Myotpis is so happy that he wants to run away and fall in love with someone. He runs away from his father, who is too busy to watch him. He then runs to his father's house, where he finds that his father is cooking glutinous balls. He tells his father to stop cooking, but his father refuses, saying that his wife has always spoiled him. The author tells him that he has seen many good plots on the comment section, and that he is kind and merciful. His wife's anger is directed back to her conscience when her baby died, and he feels very painful. Life and death are both fates, he says, and
Myotpis is so happy that he wants to run away and fall in love with someone. He runs away from his father, who is too busy to watch him. He then runs to his father's house, where he finds that his father is cooking glutinous balls. He tells his father to stop cooking, but his father refuses, saying that his wife has always spoiled him. The author tells him that he has seen many good plots on the comment section, and that he is kind and merciful. His wife's anger is directed back to her conscience when her baby died, and he feels very painful. Life and death are both fates, he says, and