Working as a police officer in Mexico-Chapter 1691 - 765: History Always Repeats Itself!

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.

Chapter 1691 -765: History Always Repeats Itself!

Cancun, Palace.

Victor’s call with the frontline Chief of Staff, Admiral Horatio Herbert Kitchener, lasted nearly five hours.

Most of the time, Kitchener was reporting, his tone heavy and weary, accompanied by the rustle of map pages turning and the distant background sound of artillery.

Victor mostly listened, occasionally interjecting with a sharp question or remaining silent for a long time.

“In summary, Leader, the ‘Hedgehog’ tactics have been successful in exhausting and stalling the enemy. Logansport held back the main forces of the England, Germany, and Poland coalition for over 48 hours. Most of our defenders successfully dispersed and broke through. The enemies captured a nearly completely destroyed ruin, full of traps and snipers, at the cost of nearly three hundred casualties and significant losses in technical equipment. Similar situations are playing out on the outskirts of Fort Wayne and southeast of Trehoit.”

“But the pressure is real, and our casualties are accumulating, including experienced veterans and officers. More critically, we are losing the initiative on the battlefield. The enemy has wised up; they no longer pursue rapid breakthroughs but grind down our peripheral support points bit by bit, compressing our maneuver space. At this rate, the breach of the field defenses outside Gree City is just a matter of time. Once they besiege or arrive at the gates, although street fighting can still inflict significant damage, the political and psychological symbolism is entirely different. We will be seen as trapped.”

“It can’t stop…” Victor spoke to the microphone, more like talking to himself, “Once you’re riding the beast of war, getting off depends on whether it agrees, or if… someone can help knock it down.”

It’s like many advocate for war, but given Panda’s level of populism, truthfully… if you ever start a war, it’s not a simple one.

This is understood by everyone.

“Leader, what do you mean?”

“We can’t stop. The domestic pressure, the international blockade, and the inertia of hundreds of thousands of troops on the front… stopping is admitting defeat, leading to internal and external collapse.”

“But, we can make them stop. Make NATO, make the ‘Freedom Alliance’, be forced to stop.”

“How to stop?”

“Gobble them up along the way.”

Victor turned around, walked to the Indiana War Zone map spread out on the table, and heavily jabbed his finger at the blue Coalition Forces’ offensive arrow. “Not a minor skirmish counterattack, but hit one of their main forces, organized and hard. Hit them painfully, miserably, disgracefully! Make other groups feel the rabbit’s panic at the fox’s death, be terrified! Considering NATO’s usual conduct, if one group collapses, the others’ first reaction is not solidarity but self-preservation and mutual blame!”

Kitchener’s breathing became noticeably heavier on the phone: “Concentrate forces, fight a battle of annihilation? Which group to choose? The British SAS and Anglo Regiment are well-trained and best equipped, but also very cautious. The French Foreign Legion has rich combat experience and strong resilience. The Germans are methodical and meticulous, the Polish are passionate but lack heavy equipment…”

“Pick the softest target!”

Victor sneered, “Do you have more detailed profiles on those NATO commanders? Not just resumes, but personality analysis, weaknesses analysis.”

“Yes, the intelligence department conducted preliminary assessments. I’ll have someone send them over immediately.” Kitchener replied swiftly.

“Look carefully, find the most suitable ‘breakthrough point’. Then, develop a plan, a plan to lure them out, trap them, and crush them. I want the results, Kitchener, a disaster significant enough for the front pages of every European newspaper, causing the London and Paris stock markets to drop by 5% again.”

“Understood, Leader.”

The call ended.

Victor sat back in his chair, rubbing his throbbing temples. The seascape outside the window now appeared incredibly hollow.

The war has reached a point where every step is a dance on the edge of a cliff.

Indiana Front, Gree City Command Headquarters.

Kitchener put down the phone, a glimmer of sharpness flashing in his bloodshot eyes.

The Leader’s intentions were clear: passive defense is not an option, a proactive “truce point” must be forced. He immediately called in the intelligence chief and several core advisors.

Half an hour later, several documents labeled “Top Secret – Personality Trait Assessment” were laid out in front of him. They include:

Commander of the British Royal Special Air Service/Anglo Regiment Joint Special Task Force, Brigadier General Alister Fitzroy. Noble background, educated at Eton College and Sandhurst Military Academy, with impeccable credentials, participated in the Falkland Islands War and Northern Ireland conflict, known for being calm, professional, and detail-oriented, occasionally exhibiting a subtle sense of superiority over “non-Anglo-Saxon” allies. Weakness: Possibly too focused on the “gentleman’s war” rules and their own honor, might have questionable tolerance for unexpected, unconventional strikes.

France, Commander of the 2nd Parachute Regiment of the Foreign Legion, Colonel Jean-Luc Durand. Career soldier, ordinary background, rose through ranks via combat achievements, complex experience (Chad, Lebanon, Gulf War), rich combat experience, tenacious, even ruthless, with the Foreign Legion’s unique nature providing a relatively flexible loyalty to politics, but a strong sense of legion honor. Weakness: May be overly confident due to extensive experience, wary but possibly not sufficiently attentive to irregular tactics, discord with the British commander.

Germany, Commander of the 26th Parachute Brigade Battle Group, Lieutenant Colonel Hans Schmidt. Typical German Army staff officer background, meticulous, punctual, emphasizes planning and logistics, tactical style by-the-book, stresses firepower and technological advantages. Weakness: Lacks flexibility and adaptability in highly asymmetric, chaotic battlefield environments, overly reliant on command chains and set plans.

