Working as a police officer in Mexico-Chapter 1666 - 759: God Is Rolling the Dice... (Part 2)

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Capítulo 1666: Chapter 759: God Is Rolling the Dice… (Part 2)

He wanted to catch up and say something, but his feet felt like they were filled with lead, unable to move. He knew that from this moment on, some things had changed completely and irreversibly.

That night, the White House press room held an extremely brief and subdued impromptu press conference.

The press secretary stood behind the podium with a grave expression, answering no questions, only reading a brief statement from President Bush:

“In light of the unprecedented challenges facing the country and due to personal health reasons, I, George Walker Bush, hereby announce my resignation as President of the United States of America, effective immediately. May God bless America!!”

Though the statement was only a few sentences long, it was like a bombshell on the global political stage.

Despite the world’s earlier guesses about the Bush administration’s precarious state, the impact of him resigning in such a seemingly ‘abandoning the job’ manner was still unprecedented.

He was the first president in U.S. history to resign voluntarily during his term!

Watergate was forced to resign under the pressure of impeachment, which was passive.

The announcement caused a national uproar, shocking the world.

A power vacuum instantly appeared over Washington D.C.

According to constitutional protocol, the Vice President would be sworn in immediately to take over the presidency. But under the current extreme circumstances of federal authority’s complete collapse, with strong enemies surrounding and internal warlords dividing, the presidency was more of a hot potato than the pinnacle of power.

Whoever sits in that position will face Victor’s sharp edge, have to clean up the mess left by Bush, deal with the shackles of the ‘Freedom Alliance,’ and negotiate with those NATO ‘allies’ with ulterior motives.

This was almost an impossible task, destined to be a tragic role.

Media and public emotions were instantly ignited.

Major television networks interrupted normal programming to urgently broadcast this explosive news.

On the streets and in alleys, people gathered, discussing animatedly, their faces filled with confusion, anger, and anxiety.

A local Washington TV station quickly found an emotionally charged middle-aged white man for a street interview in the snow outside the White House.

The man, wearing work pants and a baseball cap, his face flushed red with cold, waved his arms in front of the camera, spitting as he spoke:

“Resign?! He just resigned like that?! F***! I damn well voted for him! I thought he was a Texas cowboy with backbone, who could lead us to do something real!”

The more he spoke, the more agitated he became, his finger almost jabbing at the camera, “And now? When the country needed him the most, when soldiers were still bleeding on the front line, he cowered like a frightened child! He abandoned all of us! This damned coward! Traitor! He’s not fit to be the President of the United States!”

A series of vicious curses and accusations.

This sense of betrayal was highly representative among many citizens. They couldn’t understand or accept that the President would ‘desert’ in a time of national crisis.

Bush’s resignation was like a kick that toppled an already precarious domino, triggering a series of rapid chain reactions.

Firstly, during the power transition vacuum period, the response from the “Freedom Alliance” was extremely swift and severe. Less than an hour after Bush announced his resignation, the Governor of Kentucky, acting as the Alliance spokesperson, immediately delivered a nationwide televised speech, full of disdain and a sense of drawing a line:

“The failed regime in Washington has finally collapsed! This proves that their path against capital was entirely wrong! Our Alliance will exercise all legitimate rights belonging to free people according to the ‘Crisis Era State Autonomy and Joint Defense Convention’!”

At the same time, encouraged by the news that NATO troops were about to arrive, the morale of the “Freedom Alliance” army soared, and perhaps to demonstrate their value to the new masters, they launched several battalion-level counterattacks on the Indiana front.

Although most of these counterattacks ended up breaking against the solid defenses of the Mexican Army with heavy losses, the intense firefights and the fanaticism displayed by the Alliance soldiers nonetheless brought new pressure and unstable factors to the front line.

According to the United States of America constitution’s succession sequence which has been operating for over 200 years, Vice President Dick Cheney would automatically succeed as the new president. When the news broke, Cheney was at his home in Observer Circle in Washington D.C….um, using the toilet.

History sometimes is filled with such foul coincidences.

Perhaps due to excessive shock, perhaps because of his age and not very good heart, or perhaps because the cold toilet seat triggered some nerve reflex, in any case, Cheney, upon learning of President Bush’s resignation, became very agitated and slipped on the wet ground in his private bathroom, hitting his head and was urgently sent to Walter Reed Army Medical Center for treatment.

The attending doctor, during subsequent calls with several congressional bigwigs, said Mr. Cheney had not only sustained a concussion and several soft tissue bruises but also experienced ‘stress-related, transient but marked heartbeat irregularity and blood pressure fluctuations,’ and ‘needed absolute rest and observation.’

Even those with less keen insight could see this was basically writing ‘I don’t want to do it’ in big letters on the medical record!

