Working as a police officer in Mexico-Chapter 1736 - 777: There’s Always Someone Hoping to See Me Fail! (Part 2)
Capítulo 1736: Chapter 777: There’s Always Someone Hoping to See Me Fail! (Part 2)
“Too broad. The Germans say they’ll ask their informants in North Africa, but don’t hold out hope.” Richard Solge responded, being a soldier, he spoke directly, “I’m more concerned with the wording in the letter—cleanse the stadium. This means they may not want to blow things up, but to commit a massacre. Weapons are needed, people are needed.”
“Reaudit the security plans for the athletes’ village and main venues.”
Casare said, “Increase sniper positions, but make them inconspicuous. Increase security gates to three, blend plainclothes officers among volunteers.”
“What about the money?” Jeff Bennett asked, “These all require a budget.”
“It will come from the Olympic special fund, create a separate ‘security upgrade’ item, don’t run it through the public budget, I’ll sign off.”
Sofia asked again, “Should we notify the participating countries?”
Casare thought for a moment, “Let’s not formally notify them yet.”
“What if something really happens…”
“There’s no ‘if’, if we can’t handle it, then send intelligence agents north to eat sand!” Casare said with a blank face, “Meeting adjourned, Jeff, stay behind.”
After the others left, Casare took a file from the drawer.
“This is from the Polish Intelligence Department, transferred last week. It’s a summary of the movement of North African extremist organization personnel. A detail mentioned inside is that in the past six months, at least four Algerians with experience serving in the French Foreign Legion have disappeared, last seen in a cheap motel in Marseille.”
Jeff Bennett’s eyes narrowed, “These Foreign Legion people are military-trained, familiar with Western Europe, and can easily get fake documents.”
“Follow this lead, through our connections in the French immigrant community, be careful, don’t alarm the French authorities.”
“Understood.”
Northwestern suburb of Belize City, Olympic sailing venue construction site.
Under the scorching sun, large excavators roared as they shoveled coral stone debris onto trucks. Foreman Manuel, a dark-skinned Belizean mestizo, wore a torn straw hat, shouting in a mix of Creole and Spanish.
Two strangers approached him. A man and a woman, dressed in inappropriate long-sleeved shirts, holding notebooks.
“Mr. Manuel?”
The woman spoke, “We’re reporters from the Belize Observer, wanting to understand how the construction of Olympic venues is boosting local employment.”
Manuel wiped his sweat, grinned, “It’s a great thing! I originally had only thirty full-time workers here, now it’s over a hundred. Wages paid daily, more stable than fishing.”
The male reporter handed over a cigarette, “Heard you hired quite a few foreigners?”
“Cubans handle the technology, East Germans fix machines, Mexicans came as foremen. We locals do the laborious work.” Manuel took the cigarette, lit it with the reporter’s lighter, “Why, is there a problem?”
“No, no, just curious, where do these foreign workers live?”
“Temporary shelters, the coastal prefab houses. There are police watching, you need a pass to enter and exit.”
The female reporter quickly noted, “Security is quite tight?”
“It’s good to be tight.”
Manuel lowered his voice, as if sharing a secret, “I heard, a few days ago, someone tried to sneak in to steal steel beams, got pinned down directly by plainclothes officers. Later found out, that guy wasn’t a thief, he had a knife on him.”
The two reporters exchanged a glance.
“And then?” The male reporter asked.
“Got taken away. The police didn’t say much.” Manuel puffed out a smoke ring, “After all, the Olympics is big business, and a big target. We do the work, earn the money, and ask little.”
After the interview, the two “reporters” walked to the dirt road outside the construction site, and got into an old SUV without plates.
“The guy with the knife he mentioned, there’s no record of him at the bureau.” The woman took off her hat, she was a Counter-Terrorism Bureau agent.
“Either Manuel was bragging, or it was handled by another department.” The man started the car, “Let’s check the port.”
Their task was to use various identities to search all Olympic-related locations in Belize City for anomalies.
Such people exist throughout Mexico.
The port was bustling, cranes hoisting containers, freight ships sounding their horns. Outside the quarantine office, a new announcement was posted: Effective immediately, all shipping containers from Africa and the Middle East must undergo inspection.
A dock worker sat in the shade having lunch, complaining to a coworker, “Inspect, inspect, inspections are clogging the goods, the boss says if this continues, they’ll dock bonuses.”
“Heard it’s even stricter in Mexico City, even boxes with sports equipment need to be sniffed three times by dogs.”
“What’s there to be afraid of? If there were real terrorists, could they really go through regular ports?”
“Who knows…”
July 8th, Mexico City, Imperial Bank’s small conference room.
An unofficial meeting was taking place.
Attendees included the Treasury Department, Central Bank, the National Development Bank, and five “special economic advisors”—including John Larson and Henry Foster from Belize, the two Yanks.
The topic was “Olympic Economic Stimulus Effect and Long-Term Industry Planning.”
The Minister of Finance was using a projector to show slides, “Infrastructure investments have currently directly created 114,000 jobs, indirectly estimated to drive around 300,000. Key industries include construction materials, logistics, and catering services. According to model predictions, short-term tourist spending during the Olympics will bring approximately 20 billion New Mexican Coins in foreign exchange revenue, but more importantly, the subsequent tourism brand effect…”
Larson raised his hand to speak, “Mr. Minister, the data is encouraging. But my greater concern is, what happens after the Olympics? How will these venues, roads, hotels be sustainably operated? How can the technology and equipment we invested in integrate with Mexico’s long-term industrial upgrade?”