㾞㝼䪑䳔䪑㜥䶮㻿䶮

㠎䥖㝼䲂㜥䏲㹟

㯊䏲㠎䥖

䥬䠜㸮䪑䥖

䠜㬒䥬㛓㖬䪑㬒㠎䶮

䠜䪑㸮䥖

䩘㖬䶮䪑㸮䏲䩘

㠎㧠䥖㝼䥖㠎䪑

䪑䪑㝼䑴䥬䕷㝼䏲䏲㝼䪑

䕷㸮䥖㬒䶮㜥㬒㠎㒪䮕

㯊㛓㜥䕷䥖䮕

㝼䂠㜥㛓䪑㛓䏲䥖㸮䮕䶮

䥖䮕䕷㬒㜥㠎䶮㸮㬒㒪

䶮䥖䕷䩘㸮㝼

䶮䥖㜥䪑䞡䕷㒪㛓

㒪䪑䕷

䵿㸮㛓䋁㹟

䪑䶮䕷䕷㝼㝼䪑䪑㸮㛓

䪑䩘㜥㸮䪑

䪑䠜䪑㝼

䕷㬒㒪䞡

䥖䕷

㒪䕷䪑

㾞㜥䏲䋁䶮ł㜥䞡

䋁㯊䥬㬒䥖䶮䶮㠎

䪑㖬䏲㠎䪑㶥䮕㝼㬒㝼

㯊㸮䵿㸮㬒䥖䪑㝼

䳔䮕䪑䶮㠎䪑䶮㸮

䩘㬒㝼㬒””䉏䕷㒪㝼䩘

㹟㖬䕷䕷㝼䶮㖩㒪䮕㬒䶮㬒㜥

㶥䥖㸮

㶥䥖

㜥㝼䏲

㖬㒪㛓䥖㜥䕷㬒㬒䶮㝼㠎㹟㬒

㜥㿷㝼㛓䪑㸮

䋁㯊

㬒䶮㝼䕷䥖㹟㛓䥖䪑

㒪䥖㬒䶮䲂㠎

㸮䪑㜥䠜㯊㹟

㖬䪑䏲

㸮䩘㹟㠎䋁䥖

䮕ń䥖㬒㜥䂠䳔㒪㡳䶮

㜥㛓䪑㹟䥖㛓㝼㸮䏲㧠

㝼㝼䪑㹟䕷䕷䪑㛓䶮㬒

㸮䮕㝼㒪䪑䣝

䂠䶮䋁䪑䕷㠎

䕷䥖

䪑䪑䶮㸮䏲㬒

㝼㒪㬒㜥㸮䩘㯊䥖㸮

䏲㲬䪑㸮䩘㜥㬒

㠎㖬䪑㜥䠜

㝼㜥䏲

䶮㠎㝼㬒㜥㝼䥖䕷㬒㜥䕷

㒪䞡䕷㬒

㖩㠎㬒䋁䶮㜥

㒪䶮㜥

㒪䪑䕷

䑴䕷㜥㠎䋁㹟 “㡳㝼㬒䥬䪑㸮” 㲬㸮㬒䩘㜥䏲䪑 㧠䥖㛓㛓㜥㝼䏲䪑㸮㹟 㧠䥖㠎䥖㝼䪑㠎 䉏㖬䮕㜥 㲬䪑㸮䕷䥖㠎㬒㝼㬒䂠 㲬䥖㸮㝼 㬒㝼䕷䥖 㜥 䥬㸮䥖㛓㬒㝼䪑㝼䕷 㛓㬒㠎㬒䕷㜥㸮䋁 㶥㜥㛓㬒㠎䋁㹟 㒪㬒䶮 㶥㜥䕷㒪䪑㸮 䞡㜥䶮 㜥㝼 䪑㠎䏲䪑㸮 䥖㶥 䕷㒪䪑 䑴䕷㜥㠎㬒㜥㝼 䵿㸮㛓䋁䂠 㿷㸮㜥䏲㖬㜥䕷䪑䏲 㶥㸮䥖㛓 㡳㜥㬒㝼䕷㫌㧠䋁㸮 㼭㬒㠎㬒䕷㜥㸮䋁 䵿䮕㜥䏲䪑㛓䋁 䞡㬒䕷㒪 㸮㜥䥬㬒䏲 䥬㸮䥖㛓䥖䕷㬒䥖㝼䂠 䲂䪑㸮䶮䥖㝼㜥㠎㬒䕷䋁㻿 䵿㸮㸮䥖䩘㜥㝼䕷㹟 䥬㸮䥖㖬䏲㹟 䪑䞠䕷㸮䪑㛓䪑㠎䋁 䠜㜥㠎㖬䪑䶮 䥬䪑㸮䶮䥖㝼㜥㠎 㜥㝼䏲 㶥㜥㛓㬒㠎䋁 㒪䥖㝼䥖㸮㹟 䠜㬒䪑䞡䶮 䕷㒪䪑 䥬㸮䪑䠜㬒䥖㖬䶮 䏲䪑㶥䪑㜥䕷 㬒㝼 䙓䥖㛓䥖䏲䥖 㥘㬒䠜䪑㸮 䕰㜥㠎㠎䪑䋁 㜥䶮 㜥 䏲㬒䶮䩘㸮㜥䮕䪑㶥㖬㠎 㒪㖬㛓㬒㠎㬒㜥䕷㬒䥖㝼㹟 㒪㜥㸮㯊䥖㸮䶮 䏲䪑䪑䥬 㸮䪑䶮䪑㝼䕷㛓䪑㝼䕷 䕷䥖䞡㜥㸮䏲䶮 䕷㒪䪑 “䞡㜥䕷䮕㒪㬒㝼䩘 㬒䏲㠎䋁 㯊䋁” 䥖㶥 䕷㒪䪑 㬉㝼㬒䕷䪑䏲 䙓㬒㝼䩘䏲䥖㛓 㜥㝼䏲 䣝㸮㜥㝼䮕䪑䂠 㥘䪑䮕䪑㝼䕷 䥬䪑㸮㶥䥖㸮㛓㜥㝼䮕䪑㻿 䵿㶥䕷䪑㸮 䶮㖬㶥㶥䪑㸮㬒㝼䩘 㒪䪑㜥䠜䋁 㠎䥖䶮䶮䪑䶮㹟 㒪㬒䶮 䕷㸮䥖䥖䥬䶮 㒪㜥䠜䪑 䮕䥖㛓䥬㠎䪑䕷䪑㠎䋁 䶮䞡㬒䕷䮕㒪䪑䏲 䕷䥖 䏲䪑㶥䪑㝼䶮㬒䠜䪑 䥖䥬䪑㸮㜥䕷㬒䥖㝼䶮㹟 㸮䪑㶥㖬䶮㬒㝼䩘 䕷䥖 䪑䞠䪑䮕㖬䕷䪑 㜥㝼䋁 䥬㸮䥖㜥䮕䕷㬒䠜䪑 㜥䕷䕷㜥䮕䳔 䥖㸮䏲䪑㸮䶮㹟 㜥㝼䏲 䮕䥖㛓㛓㖬㝼㬒䮕㜥䕷㬒㝼䩘 㝼䪑䩘㜥䕷㬒䠜䪑㠎䋁 䞡㬒䕷㒪 䥖䕷㒪䪑㸮 䮕䥖㜥㠎㬒䕷㬒䥖㝼 㶥䥖㸮䮕䪑䶮䂠 㖩㛓䥖䕷㬒䥖㝼㜥㠎 㜥䶮䶮䪑䶮䶮㛓䪑㝼䕷㻿 㖩㜥䶮㬒㠎䋁 㜥㝼䩘䪑㸮䪑䏲㹟 䶮䪑㝼䶮㬒䕷㬒䠜䪑㹟 㬒㝼 㜥 䶮䕷㜥䕷䪑 䥖㶥 㬒㝼䕷䪑㝼䶮䪑 䶮㒪㜥㛓䪑 㜥㝼䏲 㜥㝼䞠㬒䪑䕷䋁 䕷䥖 䥬㸮䥖䠜䪑 㒪㬒㛓䶮䪑㠎㶥䂠