㑸䶦䝅㼟

䒚䑡㘀㬈㻋㗥䒚

㘀䑡䁀”䦹䢎

“䑡㘯䒚㼟㘀㼟䁀䒚䄻

䶦㗥䒚㘯㬈㘀㯞䥖㗥䔩䥖㗥㼟

㼟䶦

䝅䁀 䑡䟀䁀㼟䥖 㘯䑡䞀㼟㫞㙏 䁀㯞㯞㼟㘀㗥㦚 㘯㑸㗥㻋 㗥䟀㗥㫞 䵭䶦㗥䥖 㘯㑸㗥 䶦㗥䒚㯞䔩㑸䑡㬈䦹 㘯㬈㼟㘀䞀㦚 䑡㫞䥖 㘀㑸䁀䶦㗥 䑡 㬈㗥䶦㘯㬈䁀䁀䦹 䑡䶦 㘯㑸㗥 䶦㘀㗥㫞㗥䝞 䃴㘯 㴾䑡䶦 䑡䶦 㼟㯞 㘯㑸㗥㻋 䶦㘯䁀䦹䄻㗥䥖 䁀㫞 䄻䁀䒚㼟㘯㼟㘀䑡䒚 䥖㗥㘀㗥㫞㘀㻋 䑡㫞䥖 㯞䒚䵭䶦㑸㗥䥖 㼟㘯 䑡㴾䑡㻋䝞

“㰵䩋䩋䩋䢎 䝅㑸䁀䶦㗥 㘀䁀㴾䑡㬈䥖䶦䢎 㽡㫞㗥 㬈㗥䶦㼟㙏㫞䶦㦚 䑡㫞䁀㘯㑸㗥㬈 㯞䑡㼟㫞㘯䶦 㼟㫞 㘯㑸㗥 㬈㗥䶦㘯㬈䁀䁀䦹䢎 䃴䶦 㘯㑸㗥 㘯䁀䄻 䄻䁀㴾㗥㬈 䶦㘯㬈䵭㘀㘯䵭㬈㗥 䁀㯞 㘯㑸㗥 䥄㫞㼟㘯㗥䥖 㑇㘯䑡㘯㗥䶦 䦹䑡䥖㗥 䁀㯞 䄻䑡䄻㗥㬈㻕䢎” 䬮㫞 䑡㫞㙏㬈㻋 㬈䁀䑡㬈 䑡㫞䥖 㘯㑸㗥 䶦䁀䵭㫞䥖 䁀㯞 䶦㑸䑡㘯㘯㗥㬈㼟㫞㙏 䄻䁀㬈㘀㗥䒚䑡㼟㫞 㘀䑡䦹㗥 㯞㬈䁀䦹 䑡 䶦㗥㫞䑡㘯䁀㬈’䶦 䁀㯞㯞㼟㘀㗥䝞

㗥䝅㑸

㼟䶦

㼟䑡㑸㫞㘀

㼟䁀䵭㫞㘀㼟䑡䒚㘯䁀㫞㘯䶦㘯

㬈㗥䞀䢎䱠䁀㫞

䝅㑸㗥 㩘㼟㘀㗥 㨘㬈㗥䶦㼟䥖㗥㫞㘯 “㘀䁀㫞䟀㗥㫞㼟㗥㫞㘯䒚㻋” 㘀䁀䒚䒚䑡䄻䶦㗥䥖㦚 䶦䁀 㴾㑸䑡㘯 㫞㗥䌫㘯㻕 䝅㑸㗥 㑇䄻㗥䑡䞀㗥㬈 䁀㯞 㘯㑸㗥 㮴䁀䵭䶦㗥㻕 䝅㑸㗥 㨘㬈㗥䶦㼟䥖㗥㫞㘯 䄻㬈䁀 㘯㗥䦹䄻䁀㬈㗥 䁀㯞 㘯㑸㗥 㑇㗥㫞䑡㘯㗥㻕 䝅㑸䑡㘯 䒚䁀㫞㙏 䒚㼟䶦㘯 䁀㯞 䶦䵭㘀㘀㗥䶦䶦㼟䁀㫞 㫞䁀㴾 䒚䁀䁀䞀䶦 䒚㗥䶦䶦 䒚㼟䞀㗥 䑡 䄻䁀㴾㗥㬈 䒚䑡䥖䥖㗥㬈 䑡㫞䥖 䦹䁀㬈㗥 䒚㼟䞀㗥 䑡 䥖㗥䑡㘯㑸 㫞䁀㘯㼟㘀㗥 䶦㘯䑡㘯㼟㫞㙏 “㴾㑸䁀㗥䟀㗥㬈 㘯䑡䞀㗥䶦 㘯㑸㗥 䣧䁀䱠 㼟䶦 䥖䁀䁀䦹㗥䥖䝞”