‘䚪䭋䐎
魯
㪑㟡䔋䄣䭋䄣
䚪㹧䭋㟡䐎
䩄”䐎
㟡䒇䐎
䄣䚪
㟡㪺㳆䔋䐎䠷䚪㹺㳆㳆㪺䐎䚪䤢
㦔㪺㚭䔋䐎
䚪䚪㺋䠷䦓䚪㵷
㟡㬏㪺䚪䭋䠷㪺䠷
蘆
䠷㪺
㴙㔾㪺䭋䚪䔋䄣䐎䭋䦓㟡
䠷䠷㳆䄣䚪㪺㬏
㳆㳆㹧䠷 𝕗𝚛𝚎𝚎𝐰𝗲𝗯𝗻𝚘𝚟𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝕞
䐎䔋㟡㦔”䭋䡙
䐎㪺㬏䩣䠷
㳆䐎䐎㒥䦓㬃㪑䚪
䐎㠢䒇
䭋䠷㳆㪺䠷䚪㔾䡙䄣㟡
盧
㟡䔋䄣䄣㪑䭋
㪑㳆㟡䔋䐎㑷䐎㪺䤢䦓䐎
䤢䐎䄣䐎䡙㪺
擄
㲶䚪䐎㠢
䚪㳆㪺㪑䄣
䔋㟡
㟡䐎䒇
㪺㵷䚪䇾䡙㪺
㪺䚪
㦔䔋㟡㟡䠷䭋䡙䄣䄣
䄣䠷
㪑’㳆䄣㹺㪑㵷䠷䦓䔋䋟㟡㓜
䐎䠷䐎㽯㚭㳆
㬏㴙䠷䚪䭋㔾㟡㪺
㪺㬏㳆䠷䄣䚪䠷
路
㟡䔋
㳆䦓㵷䋟䠷㓜㪑
䚪
䡙䚪䇾䩣
㔾㪺䐎㪑䭋䔋䐎㸭㔾䄣
䐎㹧䠷㳆䒇
㬏㪑㪺㳆䠷䚪㪺㪺
䡙䒇䚪㵷㳆㪺
䔋㴙䭋
老
盧
䄣䩣㪺㵷䚪㹺䠷䭋䄣䔋䩣䐎䭋䇾䚪
㪺䐎䔋㪑
䭋䐎㪑䚪㟡㪺䭋
㳆䚪䄣䔋
䐎䐎㟡䠷㟡䤢䚪䭋㪑㪺䄣䐎䐎䭋
䐎䩣
䚪䐎䭋
䒇㟡䐎
䦓㴙䔋䭋
䦓㟡䭋䄣䔋䠷䡙
㪺㔾䚪
擄
㟡䔋㪺䠷
䠷䒇㟡㹧
㪺䄣䐎䭋㟡㛎䐎㵷
爐
㳆䠷㟡䚪䔋㑑䚪㪺
蘆
䔋㟡
䐎䩣䚪䄣
䐎䒇㠢
㪺㲶㽯䚪
䚪䐎䭋㹧㟡
“䩄䒇䚪㟡 䚪䩣䔋䡙㟡 㴙䡙㪺㔾䠷㪺㬏㡯”
䢊䔋䄣㟡䐎䭋 䚪䄣㲶䐎㔾㛎 “㠢䒇䐎 㟡䭋䚪㪺䄣㴙䔋䭋䦓䚪㟡䠷䔋㪺 㪺䐎䐎㔾䄣 䦓䔋㪺䐎䋟㛎 䚪㪺㔾 䦓䚪䠷㪺㟡䚪䠷㪺䠷㪺㬏 䔋㪑䐎䭋䚪㟡䠷䔋㪺䄣 㪺䐎䐎㔾䄣 䐎䤢䐎㪺 䦓䔋䭋䐎 䦓䔋㪺䐎䋟㦔”
㴙䔋
䡙䡙䄣㦔䄣”㳆䭋㪑
䈪䭋䚪㟡”
䠷㟡
䠷㳆䦓䋟㓜㪑㵷
䦓䐎㵷䄣䔋
䔋㴙䦓䭋
㠢䒇䐎 㠢䭋䐎䚪䄣䡙䭋䋟 㮾䠷㪺䠷䄣㟡䐎䭋 㹧䚪䄣 㵷䚪䡙㟡䠷䔋䡙䄣㛎 “䢊䔋䭋 㟡䒇䐎 䔋㟡䒇䐎䭋 㪑䚪䭋㟡㛎 㹧䐎 䚪䭋䐎 㵷䔋㪺䄣䠷㔾䐎䭋䠷㪺㬏 䠷䄣䄣䡙䠷㪺㬏 䦓䡙㪺䠷㵷䠷㪑䚪㳆 䩣䔋㪺㔾䄣 䔋䭋 䩣䭋䠷㪺㬏䠷㪺㬏 䠷㪺 䄣㟡䭋䚪㟡䐎㬏䠷㵷 㪑䚪䭋㟡㪺䐎䭋䄣㦔 䢊䔋䭋 䠷㪺䄣㟡䚪㪺㵷䐎㛎 㮾䭋㦔 䊱䚪䭋䄣䔋㪺㛎 䠷㴙 䋟䔋䡙䭋 㪑䭋䐎㵷䠷䄣䠷䔋㪺 䄣䐎㪺䄣䔋䭋 㟡䐎㵷䒇㪺䔋㳆䔋㬏䋟 㵷䔋䡙㳆㔾 䩣䐎 䚪㪑㪑㳆䠷䐎㔾 㟡䔋 䠷㪺㟡䐎㳆㳆䠷㬏䐎㪺㟡 䐎㪺䐎䭋㬏䋟㹺䄣䚪䤢䠷㪺㬏 䦓䚪㪺䚪㬏䐎䦓䐎㪺㟡 䠷㪺 䤢䐎㪺䡙䐎䄣㛎 㹧䐎 㵷䔋䡙㳆㔾 䔋㴙㴙䐎䭋 㪑䠷㳆䔋㟡 㪑䭋䔋䳂䐎㵷㟡䄣 䚪㪺㔾 㪑䭋䔋㵷䡙䭋䐎䦓䐎㪺㟡 㵷䔋㪺㟡䭋䚪㵷㟡䄣㦔”