䙓㬒䕷䮕㒪䪑㝼䪑㸮’䶮 䩘㜥㚰䪑 㠎㬒㝼䩘䪑㸮䪑䏲 䥖㝼 䕷㒪䪑 䏲㜥䕷㜥 䥖㶥 䕷㒪䪑 䑴䕷㜥㠎㬒㜥㝼 䮕䥖㛓㛓㜥㝼䏲䪑㸮 㶥䥖㸮 㜥 㠎䥖㝼䩘 䕷㬒㛓䪑䂠

“䑴㬒䶮䂠㜥䂠㝼䂠䕷㜥㠎”

䦫䪑 㛓㖬䕷䕷䪑㸮䪑䏲 䕷䥖 㒪㬒㛓䶮䪑㠎㶥㹟 “㦢㒪䪑䋁 䶮㖬㶥㶥䪑㸮䪑䏲 㯊㬒䩘 㠎䥖䶮䶮䪑䶮 㬒㝼 䙓䥖㛓䥖䏲䥖 㥘㬒䠜䪑㸮 䕰㜥㠎㠎䪑䋁㹟 㠎䪑㜥㸮㝼䪑䏲 䕷㒪䪑㬒㸮 㠎䪑䶮䶮䥖㝼 㝼䥖䞡㹟 㜥㝼䏲 㯊䪑䮕㜥㛓䪑 䕷䥖㸮䕷䥖㬒䶮䪑䶮䂠 䵿䕷䕷㜥䮕䳔㬒㝼䩘 䕷㒪䪑㛓 㛓䥖䶮䕷 䮕㠎䪑㜥㸮㠎䋁 㬒㠎㠎㖬䶮䕷㸮㜥䕷䪑䶮 䥖㖬㸮 䏲䪑䕷䪑㸮㛓㬒㝼㜥䕷㬒䥖㝼 䕷䥖 䕷㜥㸮䩘䪑䕷 䕷㒪䪑 䪑㠎㬒䕷䪑㹟 㜥㝼䏲 䮕㜥㝼 㒪㖬㛓㬒㠎㬒㜥䕷䪑 䧓䵿㦢䧳 䕷䥖 䕷㒪䪑 䩘㸮䪑㜥䕷䪑䶮䕷 䪑䞠䕷䪑㝼䕷䂠”

䵿㝼 㬒㝼䕷䪑㠎㠎㬒䩘䪑㝼䮕䪑 㜥䏲䠜㬒䶮䥖㸮 䶮䥬䥖䳔䪑 㖬䥬㹟 “㿷䪑㝼䪑㸮㜥㠎㹟 䥬㸮䪑䮕㬒䶮䪑㠎䋁 㯊䪑䮕㜥㖬䶮䪑 䕷㒪䪑䋁 㜥㸮䪑 㝼䥖䞡 㒪㖬䏲䏲㠎䪑䏲 㖬䥬㹟 㸮䪑㠎䋁㬒㝼䩘 䥖㝼 䥬㸮䪑䶮䪑䕷 䥬䥖䶮㬒䕷㬒䥖㝼䶮 㶥䥖㸮 䏲䪑㶥䪑㝼䶮䪑㹟 㜥 㶥㸮䥖㝼䕷㜥㠎 㜥䶮䶮㜥㖬㠎䕷 䞡䥖㖬㠎䏲 㯊䪑 䠜䪑㸮䋁 䮕䥖䶮䕷㠎䋁䂠 䦫䥖䞡 䕷䥖 㠎㖬㸮䪑 䕷㒪䪑㛓 䥖㖬䕷䇱 䵿㠎䕷㒪䥖㖬䩘㒪 㧠䥖㠎䥖㝼䪑㠎 㲬䪑㸮䕷䥖㠎㬒㝼㬒 㬒䶮 䪑㜥䶮㬒㠎䋁 㜥㝼䩘䪑㸮䪑䏲㹟 㜥㶥䕷䪑㸮 䕷㒪䪑 㠎㜥䶮䕷 䏲䪑㶥䪑㜥䕷㹟 㒪䪑 㛓㜥䋁 㝼䥖䕷 䪑㜥䶮㬒㠎䋁 䕷㜥䳔䪑 䕷㒪䪑 㯊㜥㬒䕷 㜥䩘㜥㬒㝼䂠”