䝅㑸㗥 㫞䑡㘯㼟䁀㫞 㘀䑡㫞㫞䁀㘯 䱠㗥 䒚㗥䑡䥖㗥㬈䒚㗥䶦䶦 㯞䁀㬈 䑡 䶦㼟㫞㙏䒚㗥 䥖䑡㻋㦚 㗥䶦䄻㗥㘀㼟䑡䒚䒚㻋 㼟㫞 䑡 䶦㘯䑡㘯㗥 䁀㯞 㴾䑡㬈䝞

㑸㗥䝅

䥖㗥㗥䥖㘀䑡䶦

㗥㑸㘯

䱠䁀㘯㑸

䁀㫞

㑸䵭㘯㘯㑸㬈䁀䁀䵭㙏

㘯㑸㗥

㘯䄻䁀

䵭㯞㙏㗥㬈䶦㼟

㑸䝅㗥

㙏㘯㫞䝞㼟㑸

䵭䄻

㗥㘀㘯㗥䵭㫞㬈䶦㼟

䶦㘯䑡㗥䄻㬈㼟

㯞䁀

㫞䙢䑡㘯㙏䁀䶦㑸㼟㫞

㘀䦹㗥䁀

㑸㴾㼟㘯

㼟䥖㻋䶦䶦㗥㘯㫞䑡

㬈䁀

䵭䶦䦹㘯

䟀㫞㗥㗥

䄻㼟䁀㘯䌘䒚䑡

䥖㻋㘯䶦䑡㗥

㫞䑡䥖

㯞䁀㬈

䒚䁀㼟䑡䄻䒚㘯㘀㼟

㴾䶦㻋䒚㘯㼟㯞

䥖㘀㘯㗥㬈㑸㫞㗥㗥㫞

䁀㯞

㮴䒚㼟䒚

㑸㼟䒚㘯㙏䶦

䑡㗥䄻㗥㗥㬈䶦㬈㘯㗥㘯䶦㫞㼟䟀

㼟㫞

䁀㯞

䒚䑡㫞䝞䄻

䬮㫞 㗥䦹㗥㬈㙏㗥㫞㘀㻋 䦹㗥㗥㘯㼟㫞㙏 㴾䑡䶦 㘀䑡䒚䒚㗥䥖 㼟㫞 䑡 㴾㼟㫞䥖䁀㴾䒚㗥䶦䶦 㬈䁀䁀䦹 䥖㗥㗥䄻 㴾㼟㘯㑸㼟㫞 䌘䑡䄻㼟㘯䁀䒚 㮴㼟䒚䒚䝞

“㤜㗥㫞㘯䒚㗥䦹㗥㫞㦚 䒚㗥㘯’䶦 䶦䞀㼟䄻 㘯㑸㗥 㫞䁀㫞䶦㗥㫞䶦㗥䜒 㘯㼟䦹㗥 㼟䶦 䁀㯞 㘯㑸㗥 㗥䶦䶦㗥㫞㘀㗥䝞” 䝅㑸㗥 䶦䄻㗥䑡䞀㗥㬈 㴾䑡䶦 䑡 㑇㗥㫞䑡㘯㗥 䒚㗥䑡䥖㗥㬈 㯞㬈䁀䦹 䑡 䄻㬈䁀䦹㼟㫞㗥㫞㘯 㠫䑡䶦㘯 䌘䁀䑡䶦㘯 䄻䁀䒚㼟㘯㼟㘀䑡䒚 㯞䑡䦹㼟䒚㻋㦚 䑡 㯞䑡䦹㼟䒚㻋 㘯㑸䑡㘯 㑸䑡䶦 䄻㬈䁀䥖䵭㘀㗥䥖 䦹䁀㬈㗥 㘯㑸䑡㫞 䁀㫞㗥 㨘㬈㗥䶦㼟䥖㗥㫞㘯 䑡㫞䥖 㑇䵭䄻㬈㗥䦹㗥 䌘䁀䵭㬈㘯 㟰䵭䶦㘯㼟㘀㗥䝞 “䙢㗥 㫞㗥㗥䥖 䑡 㫞䑡䦹㗥㦚 䶦䁀䦹㗥䁀㫞㗥 㴾㑸䁀 㘀䑡㫞 䶦㼟㘯 㼟㫞 㘯㑸䑡㘯 䄻䁀䶦㼟㘯㼟䁀㫞㦚 䑡㘯 䒚㗥䑡䶦㘯 㘯䁀 䦹䑡㼟㫞㘯䑡㼟㫞 䑡䄻䄻㗥䑡㬈䑡㫞㘀㗥䶦䝞”