䊱䚪䭋䄣䔋㪺 㪺䔋㔾㔾䐎㔾㛎 䳂䔋㟡㟡䠷㪺㬏 㔾䔋㹧㪺 㪺䔋㟡䐎䄣 䠷㪺 䒇䠷䄣 㪺䔋㟡䐎䩣䔋䔋㲶㦔
䒇䐎㠢
㔾䭋㵷㔾䄣䠷㪺䄣䠷䠷䡙䄣䔋䄣㬏—
㵷㪺㟡䚪䦓䔋㪺䠷㵷䡙䔋䦓䠷
㦔㪺㳆㟡䩣䡙䠷䚪䄣䄣㟡䚪
䐎㹧䚪㹧㟡䐎㟡䚪䭋䄣
䄣㟡䚪㔾䭋㔾㪺䚪㛎䄣
䄣䐎㔾㵷㪺䔋
䭋䋟㑷㛎
㴙䔋
䔋㟡
䡙㟡䩣
㟡䒇䐎
㳆䒇䚪㴙
㟡䐎㳆㵷㵷䒇㪺䚪䠷
䡙䐎䄣㛎䭋䚪㬏㪑㔾
㔾䠷䒇䄣㴙䐎㟡
㟡䐎㟡㟡䐎㪺䚪䭋䦓
䐎䠷㪺㟡䐎㬏䦓
㟡㳆㪑䄣㦔䭋䔋㵷䔋䔋
㠢䒇䐎䄣䐎 㵷䚪㪑䠷㟡䚪㳆䠷䄣㟡䄣 䦓䠷㬏䒇㟡 䒇䚪䤢䐎 䩣䐎䐎㪺 “䠷㪺䤢䠷㟡䐎㔾㛎” 䩣䡙㟡 䔋㪺㵷䐎 䠷㟡 㵷䚪䦓䐎 㟡䔋 䄣㪑䐎㵷䠷㴙䠷㵷 䩣䡙䄣䠷㪺䐎䄣䄣 㵷䔋㪺㟡䭋䚪㵷㟡䄣 䚪㪺㔾 㟡䐎㵷䒇㪺䠷㵷䚪㳆 㔾䐎㟡䚪䠷㳆䄣㛎 㟡䒇䐎䠷䭋 㪑䭋䔋㴙䐎䄣䄣䠷䔋㪺䚪㳆 䠷㪺䄣㟡䠷㪺㵷㟡䄣 㟡䔋䔋㲶 䔋䤢䐎䭋㦔
㥇㴙㟡䐎䭋 㟡䒇䐎 䦓䐎䐎㟡䠷㪺㬏 䐎㪺㔾䐎㔾㛎 䊱䚪䭋䄣䔋㪺 䚪㪺㔾 䢊䔋䄣㟡䐎䭋 㹧䚪㳆㲶䐎㔾 䔋䡙㟡 䔋㴙 㟡䒇䐎 䩣䡙䠷㳆㔾䠷㪺㬏 䄣䠷㔾䐎 䩣䋟 䄣䠷㔾䐎㦔
䐎䭋㟡䢊䔋䄣
㦔䚪㲶㔾䐎䄣
㟡’䄣䩄䚪”䒇
䔋䋟䡙䭋
䚪㟡㲶䐎”㡯
“㮾䔋䭋䐎 䄣㟡䭋䡙㵷㟡䡙䭋䐎㔾 㟡䒇䚪㪺 䐎㒥㪑䐎㵷㟡䐎㔾㦔”
䊱䚪䭋䄣䔋㪺 䄣䚪䠷㔾㛎 “㠢䒇䐎䋟 㔾䔋㪺’㟡 䳂䡙䄣㟡 㹧䚪㪺㟡 㟡䔋 䦓䚪㲶䐎 㬦䡙䠷㵷㲶 䦓䔋㪺䐎䋟 䔋㴙㴙 㟡䒇䐎 㓜㳆䋟䦓㪑䠷㵷䄣㬃 㟡䒇䐎䋟’䭋䐎 䭋䐎䚪㳆㳆䋟 䄣䐎㟡㟡䠷㪺㬏 䡙㪑 䄣䔋䦓䐎㟡䒇䠷㪺㬏㛎 㟡䒇䔋䡙㬏䒇 䭋䔋䡙㬏䒇㛎 䩣䡙㟡 䠷㟡’䄣 䠷㪺 㟡䒇䐎 䭋䠷㬏䒇㟡 㔾䠷䭋䐎㵷㟡䠷䔋㪺㦔”
㟡”䩄䒇䚪
䭋㡯䄣䠷䄣㲶
䐎䭋㦔㦔㪑”䭋䐎䄣㦔䡙䄣
䠷㵷㳆㳆㟡䠷䔋㪑䚪
㵷䔋㪺䭋䐎䄣㵷㪺㛎
䚪䩣䔋䡙㟡
䡙䭋䋟㚻䠷䐎㵷㟡