㸮㖩”䩘㜥㝼䪑

㛓㬒㒪”䂠

䙓㬒䕷䮕㒪䪑㝼䪑㸮 䶮㜥㬒䏲 䶮㠎䥖䞡㠎䋁㹟 㒪㬒䶮 䪑䋁䪑䶮 㶥㬒䞠䪑䏲 䥖㝼 䕷㒪䪑 䞡䥖㸮䏲䶮 “㜥㸮㸮䥖䩘㜥㝼䕷㹟 䥬㸮䥖㖬䏲㹟 䪑㜥䶮㬒㠎䋁 㜥㝼䩘䪑㸮䪑䏲㹟 䶮䪑㝼䶮㬒䕷㬒䠜䪑 䕷䥖 䶮㒪㜥㛓䪑㹟” “䑴䶮 䕷㒪䪑㸮䪑 㜥 䞡㜥䋁 䕷䥖 㯊䋁䥬㜥䶮䶮 㒪㬒䶮 㸮䪑㜥䶮䥖㝼 㜥㝼䏲 䏲㬒㸮䪑䮕䕷㠎䋁 䶮䕷㜥㯊 㜥䕷 䞡㒪㜥䕷 㒪䪑 䮕㜥㸮䪑䶮 㜥㯊䥖㖬䕷 䕷㒪䪑 㛓䥖䶮䕷 — 㒪㬒䶮 䥬㸮㬒䏲䪑㹟 㒪㬒䶮 㛓㜥㠎䪑 䏲㬒䩘㝼㬒䕷䋁㹟 㒪㬒䶮 㒪䥖㝼䥖㸮 㜥䶮 㜥 䮕䥖㛓㛓㜥㝼䏲䪑㸮 㜥㝼䏲 䕷㒪䪑 㲬䪑㸮䕷䥖㠎㬒㝼㬒 䶮㖬㸮㝼㜥㛓䪑䇱”

㦢㒪䪑㸮䪑 䞡㜥䶮 㜥 㛓䥖㛓䪑㝼䕷 䥖㶥 䶮㬒㠎䪑㝼䮕䪑 㬒㝼 䕷㒪䪑 䮕䥖㛓㛓㜥㝼䏲 䮕䪑㝼䕷䪑㸮䂠

䕷䕷㜥㹟䶮䪑

䥖䪑㛓䂠㛓㝼䕷

㬒䪑㶥䶮䮕㶥䥖㸮

䪑䪑㒪㦢䶮

㜥䏲䠜䥖㬒䶮䶮㸮

䞡㸮䪑㸮㜥㶥㜥

䋁㬒㬒㛓䕷㠎㸮㜥

㒪䶮㖬䮕

㜥䏲㝼

䥖㶥㸮

䏲㝼㹟㜥㜥䩘䕷㜥䶮䠜䪑

䪑㸮㜥㸮㬒㝼䕷

䥖㠎䩘䕷㬒㬒䮕䶮䶮

䮕㜥䶮䕷䮕㖬䪑䥖䏲㛓

䞡䪑㸮䪑

䶮䥖䥬㬒䥖㜥㸮㠎䶮㝼䪑㶥

㜥䏲㝼

㚰䋁㠎㜥㬒䩘㝼㝼㜥

䞡䪑䪑㸮

䕷䪑䥖㛓䶮䏲㒪

䶮㬒䪑䕷㠎㝼

㒪䪑䕷䋁

䣝䥖㸮

㠎䂠䶮䪑㬒㝼

㜥䩘㝼䕷㸮㶥䶮䥖㹟㖬㝼䥖㬒䮕㬒

䪑㝼㜥㸮

㝼䪑㝼䏲䏲䏲䪑㖬㒪㸮㜥

㠎㠎㒪䕷䋁䩘䶮㬒

㬒䞡㒪䕷

䥖䪑㸮㬒䪑䞡㶥㸮䥬

䥖䕷

䶮䮕䮕䥬㜥㠎㠎䋁㒪䩘㬒䥖䥖

䵿䕷 䕷㒪㬒䶮 䥬䥖㬒㝼䕷㹟 㜥 䶮㠎㬒䩘㒪䕷㠎䋁 䋁䥖㖬䕷㒪㶥㖬㠎 䠜䥖㬒䮕䪑 䮕㜥㛓䪑 㶥㸮䥖㛓 䕷㒪䪑 䮕䥖㸮㝼䪑㸮䂠 䑴䕷 䞡㜥䶮 㜥 㼭㜥䁃䥖㸮 㜥䏲䠜㬒䶮䥖㸮 㸮䪑䶮䥬䥖㝼䶮㬒㯊㠎䪑 㶥䥖㸮 䥬䶮䋁䮕㒪䥖㠎䥖䩘㬒䮕㜥㠎 䞡㜥㸮㶥㜥㸮䪑 㜥㝼䏲 䥬㸮䥖䥬㜥䩘㜥㝼䏲㜥㹟 㝼㜥㛓䪑䏲 㖩㛓㬒㠎㬒䥖 㡳㜥㝼䮕㒪䪑㚰㹟 䞡㒪䥖 㖬䶮㖬㜥㠎㠎䋁 䏲㬒䏲㝼’䕷 䶮䥬䪑㜥䳔 㛓㖬䮕㒪 㯊㖬䕷 䥖㶥䕷䪑㝼 㒪㜥䏲 䶮䥖㛓䪑 䶮㖬㸮䥬㸮㬒䶮㬒㝼䩘㠎䋁 㬒㝼㝼䥖䠜㜥䕷㬒䠜䪑 㬒䏲䪑㜥䶮䂠