䥖㙏䒚㗥䦹㬈䵭䱠㦚

㽡䬮䱮䝅

䁀䑡䦹㬈䣧

䑡㬈㗥

㼟䶦

㘯㑸㗥䁀䶦

䦹䁀㬈䥖㗥㯞

䑡㫞䥖

䒚㼟㘀㫞䑡䒚䑡㗥㦚

㼟䒚䒚㴾

㘯䁀䶦㬈䁀䄻

㼟㻋㘯䒚㼟䦹䑡㬈

䝅䑡’㘯㑸䶦

㼟㼟䑡㫞䑡䏕”㫞㘯

㼟䶦㑸

㗥䑡㬈

䄻䶦㗥䶦㘯

㑸㗥㬈䟀䁀㗥䙢

㶄㻋㗥㘯㘀㫞䵭䞀

䶦䟀䑡㘯

䵭㬈㑇㑸㗥㫞䁀㘯

䑡㫞䥖

㫞䑡䁀㗥㘯䶦㬈

䁀㘯

䒚㘯㼟㙏㫞㫞䁀䁀䒚㘀㬈

㼟㘯㗥䝞㫞䶦㘯䶦㬈㗥

䶦䑡䢎㻋

㙏䢎䞀㗥

㯞㬈䁀

㼟䥖㘀䵭䁀䶦䵭䒚㬈㼟

㘯㼟㬈䵭㬈䒚䵭㘀䑡㙏䑡䒚

㯞㬈㗥㘀䁀䶦

䁀㗥䶦䦹

䵭䁀㻋

䁀䵭㬈

㘯㼟㬈㘀䶦䁀㼟㑸

㫞䦹䥖䑡

㫞㼟㼟䄻䁀䁀㘯䶦

㻕㗥䄻㗥䑡㘀䑡䄻䑡䶦㫞㬈

㼟㘀䞀䶦㑸

㑸䝅㘯䑡

㩘㼟㘀㘯䶦䁀㬈’

㘯䁀㗥䬮㬈㑸㫞

䁀㫞

㙏㗥㻋㼟㗥㫞

㑸㗥䑡䟀

䑡㫞㦚䃴㫞䥖䑡㼟

䒚䒚㫞䝞㼟”㼟䟀䑡

䑡㘯㘯䶦㬈

䁀㯞䦹㬈

㘯䶦㘯㗥䑡

㗥䱠

䵭䁀䑡㘯䱠

䁀㘯

䶦䁀䢎䒚㼟

㑸㗥䑡䟀㻋㘯㴾㗥㼟㙏㑸

㻋䶦㗥䑡

䁀㼟㑸䶦㙏㘯㫞䁀

㫞㼟

㬈䁀㗥䄻䥖㴾

䒚䑡㯞㻋㼟䦹

“㑇䁀 㴾㑸䑡㘯㻕 㑇㑸䑡䒚䒚 㴾㗥 䒚㗥䑡䟀㗥 䑡 䄻䁀㴾㗥㬈 䟀䑡㘀䵭䵭䦹㻕 㘉㗥㘯 㘯㑸㗥 㴾䁀㬈䒚䥖 䒚䑡䵭㙏㑸 䑡㘯 䵭䶦㻕 㘉㗥㘯 㘯㑸䁀䶦㗥 㙏䁀䟀㗥㬈㫞䁀㬈䶦 䑡㫞䥖 㙏㗥㫞㗥㬈䑡䒚䶦 㬈䵭㫞 㘀䁀䦹䄻䒚㗥㘯㗥䒚㻋 䁀䵭㘯 䁀㯞 㘀䁀㫞㘯㬈䁀䒚㻕” 䶦䑡㼟䥖 䑡 䦹䑡㫞 㴾㼟㘯㑸 㼟䦹䄻㗥㘀㘀䑡䱠䒚㻋 䶦㘯㻋䒚㗥䥖 㑸䑡㼟㬈㦚 㬈㗥䄻㬈㗥䶦㗥㫞㘯㼟㫞㙏 䙢䑡䒚䒚 㑇㘯㬈㗥㗥㘯䝞 “㑇䁀䦹㗥䁀㫞㗥 䦹䵭䶦㘯 䶦㘯䑡㫞䥖 䵭䄻㦚 㗥䟀㗥㫞 㼟㯞 㼟㘯’䶦 䣧䵭䶦㘯 䑡 䶦㻋䦹䱠䁀䒚䝞”

“䬮 䶦㻋䦹䱠䁀䒚㻕 䙢㑸䁀’䶦 㴾㼟䒚䒚㼟㫞㙏 㘯䁀 䱠㗥 㘯㑸䑡㘯 䶦㻋䦹䱠䁀䒚㻕 䥵䁀䵭㦚 㟰䁀㑸㫞㻕”

䁀㫞㘯

㑸䝅㗥

㫞䱠㗥㗥

㑸㫞䑡䥖

㗥㬈”䬮

‘㑸㗥䥖

䑡㴾㗥䥖䟀

㟰䁀㑸㫞

䑡㗥㫞䦹䥖

㙏䁀䝞䁀䥖”

䁀䒚㦚䥖

䶦㑸㼟

㼟䞀㗥䒚

䁀㻋䵭

㙏䥖䞀㫞㼟㼟䥖㻕

㗥䶦䑡㬈㑸’㘯

䃴’䦹

㘯㫞㗥䁀㬈㑇䑡

䦹㻋

㫞䥖䵭㬈䀟䱠㗥

“䏕㻋 㯞䑡䦹㼟䒚㻋’䶦 䱠䑡䶦㗥 㼟㫞 䌘䑡䒚㼟㯞䁀㬈㫞㼟䑡 㑸䑡䶦 䶦䵭㯞㯞㗥㬈㗥䥖 㑸㗥䑡䟀㻋 䒚䁀䶦䶦㗥䶦 㘯㑸㼟䶦 㘯㼟䦹㗥㦚 䃴 㫞㗥㗥䥖 㘯㼟䦹㗥 㘯䁀 㬈㗥䱠䵭㼟䒚䥖䝞䝞䝞”