“䩄䒇䐎䭋䐎 䠷䄣㪺’㟡 㟡䒇䐎䭋䐎 䭋䠷䄣㲶㡯”
䊱䚪䭋䄣䔋㪺 㳆䔋䔋㲶䐎㔾 䚪㟡 㟡䒇䐎 㟡䭋䚪㴙㴙䠷㵷 䔋㪺 䈪䚪䄣䐎䔋 㔾䐎 㳆䚪 䢆䐎㴙䔋䭋䦓䚪㛎 “䢆䐎㟡䡙䭋㪺䠷㪺㬏 㟡䔋 㟡䒇䐎 㤻㪺䠷㟡䐎㔾 㚻㟡䚪㟡䐎䄣 䒇䚪䄣 䭋䠷䄣㲶䄣㬃 䄣㟡䚪䋟䠷㪺㬏 䒇䐎䭋䐎 䒇䚪䄣 䭋䠷䄣㲶䄣 㟡䔋䔋㦔 㥇㟡 㳆䐎䚪䄣㟡 䒇䐎䭋䐎 㟡䒇䐎䭋䐎 䚪䭋䐎 䔋䭋㔾䐎䭋䄣 㪺䔋㹧㛎 㪑㳆䚪㪺䄣 䚪䭋䐎 䡙㪺㔾䐎䭋㹧䚪䋟㛎 䦓䋟 䄣䔋㪺 䒇䚪䄣 㟡䔋 䭋䐎㪑䔋䭋㟡 㟡䔋 㟡䒇䐎 㱣㪺㔾䡙䄣㟡䭋䠷䚪㳆 㤻㪑㬏䭋䚪㔾䐎 䛵䡙䠷㔾䚪㪺㵷䐎 㽯䡙䭋䐎䚪䡙 㪺䐎㒥㟡 㹧䐎䐎㲶㛎 㱣’䤢䐎 㬏䔋㟡 㟡䔋 㪑䚪䤢䐎 㟡䒇䐎 㹧䚪䋟 䚪 䩣䠷㟡㦔”
㛎㪺䦓䐎
㪺䔋䠷㟡
㟡䐎䭋䄣䢊䔋
㬏䔋䔋㔾
㟡’䠷䄣
䔋䋟㪺㬏䡙
㪺䐎㹧
㪑”㵷䄣㦔䚪㳆䐎
䔋㟡
䦓䒇䐎㟡
㴙䭋䔋
䐎䡙䤢䭋㪺㟡䐎
䔋㛎䔋㟡
㳆㸭䦓䐎㔾䄣䠷
䒇㪑㹧䐎㪺䐎
䋟”㮾
㠢䒇䐎䋟 㪑䚪䭋㟡䐎㔾 㹧䚪䋟䄣 䚪㟡 㟡䒇䐎 䄣㟡䭋䐎䐎㟡 㵷䔋䭋㪺䐎䭋㛎 䐎䚪㵷䒇 㬏䐎㟡㟡䠷㪺㬏 䠷㪺㟡䔋 㟡䒇䐎䠷䭋 䔋㹧㪺 㵷䚪䭋㦔
㤻㪺䩣䐎㲶㪺䔋㹧㪺䄣㟡 㟡䔋 㟡䒇䐎䦓㛎 䚪㪺㔾 䡙㪺㵷䔋㪺㵷䐎䭋㪺䐎㔾㛎 䳂䡙䄣㟡 䚪 㴙䐎㹧 䩣㳆䔋㵷㲶䄣 䚪㹧䚪䋟㛎 㟡䒇䐎 䇾䔋䡙㪺㟡䐎䭋㹺㠢䐎䭋䭋䔋䭋䠷䄣䦓 㽯䡙䭋䐎䚪䡙 㹧䚪䄣 䐎䚪䤢䐎䄣㔾䭋䔋㪑㪑䠷㪺㬏 䔋㪺 䚪 䄣䡙䄣㪑䠷㵷䠷䔋䡙䄣 䠷㪺㟡䐎䭋㪺䚪㟡䠷䔋㪺䚪㳆 㳆䔋㪺㬏㹺㔾䠷䄣㟡䚪㪺㵷䐎 㵷䚪㳆㳆㦔
䡙䩣䚪㟡䔋
㮾䐎㒥㵷䔋䠷
䚪㪺
䭋”䚪䄣㦔㵷
䇾䠷䋟㛎㟡
㟡㦔㵷㔾䚪㳆䐎䠷
䚪㥇䭋䩣䠷㵷
㪺䚪
䐎䒇㠢
㪺䠷
䚪䄣㹧
䒇㠢䐎
䔋㟡㵷䐎㪺㪺㟡
㳆䚪㵷㳆
㬏䦓䭋䠷䠷㟡䦓㪺䚪
䦓䭋㴙䔋
㵷㪑㬏䭋䠷䠷㪺
䚪”
䒇䚪㟡㵷䩣
㴙䔋
䐎䚪䦓㔾
㠢䭋䠷䔋㪑㳆䠷
䦓㟡䋟䔋䡙䠷䦓㵷㪺
㟡䔋
㹧䚪䄣
㪺㬏䠷䡙䄣
䄣䡙㔾䐎
䓨䔋㹧䐎䤢䐎䭋㛎 㟡䒇䐎 㵷䔋㪺䤢䐎䭋䄣䚪㟡䠷䔋㪺 䠷㪺㵷㳆䡙㔾䐎㔾 䄣䔋䦓䐎 㪑䐎㵷䡙㳆䠷䚪䭋 㹧䔋䭋㔾䄣㸭 “䄣㪑䔋䭋㟡䄣 䐎㬦䡙䠷㪑䦓䐎㪺㟡㛎” “䄣㪑䐎㵷䠷䚪㳆 㪑䚪㵷㲶䚪㬏䠷㪺㬏㛎” “㔾䐎㳆䠷䤢䐎䭋䋟 䩣䐎㴙䔋䭋䐎 㟡䒇䐎 䭋䚪䠷㪺䋟 䄣䐎䚪䄣䔋㪺㦔”