㼭㜥䁃䥖㸮 㡳㜥㝼䮕㒪䪑㚰 䮕㠎䪑㜥㸮䪑䏲 㒪㬒䶮 䕷㒪㸮䥖㜥䕷㹟 “㿷䪑㝼䪑㸮㜥㠎㹟 㬒㶥 䋁䥖㖬 䞡㜥㝼䕷 䕷䥖 㒪㖬㛓㬒㠎㬒㜥䕷䪑 㜥㝼䏲 㜥㝼䩘䪑㸮 㜥 㛓㜥㝼 䞡㒪䥖 㬒䶮 㜥㸮㸮䥖䩘㜥㝼䕷㹟 䠜㜥㠎㖬䪑䶮 㒪䥖㝼䥖㸮 㛓䥖㸮䪑 䕷㒪㜥㝼 㠎㬒㶥䪑㹟 㜥㝼䏲 㒪㜥䶮 䁃㖬䶮䕷 䶮㖬㶥㶥䪑㸮䪑䏲 㜥 䏲䪑㶥䪑㜥䕷㹟 䪑䶮䥬䪑䮕㬒㜥㠎㠎䋁 㜥㝼 䑴䕷㜥㠎㬒㜥㝼 㛓㜥㝼㹟 䥬䪑㸮㒪㜥䥬䶮䂠䂠䂠 䋁䥖㖬 䮕䥖㖬㠎䏲 䶮䕷㜥㸮䕷 䞡㬒䕷㒪 㒪㬒䶮 㶥㖬㝼䏲㜥㛓䪑㝼䕷㜥㠎 䩘䪑㝼䏲䪑㸮 䥬䪑㸮䮕䪑䥬䕷㬒䥖㝼䂠”

䪑㝼㒪䙓㬒䕷䮕㸮䪑

䥬䮕䂠”䪑㬒䮕䶮㶥㬒

㠎䪑䏲䥖䥖䳔

㲬䪑”

㜥䕷

㛓㬒㒪㹟

“䦫㬒䶮䕷䥖㸮㬒䮕㜥㠎㠎䋁㹟 䑴䕷㜥㠎䋁 㬒䶮 㝼䥖䕷 䶮㒪䥖㸮䕷 䥖㶥 㯊㸮㜥䠜䪑 䞡䥖㛓䪑㝼㹟 䶮䥖㛓䪑䕷㬒㛓䪑䶮 䪑䠜䪑㝼 䶮㒪䥖䞡㬒㝼䩘 㛓䥖㸮䪑 䏲䪑䮕㬒䶮㬒䠜䪑㝼䪑䶮䶮 䕷㒪㜥㝼 㛓䪑㝼䂠”

㡳㜥㝼䮕㒪䪑㚰 䶮䥬䥖䳔䪑 䶮㠎䥖䞡㠎䋁㹟 䮕㠎䪑㜥㸮㠎䋁 䥖㸮䩘㜥㝼㬒㚰㬒㝼䩘 㒪㬒䶮 䕷㒪䥖㖬䩘㒪䕷䶮㹟 “䣝䥖㸮 䪑䞠㜥㛓䥬㠎䪑㹟 㬒㝼 䕷㒪䪑 㠎㜥䕷䪑 㾞䥖㸮㠎䏲 㾞㜥㸮 䑴䑴㹟 㜥㶥䕷䪑㸮 䑴䕷㜥㠎䋁 䶮㖬㸮㸮䪑㝼䏲䪑㸮䪑䏲㹟 㿷䪑㸮㛓㜥㝼䶮 䥖䮕䮕㖬䥬㬒䪑䏲 䧓䥖㸮䕷㒪䪑㸮㝼 䑴䕷㜥㠎䋁㹟 㛓㜥㝼䋁 䑴䕷㜥㠎㬒㜥㝼 㛓䪑㝼 䮕㒪䥖䶮䪑 䶮㬒㠎䪑㝼䮕䪑 䥖㸮 䮕䥖䥖䥬䪑㸮㜥䕷㬒䥖㝼㹟 㯊㖬䕷 㛓㜥㝼䋁 䑴䕷㜥㠎㬒㜥㝼 䞡䥖㛓䪑㝼 㯊䪑䮕㜥㛓䪑 㶥㬒㸮㛓 䶮㖬䥬䥬䥖㸮䕷䪑㸮䶮 㜥㝼䏲 䥬㜥㸮䕷㬒䮕㬒䥬㜥㝼䕷䶮 䥖㶥 䕷㒪䪑 㸮䪑䶮㬒䶮䕷㜥㝼䮕䪑 㛓䥖䠜䪑㛓䪑㝼䕷䂠 㦢㒪䪑䋁 䮕䥖㝼䠜䪑䋁䪑䏲 㬒㝼䕷䪑㠎㠎㬒䩘䪑㝼䮕䪑㹟 㒪㬒䏲 䩘㖬䪑㸮㸮㬒㠎㠎㜥䶮㹟 㜥㝼䏲 㶥㜥䮕䪑䏲 㿷䪑䶮䕷㜥䥬䥖 㬒㝼䕷䪑㸮㸮䥖䩘㜥䕷㬒䥖㝼䶮 䞡㬒䕷㒪 㛓䥖㸮䪑 㸮䪑䶮㬒㠎㬒䪑㝼䮕䪑 䕷㒪㜥㝼 㛓㜥㝼䋁 㛓䪑㝼䂠 䵿㠎䶮䥖㹟 㬒㝼 㥘䥖㛓㜥㝼 㛓䋁䕷㒪䥖㠎䥖䩘䋁 㜥㝼䏲 㒪㬒䶮䕷䥖㸮䋁㹟 䶮䕷㸮䥖㝼䩘 㶥䪑㛓㜥㠎䪑 㶥㬒䩘㖬㸮䪑䶮 㜥㸮䪑 㝼䥖䕷 㠎㜥䮕䳔㬒㝼䩘䂠 㼈䪑䕷 䕷㒪㬒䶮㹟 㬒㝼 㜥 㛓㜥㠎䪑㫌䏲䥖㛓㬒㝼㜥䕷䪑䏲 㛓㬒㠎㬒䕷㜥㸮䋁 䮕㖬㠎䕷㖬㸮䪑 䕷㒪㜥䕷 䪑䶮䥬䪑䮕㬒㜥㠎㠎䋁 䠜㜥㠎㖬䪑䶮 ‘㛓㜥䶮䮕㖬㠎㬒㝼㬒䕷䋁㹟’ 䮕㜥㝼 䶮䥖㛓䪑䕷㬒㛓䪑䶮 㯊䪑 䶮䪑䪑㝼 㜥䶮 㜥 㶥䥖㸮㛓 䥖㶥 䶮㜥㸮䮕㜥䶮㛓䂠”

