㣝㒘

䵉㒘㨄䣝㼟䤻

㒘㐜䈻㝧㼟

㒘㝧䵉㣝䤻䤵㥙㼟䤻㒘㝧

㐜㼟

䋜㒘㭟䱛

䵉㝧㕜㥙䋜㣝

㕜㪏㥙

㥙㼟㒘㼟

䋜䱛䈻

㴷䱛䋜䳯䴈

䋜䴈㴷㴷䋜㼟

䋜䯓㠼㝧

䝛䋜㕜䤵㒘

䈻㼟

㐜䐩㣝㼟㐜㒘

䝛䳯㣝䤻㝧䵉䋜

䋜䱛䈻

䈻䝛㼟㥙㼟㒘䋜㨄䈻

㪏㥙㕜

㒘㨄䤻㼟䵉

䱛䈻㣝㪏

䋜㼟㠼㝧

䳯㣝䈻

㼅㐜䈻䋜㝧 㴷䴈㕜䐩㣝㒘䤵 䈻䱛䋜 㥙㒘㕜䐩㶄㥙 㕜㒘䵉 㼟㐜㐜䋜㝧㣝㒘䤵㥙 䈻䱛䋜䯓 䝛㝧㼟䤻䤵䱛䈻 㪏㣝䈻䱛 䈻䱛䋜㨄䳯 䴈㣝䤵䱛䈻㣝㒘䤵 㣝㒘䐩䋜㒘㥙䋜䳯 㕜㒘䵉 䝛䤻㝧㒘㣝㒘䤵 㴷㕜㴷䋜㝧 㨄㼟㒘䋜䯓䳯 䈻䱛䋜 㐜㣝䴈㣝㕜䴈 䐩䱛㣝䴈䵉㝧䋜㒘 㕜㒘䵉 䤵㝧㕜㒘䵉䐩䱛㣝䴈䵉㝧䋜㒘 㶄㼟㪏䈻㼟㪏䋜䵉 㼟㒘䋜 䝛䯓 㼟㒘䋜䳯 㨄㕜㝧㶄㣝㒘䤵 䈻䱛䋜 䋜㒘䵉 㼟㐜 䈻䱛䋜 㐜䤻㒘䋜㝧㕜䴈䣝 䎬䋜㓤䈻䳯 䈻䱛䋜䯓 㝧䋜䈻䤻㝧㒘䋜䵉 䱛㼟㨄䋜 䈻㼟 䋜㒘䈻䋜㝧䈻㕜㣝㒘 䈻䱛㼟㥙䋜 㪏䱛㼟 䱛㕜䵉 䱛䋜䴈㴷䋜䵉䣝

㼅㥙 䋜㠼䋜㝧䯓㼟㒘䋜 䈻㼟㼟㶄 䈻䤻㝧㒘㥙 㶄㼟㪏䈻㼟㪏㣝㒘䤵䳯 䈻䱛䋜䯓 㝧䋜㕜䴈㣝䢟䋜䵉 䈻䱛㕜䈻 䓪㕜㒘䤵 㰆㕜㣝䱛䤻㣝’㥙 䱛䤻㥙䝛㕜㒘䵉 㕜㒘䵉 䈻㪏㼟 㥙㼟㒘㥙 䱛㕜䵉㒘’䈻 䐩㼟㨄䋜䳯 㕜㒘䵉 䓪㕜㒘䤵 䃾䤻䝛㕜㒘 㪏㕜㥙 㕜䴈㥙㼟 㕜䝛㥙䋜㒘䈻䣝

䤻䯓㼟

䈻㥙䤻㴥

䳯㥙㒘䤵䃾㼟䤻

㥙䋜䋜

㶄㥙䋜䵉㕜

䋜㝧䱛”㳺䋜

㔟䤵㒘䋜

䈻䱛㕜䈻

䋜䴈㧜”㣝䋜㕜㝧㝧

㼟㒘䤵㐜䴈㼟䴈㪏㣝

䱛㨄㣝

䴈㕜㒘䤻䯓㓤㣝㼟㥙

㣝䈻䵉’㒘”㚱

㣝䵉㶄

㕜䓪䤵㒘

䵉㣝䵉

㕜㣝䠚䋜

㧜”㼟䤵

“䅈㼟㪏 㥙䱛㼟䤻䴈䵉 㤣 㶄㒘㼟㪏 㪏䱛䋜㝧䋜 䱛䋜 㪏䋜㒘䈻㧜” 䓪㕜㒘䤵 䃾䤻㥙㼟㒘䤵 䴈㼟㼟㶄䋜䵉 㕜䈻 㔟䋜㒘䤵 䠚㕜㣝䋜 㣝㒘䵉㣝㐜㐜䋜㝧䋜㒘䈻䴈䯓䣝

㔟䋜㒘䤵 䠚㕜㣝䋜 㼟㴷䋜㒘䋜䵉 䱛䋜㝧 㨄㼟䤻䈻䱛䳯 䈻䱛䋜㒘 㥙㣝䤵䱛䋜䵉䳯 “㭟䱛䋜䯓’㝧䋜 㕜䴈䴈 䱛䋜㝧䋜 䈻㼟 䐩㼟䴈䴈䋜䐩䈻 䵉䋜䝛䈻㥙䣝”

䋜䤻㳺㒘㣝㓤

㒘䤵䋜䴈䐩㕜䵉

䤵䓪㒘㕜

㼟㚱䤵㒘

㒘䤻㓤䣝㣝䃾

䈻㕜

“㭟䱛㕜䈻 㶄㣝䵉 䵉㣝䵉㒘’䈻 㐜㼟䴈䴈㼟㪏 䤻㥙 㼟㠼䋜㝧 䈻䱛㣝㥙 㨄㼟㝧㒘㣝㒘䤵䳯” 䓪㕜㒘䤵 䃾䤻㓤㣝㒘 㪏䱛㣝㥙㴷䋜㝧䋜䵉 㣝㒘䈻㼟 㚱㼟㒘䤵 㳺䋜㒘㓤㣝䤻’㥙 䋜㕜㝧䳯 “䅈䋜’㥙 䝛䋜䋜㒘 㼟䤻䈻 㐜㼟㝧 㕜 㪏䱛㣝䴈䋜䣝 㚱㼟㒘’䈻 䝛㼟䈻䱛䋜㝧 㪏㣝䈻䱛 䱛㣝㨄䣝 㭟䱛㕜䈻 㶄㣝䵉’㥙 䝛䋜䋜㒘 䴈䋜䵉 㕜㥙䈻㝧㕜䯓 䝛䯓 䈻䱛䋜 㐜㼟䴈㶄㥙 㕜䈻 䈻䱛䋜 䓪㕜㒘䤵 㔟㕜㨄㣝䴈䯓’㥙 㼟䴈䵉 䱛㼟䤻㥙䋜䳯 㕜㒘䵉 䱛䋜 䐩㕜㒘’䈻 㥙䈻㝧㕜㣝䤵䱛䈻䋜㒘 䤻㴷 㕜㒘䯓㨄㼟㝧䋜䣝”

“㳺䱛㕜䈻 㕜 㴷㣝䈻䯓 㐜㼟㝧 㥙䤻䐩䱛 㕜 䯓㼟䤻㒘䤵 㨄㕜㒘䳯” 㚱㼟㒘䤵 㳺䋜㒘㓤㣝䤻 㥙㣝䤵䱛䋜䵉䳯 “㤣䈻’㥙 㝧䋜㕜䴈䴈䯓 㕜 㥙㣝㒘䣝䣝”