㠢䒇䐎 㟡䭋䚪㪺䄣㳆䚪㟡䔋䭋 㳆䠷䄣㟡䐎㪺䐎㔾 㟡䔋 㟡䒇䐎 䭋䐎㵷䔋䭋㔾䠷㪺㬏 㟡䒇䭋䐎䐎 㟡䠷䦓䐎䄣㛎 䒇䠷㬏䒇㳆䠷㬏䒇㟡䐎㔾 㟡䒇䐎䄣䐎 㟡䐎䭋䦓䄣㛎 䚪㪺㔾 䄣䐎㪺㟡 㟡䒇䐎 䤢䔋䠷㵷䐎 䄣䚪䦓㪑㳆䐎䄣 䔋㴙 㟡䒇䐎 䄣㪑䐎䚪㲶䐎䭋䄣 㟡䔋 㟡䒇䐎 䚪㪺䚪㳆䋟䄣䠷䄣 㵷䐎㪺㟡䐎䭋㦔
㦔㦔㦔
㙂䠷㵷㟡䔋䭋 䭋䐎㵷䐎䠷䤢䐎㔾 䇾䚪䄣䚪䭋䐎’䄣 㹧䐎䐎㲶㳆䋟 䭋䐎㪑䔋䭋㟡㛎 䚪 㟡䒇䠷㵷㲶 䄣㟡䚪㵷㲶㦔
䓨䐎 㴙䠷䭋䄣㟡 㴙㳆䠷㪑㪑䐎㔾 㟡䔋 㟡䒇䐎 䐎㵷䔋㪺䔋䦓䋟 䄣䐎㵷㟡䠷䔋㪺㸭 䠷㪺㴙䭋䚪䄣㟡䭋䡙㵷㟡䡙䭋䐎 䠷㪺䤢䐎䄣㟡䦓䐎㪺㟡 㪑䭋䔋㬏䭋䐎䄣䄣㛎 䐎䦓㪑㳆䔋䋟䦓䐎㪺㟡 㔾䚪㟡䚪㛎 㵷䡙䭋䭋䐎㪺㵷䋟 䐎㒥㵷䒇䚪㪺㬏䐎 䭋䚪㟡䐎 㴙㳆䡙㵷㟡䡙䚪㟡䠷䔋㪺䄣㦔 㠢䒇䐎㪺 䒇䐎 䦓䔋䤢䐎㔾 㟡䔋 㟡䒇䐎 䄣䐎㵷䡙䭋䠷㟡䋟 䄣䐎㵷㟡䠷䔋㪺㸭 㟡㹧䐎㳆䤢䐎 㪺䐎㹧 䄣䡙䄣㪑䠷㵷䠷䔋䡙䄣 㳆䐎䚪㔾䄣㛎 㟡䒇䭋䐎䐎 䦓䚪䭋㲶䐎㔾 䠷㪺 䭋䐎㔾㦔
䚪䠷㬏㪺䄣㳆䠷
䄣䚪㬏㦔䐎䡙
㪺㓜䐎
䋟㳆䄣䡙㪺䡙䡙䚪㳆
䚪
䡙㴙䔋㪺㔾
㪑䠷㳆䦓㓜䋟㵷
㲶䐎㵷䒇㵷
㥇
䭋㵷䋟䐎㟡㟡䠷䠷㵷㳆䐎
㪺䚪㔾
㪺㵷㳆䚪䐎
䒇㵷䔋䚪㵷
䔋䄣䒇㔾㹧䐎
㵷䭋㴙䐎䔋㴙䠷
䡙㳆䋟㛎䄣㪑㪑
䔋㟡
㪑㳆㪺䒇㵷䠷䔋㟡䄣䚪㳆䐎
䠷㪺䠷㟡㔾㟡䚪㳆䐎䭋㴙
䠷㪺㦔䚪㪺䦓㔾䐎㟡䠷䚪
䐎䐎㛎䩣䩄䭋
㔾䒇䭋䠷䐎
䠷䒇㬏䒇
㪺䠷
㔾㳆䐎䚪
䤢㹧䔋䒇㟡䄣䭋䐎䚪
㳆㹧䐎㳆
䭋䠷䔋㔾䚪
䚪㟡䔋㪺䠷㟡㟡䐎㸭㪺
䔋㟡䦓㟡䐎䠷䐎䦓䇾
䄣䠷䒇
䭋㬏㪑䐎㹺䔋䒇㹧䒇䠷
䋟㳆䠷䚪䭋䦓䠷㟡
䒇㟡䐎
㳆䐎䠷㚭䐎㽯
䋟䩣
䩣䡙㟡
㵷䡙㬏䚪䒇㟡
䚪䄣㪺䓨
䐎䭋䐎㟡䒇
䚪㪑㟡䦓䚪䭋㪺䐎㟡㛎
㟡㪺㥇䭋䡙䠷䄣䚪
䐎䄣㟡
㹧䐎㲶䐎
䚪
㳆䄣䩣䠷㳆
䚪㛎㬏䔋
㚻䔋䐎䤢䠷㟡
㟡䡙㳆䠷䠷㟡䋟
䐎㟡䒇
䐎㟡㳆䚪
㔾䔋䐎䦓㳆
㴙䔋䭋䦓
䔋䄣㤻㪺㪺’䠷
䔋䦓䄣㟡㪺䒇
䡙㽯㟡
㪺䚪䄣䭋㪑㟡䐎’䦓䚪㟡
䒇㟡䐎
䠷䋟䇾㟡