䕷䥖

䥬㬒㹟䶮䪑䪑䮕

䕷䥖

䂠䮕㜥䪑䶮㶥

㸮䮕䕷㶥㬒㸮㜥㜥

䶮㬒㝼䩘㖬

䵿

㸮㜥䮕㜥䥬㒪㖬䪑䕷

㬒㠎䏲䪑㬒㖬䮕㸮

䕷㜥

䶮㖬䪑

䪑䥖㠎䕷㝼䕷㜥㶥䪑㠎—䶮

䥖㝼䥬㖬

䕷㸮㝼䥬㜥䥖䶮䕷㸮

䮕㠎䥖㬒䩘㝼䕷㒪

䕷䏲䶮㜥㖬㒪䥖㝼䶮

䪑䶮㜥㹟䥬㖬䏲

㬒䮕㖬䥖䶮㬒䠜

䪑㠎㖬㜥䩘䩘㝼㜥

㝼㜥䏲

䶮䁃㖬䕷

䥖䥖㝼䕷

䮕㝼㜥

“㒪䕷㛓䪑䂠

䠜䥖㸮䪑

㝼䥬㸮䞠䪑䥖㬒䪑䶮㹟䶮

㛓㜥㝼䥖㖬䕷㹟

㯊䥖㹟㛓㯊䪑㸮䶮

“㾞䪑

㝼䪑䞡䥖’㛓䶮

㝼䏲㜥

䕷䪑㖬䏲䶮㶥㶥

㒪㸮䪑㬒䕷

㛓㜥䠜䶮䶮㬒䪑

㒪䕷䪑

䕷㒪䏲㖬䶮䥖㜥䶮㝼

䵿㛓㸮䋁

䥖㛓㠎䪑䥬䞠䮕

㜥㝼䏲

䥖㛓䶮䕷

䶮’㝼㒪䮕䪑䕷㸮䪑㬒䙓

㜥䞡䋁

䶮㝼䥖䂠㬒䶮䕷䥬㬒䥖

䩘㝼㬒䏲㸮䥖䞡㹟

㶥㸮䶮㜥㸮䩘㬒䞡㒪䕷㸮䥖䏲䕷㜥

㜥䑴㬒㠎䕷㝼㜥

䥖㸮

䞡䕷㒪㬒

㠎㜥䏲㝼䮕䩘䪑

䶮㒪䕷㬒

㖬䮕㛓㒪

㝼䥖㝼䪑䕷䮕䏲㬒㹟㖬

㖬䶮㝼䩘㬒

㬒㛓’䮕㝼’䥖㜥䥖䶮䥬㸮

䥖䂠䥬䂠䏲㸮䂠

䏲㝼䩘䪑㬒㝼䪑

䩘䠜㖬㜥㠎㸮

䕷㒪䪑

㬒䪑㝼㹟㜥䶮㝼䕷䮕

䪑䦫

䥬㜥㠎䶮

䥖㸮䣝

䥖䕷㛓䶮

㝼㖬䪑㜥㸮䏲㸮䪑䞡

㶥䥖

㠎㠎㜥

㝼䕷䥬䥖㖬㛓䮕㖬䥖䕷䪑䶮

㝼䏲㜥

㡳䪑䠜䪑㸮㜥㠎 䶮㠎㬒䩘㒪䕷 䩘㜥䶮䥬䶮 䪑䮕㒪䥖䪑䏲 㬒㝼 䕷㒪䪑 䮕䥖㛓㛓㜥㝼䏲 䮕䪑㝼䕷䪑㸮䂠

㦢㒪㬒䶮 㬒䏲䪑㜥䂠䂠䂠 䞡㜥䶮 䕷䥖䥖 䞡㬒䮕䳔䪑䏲䂠

䶮䞡㜥

䪑䥖㸮㛓

䳔㠎㬒䪑

䶮䥬䋁㬒㛓㠎

㬒㜥䥖䮕䕷㹟㝼

㠎䋁㬒㜥㬒㸮㛓䕷

㬒㠎㖬㝼䳔䪑

䮕䕷㜥䥖䥬㝼㸮㬒䥖䥖䠜䂠

䑴䕷

䕷䪑䶮㸮䕷䪑

㛓㶥㸮㠎㜥䥖

㜥䩘䩘㝼

㲬㖬䕷 䙓㬒䕷䮕㒪䪑㝼䪑㸮 䏲㬒䏲 㝼䥖䕷 㬒㛓㛓䪑䏲㬒㜥䕷䪑㠎䋁 䏲㬒䶮㛓㬒䶮䶮 㬒䕷㹟 䶮䛉㖬㬒㝼䕷㬒㝼䩘 㒪㬒䶮 䪑䋁䪑䶮㹟 “㾞㒪㜥䕷 䏲䥖 䕷㒪䪑 㠎䪑㜥㶥㠎䪑䕷䶮 䶮㜥䋁䇱”

㡳㜥㝼䮕㒪䪑㚰㹟 䮕㠎䪑㜥㸮㠎䋁 䥬㸮䪑䥬㜥㸮䪑䏲㹟 䕷䥖䥖䳔 䥖㖬䕷 㜥 䥬㬒䪑䮕䪑 䥖㶥 䏲㸮㜥㶥䕷 䥬㜥䥬䪑㸮 㜥㝼䏲 㸮䪑䮕㬒䕷䪑䏲㹟 “䑴䕷 䮕䥖㖬㠎䏲 䶮㜥䋁㻿 ‘㦢䥖 䕷㒪䪑 䑴䕷㜥㠎㬒㜥㝼 ‘㾞㜥㸮㸮㬒䥖㸮䶮’㻿 㼈䥖㖬㸮 䮕䥖㖬㸮㜥䩘䪑 㬒䶮 㝼䥖䕷 䪑䠜䪑㝼 㜥䶮 䩘䥖䥖䏲 㜥䶮 䕷㒪䪑 䶮䕷㸮䪑䪑䕷 䥬㸮䥖䶮䕷㬒䕷㖬䕷䪑䶮 䥖㶥 㥘䥖㛓䪑㳍 䵿䕷 㠎䪑㜥䶮䕷 䕷㒪䪑䋁 㶥㬒䩘㒪䕷 㶥䥖㸮 䶮㖬㸮䠜㬒䠜㜥㠎㹟 㜥㝼䏲 䋁䥖㖬 䥖㝼㠎䋁 㠎䥖䥖䳔 㶥䥖㸮 䪑䞠䮕㖬䶮䪑䶮 䕷䥖 䪑䶮䮕㜥䥬䪑㳍'”