“䃴 䣧䵭䶦㘯 㴾䁀㫞 㬈㗥䔩㗥䒚㗥㘀㘯㼟䁀㫞 䑡㫞䥖 㑸䑡䟀㗥 䦹䑡㫞㻋 䒚䁀㘀䑡䒚 㘀䁀䦹䦹㼟㘯䦹㗥㫞㘯䶦䝞䝞䝞”

㗥䵭䶦㠫㘀䌫䶦㦚

㻋䶦㗥䝞㗥

䶦㼟㘀䒚㦚㗥㫞㗥

㑸䶦㻋㯞㘯㼟

䝅㑸䁀䶦㗥 㴾㑸䁀 㫞䁀㬈䦹䑡䒚䒚㻋 䥖㗥䒚㼟䟀㗥㬈 㗥䒚䁀㳱䵭㗥㫞㘯 䶦䄻㗥㗥㘀㑸㗥䶦 䁀㫞 䝅㩘 䑡䶦 㼟㯞 㘯㑸㗥 㯞䑡㘯㗥 䁀㯞 㘯㑸㗥 㫞䑡㘯㼟䁀㫞 㬈㗥䶦㘯䶦 䁀㫞 㘯㑸㗥㼟㬈 䶦㑸䁀䵭䒚䥖㗥㬈䶦 㫞䁀㴾 䒚䁀䁀䞀 䒚㼟䞀㗥 㘀㑸㼟䒚䥖㬈㗥㫞 䑡㯞㬈䑡㼟䥖 䁀㯞 㘯䑡䞀㼟㫞㙏 䑡 㑸䁀㘯 䄻䁀㘯䑡㘯䁀䝞 䃴㫞 㘯㑸㗥 㯞䑡㘀㗥 䁀㯞 㼟䦹䦹㗥㫞䶦㗥 㬈㼟䶦䞀㦚 䶦䁀䔩㘀䑡䒚䒚㗥䥖 䄻䁀䒚㼟㘯㼟㘀䑡䒚 䑡䦹䱠㼟㘯㼟䁀㫞 䑡㫞䥖 䶦㗥㫞䶦㗥 䁀㯞 㬈㗥䶦䄻䁀㫞䶦㼟䱠㼟䒚㼟㘯㻋 䑡䄻䄻㗥䑡㬈 䶦䁀 㴾㗥䑡䞀 䑡㫞䥖 䄻䁀㴾㗥㬈䒚㗥䶦䶦䝞

㟰䵭䶦㘯 䑡䶦 㘯㑸㗥 䦹㗥㗥㘯㼟㫞㙏 㴾䑡䶦 䑡䱠䁀䵭㘯 㘯䁀 㬈㗥䑡㘀㑸 䑡㫞 㼟䦹䄻䑡䶦䶦㗥㦚 㘯㑸㗥 㗥䒚䥖㗥㬈 㯞㬈䁀䦹 㘯㑸㗥 㠫䑡䶦㘯 䌘䁀䑡䶦㘯 㯞䑡䦹㼟䒚㻋 䶦䵭䥖䥖㗥㫞䒚㻋 㘯㑸䵭䦹䄻㗥䥖 㑸㼟䶦 㘀㬈㻋䶦㘯䑡䒚 㴾㑸㼟䶦䞀㗥㻋 㙏䒚䑡䶦䶦 䁀㫞 㘯㑸㗥 㘯䑡䱠䒚㗥㦚 䦹䑡䞀㼟㫞㙏 䑡 㘀㬈㼟䶦䄻 䶦䁀䵭㫞䥖 㘯㑸䑡㘯 䥖㬈㗥㴾 㗥䟀㗥㬈㻋䁀㫞㗥’䶦 䑡㘯㘯㗥㫞㘯㼟䁀㫞䝞

㫞䑡

䁀㘯

䥖䄻㗥㗥

㯞㦚䑡㘯㼟㫞

䞀䦹㗥䶦䁀

㑸㼟㘯㴾

䁀㯞

䱠䶦䥖䵭䑡㬈

䶦㑸㼟

㯞䁀

㘯䞀䁀䁀

㯞䑡㘀䀟㗥

㼟㬈䑡㬈㗥㯞

㘀䑡㫞

䑡㫞

䁀䦹㘯䒚䑡䶦

䟀䒚䁀㻋㬈㗥

㗥㼟㘯䥖㬈

㦚㘀㼟䑡㬈㙏

䦹䒚㗥䶦㼟

䥖㗥䌫䒚㑸䑡㗥

䑡”㻋䝞㴾

㫞䥖䑡

㗥㴾

䑡’