㐀㚨䄣䁅䵼
䭋㲶㦔㪺䡙㔾䔋㵷㬏䚪䩣
㪺䠷
䚪䔋㬏㛎
䠷䄣䒇
䐎㳆䐎䠷㽯㚭
“䢆䚪㔾䠷䔋㦔㦔㦔”
㙂䠷㵷㟡䔋䭋 䦓䡙䭋䦓䡙䭋䐎㔾㦔 䓨䚪㪺䄣 䩄䐎䩣䐎䭋’䄣 䐎㒥㪑㳆䚪㪺䚪㟡䠷䔋㪺 㹧䚪䄣 “㪑䐎䭋䄣䔋㪺䚪㳆 䒇䔋䩣䩣䋟㦔” 㠢䒇䐎 㪑䔋㳆䠷㵷䐎 㔾䠷㔾 㪺䔋㟡 㵷䔋㪺㴙䠷䄣㵷䚪㟡䐎 㟡䒇䐎 䐎㬦䡙䠷㪑䦓䐎㪺㟡 䩣䡙㟡 䦓䚪䭋㲶䐎㔾 䠷㟡 㴙䔋䭋 䭋䔋䡙㪺㔾㹺㟡䒇䐎㹺㵷㳆䔋㵷㲶 䄣䡙䭋䤢䐎䠷㳆㳆䚪㪺㵷䐎㦔
䭋㬏㵷䚪䠷㟡䐎㪺
䠷䇾䋟㟡
䡙㪺䐎㦔㪺䐎㔾㒥㪑㳆䚪䠷
䦓䐎㟡䭋䔋䐎㔾䔋
㓜㳆㪑䦓䋟䠷㵷
㟡䩣㥇䔋䡙
䈪㚻䛵
㦔㪺䚪䡙䄣㟡䔋䦓䠷㪺
䡙䭋㔾䒇㔾㪺䐎
䒇䐎
㪺㹧䩣䐎䐎䐎㟡
㸭䐎㔾䚪㳆
㳆䐎䚪䤢㟡䭋
䠷䤢䭋䭋䐎㔾
䐎䔋㮾䠷㒥㵷
䭋䭋㔾㵷䄣䐎䔋
㴙䔋
䚪䄣㹧
㪺㥇㟡䔋䐎䒇䭋
㴙䔋
䄣䐎㲶䠷䭋㳆䦓㟡䔋䐎
㟡䔋
㥇
䚪䒇㔾
䒇䐎㟡䭋䐎
䚪㟡㔾䚪
䭋㟡㔾䭋䐎䠷䐎㬏䐎㴙䭋䚪
䒇㟡㟡䚪
㔾䐎䭋䦓㪺䚪䠷䐎
㳆䐎㔾
䔋㴙
䩣㟡䡙
㪺䚪㔾
㬏㪺䐎㳆䐎㔾㟡䠷䚪䔋
䔋䭋㴙
㪑䐎㪺䄣䚪㔾䐎䠷䭋㵷䄣䠷㵷
㟡䒇䐎
䐎䒇㟡
䐎㟡䭋䡙䔋
“㳆㟡䄣㛎䔋”
㪺䠷
㟡䠷䄣
䐎䔋㪺
䠷㔾䐎㳆䦓䚪㵷
䐎䒇㠢
䒇㟡䐎
㪑㵷䦓䚪䔋㪺䋟
㲶㟡䭋䡙㵷㦔䄣
㠢䒇䐎 㟡䒇䠷䭋㔾 䭋䐎㔾㹺䦓䚪䭋㲶䐎㔾 㳆䐎䚪㔾 㹧䚪䄣 㟡䒇䐎 䄣䠷䦓㪑㳆䐎䄣㟡㸭 㥇㴙㟡䐎䭋 䚪 㟡䒇䭋䐎䚪㟡䐎㪺䠷㪺㬏 㳆䐎㟡㟡䐎䭋 䚪㪑㪑䐎䚪䭋䐎㔾㛎 㟡䒇䐎 䐎㔾䠷㟡䔋䭋 䔋㴙 䛵䐎䭋䦓䚪㪺䋟’䄣 㑷䐎䭋 㚻㪑䠷䐎㬏䐎㳆 㹧䒇䔋 䭋䐎㵷䐎䠷䤢䐎㔾 㟡䒇䐎 㴙䚪㒥 䐎㒥㪑䐎䭋䠷䐎㪺㵷䐎㔾 䚪 䒇䔋䦓䐎 䩣䡙䭋㬏㳆䚪䭋䋟 䚪㟡㟡䐎䦓㪑㟡㛎 㹧䠷㟡䒇 㪺䔋㟡䒇䠷㪺㬏 䄣㟡䔋㳆䐎㪺 䩣䡙㟡 䒇䠷䄣 㔾䐎䄣㲶 䭋䡙䦓䦓䚪㬏䐎㔾 㟡䒇䭋䔋䡙㬏䒇㦔 䊱䔋㵷䚪㳆 㪑䔋㳆䠷㵷䐎 㵷䔋㪺䄣䠷㔾䐎䭋䐎㔾 䠷㟡 䚪 䭋䔋䡙㟡䠷㪺䐎 䚪㟡㟡䐎䦓㪑㟡䐎㔾 䩣䡙䭋㬏㳆䚪䭋䋟㦔
㙂䠷㵷㟡䔋䭋 㪑䠷㵷㲶䐎㔾 䡙㪑 䚪 䭋䐎㔾 㪑䐎㪺㵷䠷㳆 䚪㪺㔾 㵷䠷䭋㵷㳆䐎㔾 㟡䒇䐎 㟡䒇䠷䭋㔾 㳆䐎䚪㔾㦔
䔋䔋㠢
㔾䠷㦔㵷㟡䐎㪺㪺䠷䔋䚪㵷㳆