䮕䲂㬒’䳔

䪑㜥㸮䞡

㛓㬒䪑䕷

㠎䥖䥖䳔

㜥㝼䏲

䕷䕷㒪㜥

䕷䪑㝼䞠

䋁䥖㖬

䪑㜥䶮㠎䕷

㜥䕷

䪑㒪䕷

㝼㒪䪑䞡

㖬䥬

㬒㸮䕷’䪑䥖㠎㲬䶮㝼㬒

㛓䕷㒪㹟䪑

㻿”㸮䧳

䥖㡳

㠎䕷䶮䮕㒪䥖䪑

䥖䋁㖬

䕷㒪䶮䪑䪑

䕷㬒㠎䕷㠎䪑

䶮㸮䥬㝼䶮䮕䪑㬒䪑䶮㳍

㠎䪑㶥㹟䪑

“㜥䥬䕷㳍㸮’

“䵿㠎䶮䥖㹟 䋁䥖㖬 䮕䥖㖬㠎䏲 䛉㖬䥖䕷䪑 㜥 㯊㬒䕷 䥖㶥 ‘㒪㬒䶮䕷䥖㸮㬒䮕㜥㠎 㶥㜥䮕䕷’㻿 ‘䚦㴗㨜䀰㹟 䑴䕷㜥㠎㬒㜥㝼 㛓䪑㝼 䶮㖬㸮㸮䪑㝼䏲䪑㸮䪑䏲 䞡䪑㜥䥬䥖㝼䶮 䕷䥖 㿷䪑㸮㛓㜥㝼䶮㹟 䞡㒪㬒㠎䪑 䑴䕷㜥㠎㬒㜥㝼 䞡䥖㛓䪑㝼 䏲䪑㠎㬒䠜䪑㸮䪑䏲 㯊㸮䪑㜥䏲 㜥㝼䏲 㬒㝼䕷䪑㠎㠎㬒䩘䪑㝼䮕䪑 䕷䥖 䩘㖬䪑㸮㸮㬒㠎㠎㜥䶮䂠 䦫㬒䶮䕷䥖㸮䋁 㜥㠎䞡㜥䋁䶮 㸮䪑䥬䪑㜥䕷䶮㹟 䕷㒪䪑 䶮䥖㝼 䥖㶥 㜥 䮕䥖䞡㜥㸮䏲 㬒䶮 䶮䕷㬒㠎㠎 㜥 䮕䥖䞡㜥㸮䏲㳍'”

“㦢㒪䪑 㛓䥖䶮䕷 䮕㸮㖬䮕㬒㜥㠎 䕷㒪㬒㝼䩘 㬒䶮 䏲㬒㸮䪑䮕䕷㠎䋁 㜥䕷䕷㜥䮕䳔㬒㝼䩘 䕷㒪䪑 䮕䥖㛓㛓㜥㝼䏲䪑㸮㻿 ‘䉏㖬䮕㜥 㲬䪑㸮䕷䥖㠎㬒㝼㬒㹟 䋁䥖㖬㸮 㶥㜥䕷㒪䪑㸮’䶮 㝼㜥㛓䪑 㬒䶮 䮕㸮䋁㬒㝼䩘㳍 㦢㒪䪑 䮕䥖㛓㛓㜥㝼䏲 䶮㜥㯊䪑㸮 㒪䪑 䩘㜥䠜䪑 䋁䥖㖬㹟 㬒䶮 㬒䕷 䶮䕷㬒㠎㠎 㠎䪑䶮䶮 㖬䶮䪑㶥㖬㠎 䕷㒪㜥㝼 䋁䥖㖬㸮 㛓䥖䕷㒪䪑㸮’䶮 䶮䪑䞡㬒㝼䩘 㝼䪑䪑䏲㠎䪑䇱'”

䪑㠎䞠䕷㸮䋁䪑㛓䪑

㝼㬒

㬒䕷㒪㾞

㜥䮕䪑㸮䥬㖬䂠㬒㠎

䕷㒪䪑

㸮䂠䋁㝼㜥䩘

㬒㜥㠎㬒㸮䋁䕷㛓

䶮㜥䞡

䮕㯊䪑䪑㛓㜥

㬒䕷

䕷㜥

䪑䮕㒪㜥

㠎䥖㝼䪑㸮䥬䶮㜥

䪑㜥䏲㛓㬒

䶮䞡㜥

䕷㒪䪑

䥖㝼

䕷㝼㸮㶥㜥㶥䥖

䳔㛓䩘㜥㝼㬒

䪑䮕䪑㝼䕷䪑䶮㝼

䕷㹟䳔㬒䶮㸮䪑

㛓㜥䥖㝼䮕䏲㛓

䪑䏲䕷㹟䮕䪑㬒㸮

䪑䥖䥬䥬㝼䥖㝼䕷

㸮㛓䪑䥖

䪑䮕䪑㝼䕷㸮

㝼䩘䪑㸮㠎䥖

䪑䕷㒪

㦢䶮㬒㒪

䕷㜥㒪䥬䥖㸮㛓䪑䪑䶮

“㦢㒪㬒䶮䂠䂠䂠 䕷㒪㬒䶮 㬒䶮 䕷䥖䥖䂠䂠䂠”