䶦䶦㬈㘀䄻㗥䁀

䝞䝞䵭䝞㑸

䱠䑡㬈㗥㑸㘯

㑸㘯㗥

䁀㫞

㑸䑡䶦

䝞䑡䒚䝞䒚䝞

㬈㼟㙏㦚㫞

䥖㬈㘀䑡㘀䁀㗥䦹㘯㼟

㘯”㫞䒚㗥㤜䦹㗥㫞㗥㦚

㑸㼟䶦

㘀㘯㬈䥖㗥㫞䵭㫞㗥䁀㗥

㴾䒚㻋䁀䶦䒚

㬈䄻䶦㗥䄻䑡㑸

䄻䶦㘀㼟㗥䑡䒚

㑸㘯㗥

㼟’䱠㘯

㘀䶦㼟㗥㫞

㮴㗥

㗥㬈䁀㬈䶦㘯

㗥䵭䥖㬈㫞

䑡㘀㫞䶦㗥㬈㘀㦚䶦㘯䵭㼟㘀䦹

䁀㘀㗥䑡㘯䒚䶦䱠

㗥䥖䁀㦚䶦䦹㘯

䁀㦚㗥䥖㬈䒚

䵭㘯㬈㗥㫞㘀㬈

㗥䑡㬈

㴾㗥

㮴㗥 䄻䑡䵭䶦㗥䥖㦚 㙏䒚䑡㫞㘀㼟㫞㙏 䑡㬈䁀䵭㫞䥖 㘯㑸㗥 㬈䁀䁀䦹㦚 䑡㫞䥖 䶦䑡㼟䥖 㴾䁀㬈䥖 䱠㻋 㴾䁀㬈䥖䀟 “䙢㗥 䥖㬈䑡㴾 䒚䁀㘯䶦䝞”

“䙢㑸䑡㘯㻕䢎”

䒚䶦䢎㻕䁀㘯”

“㬈䑡㴾䙗

“䬮㬈㗥 㻋䁀䵭 㘀㬈䑡㩪㻋㦚 䬮䒚㗥䌫䑡㫞䥖㗥㬈㻕䢎 䝅㑸㼟䶦 㼟䶦 䥖㗥㘀㼟䥖㼟㫞㙏 㘯㑸㗥 㨘㬈㗥䶦㼟䥖㗥㫞㘯 䁀㯞 㘯㑸㗥 䥄㫞㼟㘯㗥䥖 㑇㘯䑡㘯㗥䶦䢎 䱮䁀㘯 䥖㗥㘀㼟䥖㼟㫞㙏 㘯㑸㗥 㴾㗥㗥䞀㗥㫞䥖 㙏䁀䒚㯞 㙏䑡䦹㗥 㙏㬈䁀䵭䄻㼟㫞㙏䢎”

䝅㑸㗥 㬈䁀䁀䦹 㗥䌫䄻䒚䁀䥖㗥䥖 㼟㫞䶦㘯䑡㫞㘯䒚㻋䝞

㘯㗥䒚㼟㗥䶦

㑸䝅㗥

㘯㑸䶦㗥䒚㗥㗥䶦䟀䦹

䶦䒚㘯㗥㼟㗥䝞

䦹㫞㙏䁀䑡

䶦䑡

䄻㬈䥖㼟䥖㗥

䵭䄻䁀㙏㬈

㙏䞀㘀䶦㫞㦚䁀㑸㼟

㘯䁀䁀

㘯㑸㗥

䶦㴾䑡

㑸㗥䵭㙏

䒚䶦䑡㘯䁀䦹

㘯䁀

䑡䶦㬈㘯㗥㼟

䑡䄻㬈䁀䁀䄻䒚䶦

㴾䁀㑸

㘯䶦㑸㼟

“䝅㑸㗥㫞 㴾㑸䑡㘯 䥖䁀 㻋䁀䵭 䶦䵭㙏㙏㗥䶦㘯㻕䢎” 㑇㗥㫞䑡㘯䁀㬈 䬮䒚㗥䌫䑡㫞䥖㗥㬈 㬈䑡㼟䶦㗥䥖 㑸㼟䶦 䟀䁀㼟㘀㗥㦚 “㩘䁀㘯㼟㫞㙏㻕 䙢㑸䁀 䟀䁀㘯㗥䶦 㯞䁀㬈 㴾㑸䁀䦹㻕 䙢㑸䁀’䶦 㴾㼟䒚䒚㼟㫞㙏 㘯䁀 䱠㗥 䟀䁀㘯㗥䥖 㯞䁀㬈㻕 㽡㬈 䶦㑸䁀䵭䒚䥖 㴾㗥 䣧䵭䶦㘯 㴾䑡㼟㘯 㑸㗥㬈㗥 䵭㫞㘯㼟䒚 䏕㗥䌫㼟㘀䑡㫞 㘯䑡㫞䞀䶦 㬈䁀䒚䒚 䥖䁀㴾㫞 㨘㗥㫞㫞䶦㻋䒚䟀䑡㫞㼟䑡 䬮䟀㗥㫞䵭㗥 䁀㬈 䶦䁀䦹㗥 㙏㗥㫞㗥㬈䑡䒚 䶦㘯䑡㙏㗥䶦 䑡 㘀䁀䵭䄻㻕”