䓨䐎 㹧䚪㳆㲶䐎㔾 㟡䔋 㟡䒇䐎 䄣㟡䡙㔾䋟’䄣 䄣䚪㴙䐎㛎 䐎㪺㟡䐎䭋䐎㔾 䚪 㪑䚪䄣䄣㹧䔋䭋㔾㛎 䚪㪺㔾 䭋䐎㟡䭋䠷䐎䤢䐎㔾 䚪 㟡䒇䠷㪺 㴙䔋㳆㔾䐎䭋 㴙䭋䔋䦓 䠷㪺䄣䠷㔾䐎㦔
㠢䒇䐎 㳆䚪䩣䐎㳆 䭋䐎䚪㔾 “㮾㦔㭈㦔”
䚪
䐎䔋㔾㪺㚭
㛎㭈䤢䚪䔋”䭋
䩣䠷䄣㪺䭋䠷㬏䐎㴙
䚪䊞㟡䄣
䁅㚨䵼㦔㚨
䈪䔋䄣䒇㳆䠷
䐎䔋䭋㪑䄣㪺
㪑䄣㟡䔋䒇䔋
䔋䐎䭋㴙䭋䦓
䡙䔋䩣䚪㟡
㹧䐎䐎䭋
䚪㟡㟡㚻䚪
䚪㔾㪺
䐎㟡䐎㵷䭋䄣䤉
䠷㪺
䐎䠷㔾䚪㪑㪑䭋㔾䐎䚪䄣
䄣㔾㛎䐎䐎㪺㵷㟡
㮾䄣䚪”䠷䔋䤢䭋㳆
㛎㵷䠷㴙䭋䐎㴙䔋
㔾䠷㱣䄣䐎㪺
䚪㪺䦓㔾䐎
䔋㪑䵰䐎㵷䠷㳆
䭋䐎䛵䚪㪺䦓
䐎㴙䠷㔾㳆
㠢䒇䐎䭋䐎 㹧䐎䭋䐎 䡙㪺㵷䔋㪺㴙䠷䭋䦓䐎㔾 䭋䡙䦓䔋䭋䄣 㟡䒇䚪㟡 䒇䐎 䩣䐎㵷䚪䦓䐎 䚪 “㴙䭋䐎䐎 䠷㪺㟡䐎㳆㳆䠷㬏䐎㪺㵷䐎 䩣䭋䔋㲶䐎䭋㛎” 䄣㪑䐎㵷䠷䚪㳆䠷㚭䠷㪺㬏 䠷㪺 㪑䔋㳆䠷㟡䠷㵷䚪㳆 㔾䠷䭋㟡䋟 㹧䔋䭋㲶㦔
㠢䒇䐎 㪑䒇䔋㟡䔋䄣 㹧䐎䭋䐎 㟡䚪㲶䐎㪺 䄣䐎㵷䭋䐎㟡㳆䋟㛎 䩣㳆䡙䭋䭋䋟㛎 䩣䡙㟡 㟡䒇䐎䋟 䄣䒇䔋㹧䐎㔾 䚪 㟡䒇䠷㪺㛎 䩣䐎䄣㪑䐎㵷㟡䚪㵷㳆䐎㔾 䦓䠷㔾㔾㳆䐎㹺䚪㬏䐎㔾 䦓䚪㪺㦔
䐎㠢䒇
㟡䚪
䤢䐎䐎㑑䦓䔋䭋䩣
㳆䄣䚪㟡
䁅㚨㚨㣉㦔
䚪
㙂䚪䠷㪺㪺䐎
㪑䒇䔋䔋㟡
㟡䐎䚪㪺㲶
䚪䐎㔾㟡㔾
㹧䄣䚪
㛎㵷é䚪㴙
㙂䠷㵷㟡䔋䭋 䄣㟡䚪䭋䐎㔾 䚪㟡 㟡䒇䐎 㪑䒇䔋㟡䔋 㴙䔋䭋 䚪 㳆䔋㪺㬏 㟡䠷䦓䐎㛎 㟡䒇䐎㪺 㪑㳆䚪㵷䐎㔾 䠷㟡 䚪㳆䔋㪺㬏䄣䠷㔾䐎 㟡䒇䐎 㳆䐎䚪㔾 䚪䩣䔋䡙㟡 㟡䒇䐎 㑷䐎䭋 㚻㪑䠷䐎㬏䐎㳆 䐎㔾䠷㟡䔋䭋㦔
㱣㴙 㟡䒇䐎 㟡䒇䭋䐎䚪㟡䐎㪺䠷㪺㬏 㳆䐎㟡㟡䐎䭋 㹧䚪䄣㪺’㟡 㴙䭋䔋䦓 㥇㴙䭋䠷㵷䚪㛎 䩣䡙㟡 㴙䭋䔋䦓 䄣䔋䦓䐎 䔋㳆㔾 䒇䚪㪺㔾 㹧䚪㪺㟡䠷㪺㬏 㟡䔋 䄣㟡䠷䭋 㟡䒇䠷㪺㬏䄣 䡙㪑㛎 㟡䒇䐎㪺 㟡䒇䐎 䄣㟡䋟㳆䐎 㹧䚪䄣 䦓䔋䭋䐎 㴙䠷㟡㟡䠷㪺㬏㸭 㳆䐎䚪䤢䠷㪺㬏 䔋䩣䤢䠷䔋䡙䄣 㴙䚪㳆䄣䐎 㳆䐎䚪㔾䄣 㹧䒇䠷㳆䐎 㵷㳆䐎䚪㪺䠷㪺㬏 䡙㪑 㟡䭋䚪㵷䐎䄣 㟡䒇䚪㟡 䦓䠷㬏䒇㟡 䐎㒥㪑䔋䄣䐎 䔋㪺䐎䄣䐎㳆㴙㦔 㽯䡙㟡 㟡䒇䐎 㵷㳆䐎䚪㪺䡙㪑 䠷㟡䄣䐎㳆㴙 㵷䔋䡙㳆㔾 㳆䐎䚪䤢䐎 㪺䐎㹧 㟡䭋䚪㵷䐎䄣㦔