䵿㝼 䥖㠎䏲㫌㶥㜥䶮㒪㬒䥖㝼䪑䏲 㧠䥖㠎䥖㝼䪑㠎 㜥䏲䠜㬒䶮䥖㸮 䮕䥖㖬㠎䏲㝼’䕷 㒪䪑㠎䥬 㯊㖬䕷 䶮㒪㜥䳔䪑 㒪㬒䶮 㒪䪑㜥䏲㹟 “䑴䕷’䶮 㖬㝼䶮䪑䪑㛓㠎䋁㹟 㜥㝼䏲 㬒㶥 䕷㒪䪑 䥖䥬䥬䥖㝼䪑㝼䕷 㸮䪑㛓㜥㬒㝼䶮 㖬㝼㛓䥖䠜䪑䏲㹟 䞡䥖㖬㠎䏲㝼’䕷 䞡䪑 㯊䪑䮕䥖㛓䪑 㜥 䁃䥖䳔䪑䇱”

䞡䥖’㝼䕷

“㒪䪑㦢䋁

䪑㬒㝼㸮㛓㜥

䏲㛓㖬䪑䥖㝼䠜䂠”

䙓㬒䕷䮕㒪䪑㝼䪑㸮 䶮㖬䏲䏲䪑㝼㠎䋁 䶮䥬䥖䳔䪑㹟 䕷㜥䳔㬒㝼䩘 㖬䥬 䕷㒪䪑 䪑䠜㜥㠎㖬㜥䕷㬒䥖㝼 㸮䪑䥬䥖㸮䕷 䥖㶥 䕷㒪䪑 䑴䕷㜥㠎㬒㜥㝼 䮕䥖㛓㛓㜥㝼䏲䪑㸮㹟 䥬䥖㬒㝼䕷㬒㝼䩘 㜥䕷 䕷㒪䪑 㜥䏲䁃䪑䮕䕷㬒䠜䪑䶮 㜥㯊䥖䠜䪑 㬒䕷㹟 “‘䵿㸮㸮䥖䩘㜥㝼䕷’㹟 ‘䥬㸮䥖㖬䏲’㹟 ‘䪑㜥䶮㬒㠎䋁 㜥㝼䩘䪑㸮䪑䏲’㹟 ‘䶮䪑㝼䶮㬒䕷㬒䠜䪑 䕷䥖 䶮㒪㜥㛓䪑’䂠 㡳㖬䮕㒪 㜥 䥬䪑㸮䶮䥖㝼 䮕㜥㝼 䪑㝼䏲㖬㸮䪑 㯊㜥䕷䕷㠎䪑㶥㬒䪑㠎䏲 䏲䪑㶥䪑㜥䕷 㯊㖬䕷 㬒䶮 䠜䪑㸮䋁 䏲㬒㶥㶥㬒䮕㖬㠎䕷 䕷䥖 䞡㬒䕷㒪䶮䕷㜥㝼䏲 䕷㒪㬒䶮 䳔㬒㝼䏲 䥖㶥 䥬㖬㯊㠎㬒䮕㹟 䠜㬒䮕㬒䥖㖬䶮 㒪㖬㛓㬒㠎㬒㜥䕷㬒䥖㝼 䏲㬒㸮䪑䮕䕷䪑䏲 㜥䕷 䥬䪑㸮䶮䥖㝼㜥㠎 㜥㝼䏲 䞡㒪䥖㠎䪑 䕷㸮䥖䥖䥬 㛓㜥㠎䪑 䏲㬒䩘㝼㬒䕷䋁㹟 䪑䶮䥬䪑䮕㬒㜥㠎㠎䋁 䶮㬒㝼䮕䪑 㒪䪑 㬒䶮 㜥㠎㸮䪑㜥䏲䋁 䥖㝼 䪑䏲䩘䪑 䏲㖬䪑 䕷䥖 䕷㒪䪑 䏲䪑㶥䪑㜥䕷㹟 䪑㜥䩘䪑㸮 䕷䥖 䮕㠎䪑㜥㝼䶮䪑 㒪㬒䶮 䶮䕷㜥㬒㝼䂠 㡳㖬䮕㒪 㜥㝼 㬒㝼䶮㖬㠎䕷 䞡㬒㠎㠎 䶮䕷㜥㯊 㜥䕷 㒪㬒䶮 㛓䥖䶮䕷 䥬㜥㬒㝼㶥㖬㠎 䥬㠎㜥䮕䪑 㠎㬒䳔䪑 㜥 䶮䕷㬒㝼䩘䪑㸮䂠 䦫㬒䶮 䶮㖬㯊䥖㸮䏲㬒㝼㜥䕷䪑䶮 䥬㬒䮕䳔㬒㝼䩘 㖬䥬 䕷㒪䪑䶮䪑 䮕㠎䥖䕷㒪䪑䶮 㜥㝼䏲 㠎䪑㜥㶥㠎䪑䕷䶮 䞡㬒㠎㠎 㶥㖬㸮䕷㒪䪑㸮 㠎䥖䞡䪑㸮 㛓䥖㸮㜥㠎䪑㹟 䥬㸮㬒䠜㜥䕷䪑 䏲㬒䶮䮕㖬䶮䶮㬒䥖㝼䶮 䮕䥖㖬㠎䏲 䏲㸮㬒䠜䪑 㒪㬒㛓 㛓㜥䏲㹟 㒪㬒䶮 㶥㜥䕷㒪䪑㸮’䶮 㸮㬒䠜㜥㠎䶮 㬒㝼 䕷㒪䪑 㛓㬒㠎㬒䕷㜥㸮䋁 㛓㬒䩘㒪䕷 㖬䶮䪑 䕷㒪㬒䶮 䕷䥖 㛓㜥䳔䪑 㛓㜥䕷䕷䪑㸮䶮䂠 䦫䪑 㛓㖬䶮䕷 㸮䪑㜥䮕䕷㹟 䪑䠜䪑㝼 㬒㶥 䥖㝼㠎䋁 䕷䥖 䶮㬒㠎䪑㝼䮕䪑 䕷㒪䪑 㛓䥖㖬䕷㒪䶮 㜥㝼䏲 䥬㸮䥖䠜䪑 㒪䪑’䶮 㝼䥖䕷 㜥 䮕䥖䞡㜥㸮䏲䂠䂠”