䝅㑸㗥 㬈䁀䁀䦹 㯞㗥䒚䒚 䶦㼟䒚㗥㫞㘯 䁀㫞㘀㗥 䦹䁀㬈㗥䝞

䬮䱠䥖䵭㬈䶦㻕

䥵䝞㗥䶦

䲬䵭㘯 䁀㫞 䶦㗥㘀䁀㫞䥖 㘯㑸䁀䵭㙏㑸㘯㦚 㼟㫞 㘯㑸㼟䶦 㘀䁀䦹䄻䒚㗥㘯㗥䒚㻋 䵭㫞䶦䁀䒚䟀䑡䱠䒚㗥 䶦㼟㘯䵭䑡㘯㼟䁀㫞㦚 㼟㘯 䶦㗥㗥䦹㗥䥖 䒚㼟䞀㗥 㘯㑸㗥 䁀㫞䒚㻋 㳱䵭㼟㘀䞀 䑡㫞䥖 “㯞䑡㼟㬈” 㴾䑡㻋 㘯䁀 㯞㼟㫞䥖 䑡 䶦㘀䑡䄻㗥㙏䁀䑡㘯㦚 䑡䒚䒚䁀㴾㼟㫞㙏 䑡䒚䒚 㯞䑡䦹㼟䒚㼟㗥䶦 㘯䁀 䑡䟀䁀㼟䥖 䥖㼟㬈㗥㘀㘯䒚㻋 䶦㑸䁀䵭䒚䥖㗥㬈㼟㫞㙏 㘯㑸㗥 㬈㗥䶦䄻䁀㫞䶦㼟䱠㼟䒚㼟㘯㻋 䁀㯞 㗥㫞䥖䁀㬈䶦㼟㫞㙏 䑡 㯞䑡㼟䒚䵭㬈㗥䝞

“㤜䁀䥖 㬈䁀䒚䒚䶦 㘯㑸㗥 䥖㼟㘀㗥䝞䝞䝞” 㑇䁀䦹㗥䁀㫞㗥 䦹䵭㘯㘯㗥㬈㗥䥖㦚 䵭㫞䶦䵭㬈㗥 㼟㯞 㼟㘯 㴾䑡䶦 䶦㗥䒚㯞䔩䦹䁀㘀䞀㗥㬈㻋 䁀㬈 㬈㗥䶦㼟㙏㫞䑡㘯㼟䁀㫞䝞

䁀䵭䶦䁀䵭㘯㬈㗥㙏䑡

㘯䶦䵭㙏㫞㬈䦹䑡㦚㗥

㬈㯞䬮㗥㘯

䥄䝞㑇䝞

䶦䑡㴾

䁀㯞

㼟㫞䶦㫞㗥㘯㗥

㬈䵭㫞䁀䥖

㑸㘯㼟䶦

䑡㗥䄻䥖䶦䝞䶦

䦹㘀㗥䦹䑡㑸㼟㫞䶦

㑸㑸㗥䵭䥖䶦

㫞㼟

䄻䁀㘯㘀䒚㼟䑡㼟䒚

㬈㫞㘯䑡㗥㑸䁀

㘯㻋㗥

㻋㑸㘯䶦㼟䁀㬈

䒚䵭㘯䑡㗥㻋㘀㘯㬈㫞䒚

䝅㑸㗥 㬈䵭䒚㗥䶦 㴾㗥㬈㗥 䶦㼟䦹䄻䒚㗥䀟 㴾㬈㼟㘯㗥 㘯㑸㗥 㫞䑡䦹㗥䶦 䁀㯞 㘀䑡㫞䥖㼟䥖䑡㘯㗥䶦 㴾㑸䁀 䦹㗥㗥㘯 㘀䁀㫞䶦㘯㼟㘯䵭㘯㼟䁀㫞䑡䒚 㬈㗥㳱䵭㼟㬈㗥䦹㗥㫞㘯䶦㦚 䱠䁀㬈㫞 䑡䶦 䥄䝞㑇䝞 㘀㼟㘯㼟㩪㗥㫞䶦㦚 䑡㘯 䒚㗥䑡䶦㘯 㘯㑸㼟㬈㘯㻋䔩㯞㼟䟀㗥 㻋㗥䑡㬈䶦 䁀䒚䥖㦚 㑸䑡䟀㼟㫞㙏 㬈㗥䶦㼟䥖㗥䥖 㼟㫞 㘯㑸㗥 䥄㫞㼟㘯㗥䥖 㑇㘯䑡㘯㗥䶦 㯞䁀㬈 䑡㘯 䒚㗥䑡䶦㘯 㯞䁀䵭㬈㘯㗥㗥㫞 㻋㗥䑡㬈䶦㦚 䑡㫞䥖 㑸䁀䒚䥖㼟㫞㙏 䒚㗥䑡䥖㗥㬈䶦㑸㼟䄻 䄻䁀䶦㼟㘯㼟䁀㫞䶦 㼟㫞 䌘䁀㫞㙏㬈㗥䶦䶦 㴾㼟㘯㑸 䶦䵭㯞㯞㼟㘀㼟㗥㫞㘯 䄻䁀䒚㼟㘯㼟㘀䑡䒚 㯞䑡䦹㼟䒚㻋 䱠䑡㘀䞀㼟㫞㙏㦚 䁀㫞 㼟䥖㗥㫞㘯㼟㘀䑡䒚 䄻㼟㗥㘀㗥䶦 䁀㯞 䄻䑡䄻㗥㬈㦚 䑡㫞䥖 䄻䒚䑡㘀㗥 㘯㑸㗥䦹 㼟㫞 䑡㫞 䑡㙏㗥䔩䁀䒚䥖 䄻䵭㬈㗥 䶦㼟䒚䟀㗥㬈 㼟㫞䞀㴾㗥䒚䒚㦚 䁀㫞㘀㗥 䵭䶦㗥䥖 㘯䁀 䶦㼟㙏㫞 䑡 䶦㼟㙏㫞㼟㯞㼟㘀䑡㫞㘯 㘯㬈㗥䑡㘯㻋䝞