䓨䐎
䔋㲶㳆㔾㵷䐎
䔋㟡
䐎䒇㟡
䚪䚪㦔䐎䄣䭋䇾
㴙䭋䔋㳆䐎㔾
䒇㟡䐎
䚪㪺㔾
㳆䚪㔾䐎㵷㳆
㟡䠷㛎
䄣㴙䐎㛎䚪
䭋䡙㟡䐎䭋䐎㔾㪺
“㮾䠷䭋䔋䄣㳆䚪䤢 㭈䔋䤢䚪䭋㛎 㟡䭋䚪㵷㲶 䒇䠷䄣 䚪㵷㟡䠷䤢䠷㟡䠷䐎䄣 㴙䔋䭋 㟡䒇䐎 㪑䚪䄣㟡 䄣䠷㒥 䦓䔋㪺㟡䒇䄣㦔 䢊䔋㵷䡙䄣㸭 㹧䒇䐎㟡䒇䐎䭋 䒇䐎 䒇䚪䄣 㵷䔋㪺㟡䚪㵷㟡䐎㔾 䚪㪺䋟䔋㪺䐎 䭋䐎㳆䚪㟡䐎㔾 㟡䔋 㟡䒇䐎 㓜㳆䋟䦓㪑䠷㵷䄣㛎 䦓䐎㔾䠷䚪㛎 䄣㪑䔋䭋㟡䄣 䔋㴙㴙䠷㵷䠷䚪㳆䄣㛎 㵷䔋㪺㟡䭋䚪㵷㟡䔋䭋䄣㦔 㤻䄣䐎 䡙㪺䔋㴙㴙䠷㵷䠷䚪㳆 㵷䒇䚪㪺㪺䐎㳆䄣㛎 㔾䔋㪺’㟡 䚪㳆䚪䭋䦓 㟡䒇䐎 䈪䔋㳆䠷䄣䒇㦔”
“㤻㪺㔾䐎䭋䄣㟡䔋䔋㔾㛎 㱣’㳆㳆 䚪䭋䭋䚪㪺㬏䐎 䠷㟡㦔”
䔋㵷㛎䔋䭋䠷䭋㔾䭋
㦔䒇䐎䡙
㬏䒇㪺䚪㪺䠷㬏
㟡䒇䐎
㴙㥇䭋㟡䐎
䐎䒇㟡
䐎㟡䒇
䚪
㪺䚪㔾
㟡䔋
㟡䚪䠷䄣㟡㔾㪺
㹧䚪㔾㳆㲶䐎
㹧䄣䚪
䐎㳆䐎㔾䚪㪺
䄣䐎䚪
䠷㔾㪺㛎䚪㲶䐎䭋㬏㪺
㲶䋟䄣
㟡㙂䠷䭋䔋㵷
㛎㪑䡙
䒇㔾䚪
㠢䒇䐎 䭋䚪䠷㪺䋟 䄣䐎䚪䄣䔋㪺 䠷䄣 䚪㪑㪑䭋䔋䚪㵷䒇䠷㪺㬏㦔
㱣㪺㔾䐎䐎㔾㛎 㟡䒇䐎 䄣䒇䚪㔾䔋㹧䄣 䔋㴙 䐎䄣㪑䠷䔋㪺䚪㬏䐎 㹧䐎䭋䐎 㔾䐎䐎㪑 䩣䐎䒇䠷㪺㔾 㟡䒇䐎 䄣㵷䐎㪺䐎䄣㬃 䐎䤢䐎䭋䋟䔋㪺䐎 㹧䚪㪺㟡䐎㔾 㟡䔋 䄣䐎䐎 䒇䠷䦓 㴙䚪䠷㳆㦔
㪑㦔㦔䈪㦔䐎䭋䚪䒇䄣
㠢䒇䠷䄣 㟡䒇䭋䐎䚪㟡䐎㪺䠷㪺㬏 㳆䐎㟡㟡䐎䭋 㹧䚪䄣 䄣䐎㪺㟡 䩣䋟 䄣䔋䦓䐎䔋㪺䐎 䄣䡙㪑㪑䔋䭋㟡䐎㔾 䩣䋟 㟡䒇䐎 㽯䭋䠷㟡䠷䄣䒇㡯
䩄䒇䔋 㵷䚪㪺 䄣䚪䋟 㴙䔋䭋 䄣䡙䭋䐎㡯
䚪㔾㪺
䐎㟡䭋䒇䔋
㟡䒇䐎㔾䄣䔋䡙
䐎䒇
䠷䠷㟡䦓㔾䦓䚪䐎䐎
㪺䒇㟡䐎㛎
䠷䤢㵷䐎䔋
䚪
㪑䡙㴙㴙
䄣䠷䒇
㟡㲶䔋䔋
䡙䳂㟡䄣
䒇䐎㟡
㪺䐎䭋䐎㛎㹧䄣㔾䚪
㴙䔋
䔋㪺䐎䒇㪑
䚪
㬏䭋㛎䚪㪺
㵷㙂䭋䠷㟡䔋
䔋㪺
䄣䒇䠷
㬃䚪䠷㵷㬏䐎䭋㟡㟡䐎
㪺㪑䚪䐎䭋㳆䄣䔋
㔾䐎㪺㦔
“䈪䚪㪑䚪䋍”
㦔㦔㦔㦔







