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Deadman's Undecember

Deadman's Undecember • Chapter 61, Act 41: Trifling Matter Shuanglou (Part 1) • Page ik-page-3500153
Chapter 61, Act 41: Trifling Matter Shuanglou (Part 1)
This is a locked chapterChapter 61, Act 41: Trifling Matter Shuanglou (Part 1)
About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph is from a famous poem by the famous poet Ming-liang. It is a poem about a man who enters the silk road and becomes a seeker of magic. The poem describes a man entering the road who is able to obtain magic points from the incense. The man is referred to as "e lie, sen, pointing magical tools" . The narrator explains that the two of them are known as evil cults because they don't make friends with the qianji pavilions. He tells the men that he's sick of their staring at him. He says that they make him feel uncomfortable. He wants to go back to the pavilion and kill an iron eating beast, but he can't find out what the master of the pavilion will reward him for doing so. He also wants to know what kind of school the school is. He doesn't know much better than the old man. The old man used to be very powerful, but it's been declining for a long time. The masters of the major sects do not want to mention the school for some unknown reason. The middle-class man says that he is not one of the senior members of the school. He adds that the master always behaves like a lazy lamp when he assigns the men the task of completing a business deal. This time, he seems to be looking for some kind of secret. He asks when they'll go back. He's hungry and wants to eat the dishes. He
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Deadman's Undecember

Deadman's Undecember • Chapter 61, Act 41: Trifling Matter Shuanglou (Part 1) • Page ik-page-3500153
Chapter 61, Act 41: Trifling Matter Shuanglou (Part 1)
This is a locked chapterChapter 61, Act 41: Trifling Matter Shuanglou (Part 1)
About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph is from a famous poem by the famous poet Ming-liang. It is a poem about a man who enters the silk road and becomes a seeker of magic. The poem describes a man entering the road who is able to obtain magic points from the incense. The man is referred to as "e lie, sen, pointing magical tools" . The narrator explains that the two of them are known as evil cults because they don't make friends with the qianji pavilions. He tells the men that he's sick of their staring at him. He says that they make him feel uncomfortable. He wants to go back to the pavilion and kill an iron eating beast, but he can't find out what the master of the pavilion will reward him for doing so. He also wants to know what kind of school the school is. He doesn't know much better than the old man. The old man used to be very powerful, but it's been declining for a long time. The masters of the major sects do not want to mention the school for some unknown reason. The middle-class man says that he is not one of the senior members of the school. He adds that the master always behaves like a lazy lamp when he assigns the men the task of completing a business deal. This time, he seems to be looking for some kind of secret. He asks when they'll go back. He's hungry and wants to eat the dishes. He
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