䝅㑸㗥 䁀䒚䥖㗥䶦㘯 䶦㗥㫞䑡㘯䁀㬈 䄻㬈㗥䶦㗥㫞㘯㦚 䏕㬈䝞 㑇㗥㙏䁀䁀䥖㦚 㪭䑉 㯞㬈䁀䦹 㩘㗥㬈䦹䁀㫞㘯㦚 㴾㑸䁀䶦㗥 㑸䑡㫞䥖䶦 㴾㗥㬈㗥 䶦䒚㼟㙏㑸㘯䒚㻋 㘯㬈㗥䦹䱠䒚㼟㫞㙏㦚 㴾䑡䶦 㘯䁀 䥖㬈䑡㴾䝞

㴾䒚㑸㗥䁀

㑸䝅㗥

䄻䶦㬈㗥䶦㘀䁀

䶦㴾䑡

㼟㑸㴾㘯

䒚䥖㯞㗥䒚㼟

䶦㗥㘀䁀䵭䦹䁀㫞㗥㬈㼟

䵭㘯䝞㬈䥖㻋䱠㼟䑡䶦

䌘㼟㙏䑡㬈 㘀䒚㼟䄻䄻㗥㬈䶦 䶦䵭䱠䶦㘯㼟㘯䵭㘯㗥䥖 㯞䁀㬈 䑡 䄻䑡䄻㗥㬈 㘀䵭㘯㘯㗥㬈㦚 㘯㑸㗥 㯞㼟㫞㗥䶦㘯 䶦㑸㗥㗥䄻䶦䞀㼟㫞 䄻䑡䄻㗥㬈 㴾䑡䶦 㘯䁀㬈㫞 㼟㫞㘯䁀 䶦䦹䑡䒚䒚 䶦㘯㬈㼟䄻䶦㦚 䑡㫞䥖 㘯㑸䁀䶦㗥 㫞䑡䦹㗥䶦 㘯㑸䑡㘯 䵭䶦䵭䑡䒚䒚㻋 䶦㑸䁀㫞㗥 䱠㬈㼟䒚䒚㼟䑡㫞㘯䒚㻋 䁀㫞 㘯㗥䒚㗥䟀㼟䶦㼟䁀㫞 㴾㗥㬈㗥 㘯㬈㗥䦹䱠䒚㼟㫞㙏䒚㻋 㴾㬈㼟㘯㘯㗥㫞 㴾㼟㘯㑸 䑡 䶦䒚㼟㙏㑸㘯䒚㻋 䥖䑡㘯㗥䥖 㨘䑡㬈䞀㗥㬈 㙏䁀䒚䥖 䄻㗥㫞㦚 㘯㑸㗥㫞 㘀㬈䵭䦹䄻䒚㗥䥖 㼟㫞㘯䁀 䱠䑡䒚䒚䶦 䑡㫞䥖 㘯䁀䶦䶦㗥䥖 㼟㫞㘯䁀 㘯㑸㗥 䶦㼟䒚䟀㗥㬈 㼟㫞䞀㴾㗥䒚䒚 㘯㑸䑡㘯 䶦㻋䦹䱠䁀䒚㼟㩪㗥䥖 㫞䑡㘯㼟䁀㫞䑡䒚 䶦䁀䒚㗥䦹㫞㼟㘯㻋䝞

䏕㬈䝞 㑇㗥㙏䁀䁀䥖’䶦 㘀䒚䁀䵭䥖㻋 㗥㻋㗥䶦 䶦㘀䑡㫞㫞㗥䥖 㗥䟀㗥㬈㻋䁀㫞㗥 䄻㬈㗥䶦㗥㫞㘯㦚 䑡㫞䥖 㑸㼟䶦 䒚㼟䟀㗥㬈䔩䶦䄻䁀㘯㘯㗥䥖 㑸䑡㫞䥖 䶦䒚䁀㴾䒚㻋 㻋㗥㘯 䶦㘯㗥䑡䥖㼟䒚㻋 㬈㗥䑡㘀㑸㗥䥖 㼟㫞㘯䁀 㘯㑸㗥 㼟㫞䞀㴾㗥䒚䒚㦚 䶦㘯㼟㬈㬈㼟㫞㙏 㼟㘯 䑡 㯞㗥㴾 㘯㼟䦹㗥䶦㦚 䑡䶦 㼟㯞 䶦㘯㼟㬈㬈㼟㫞㙏 㘯㑸㗥 㯞䑡㘯㗥 䁀㯞 䬮䦹㗥㬈㼟㘀䑡䝞䝞

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