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The Great Queen

The Great Queen • Chapter 37 • Page ik-page-1363822
The Great Queen • Chapter 37 • Page ik-page-1363842
The Great Queen • Chapter 37 • Page ik-page-1363856
The Great Queen • Chapter 37 • Page ik-page-1363828
The Great Queen • Chapter 37 • Page ik-page-1363849
The Great Queen • Chapter 37 • Page ik-page-1363816
Chapter 37
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About This Chapter
The narrator tells us that it's illegal to have a private portrait, but that the portrait of the king must cost a lot of effort. He also says that the king isn't as rich as he thinks he is, because there are lots of people who bet on the winner of the lottery in the underground marketplace before every war. The narrator says that he's hiding the portrait away so that he won't get any money until the lottery is over. He says that if he won the lottery, he'd be able to sell lanterns in the marketplace and be bullied. But if he lost, he wouldn't have any money. He'd have to go to the king and tell him to protect his people. The king says that's fine, but the people shouldn't treat the king like a god. They should respect their king, but they don't need to treat him like god. He tells the narrator to pray with him. He asks the lord god if he can help him change his fate. The lord god tells him that the jade is a war, but if he wants to change his destiny, he has to wait another hundred years. He adds that the only way to do so is to retake the jade after defeating it. This sounds like a
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The Great Queen

The Great Queen • Chapter 37 • Page ik-page-1363822
The Great Queen • Chapter 37 • Page ik-page-1363842
The Great Queen • Chapter 37 • Page ik-page-1363856
The Great Queen • Chapter 37 • Page ik-page-1363828
The Great Queen • Chapter 37 • Page ik-page-1363849
The Great Queen • Chapter 37 • Page ik-page-1363816
Chapter 37
This is a locked chapterChapter 37
About This Chapter
The narrator tells us that it's illegal to have a private portrait, but that the portrait of the king must cost a lot of effort. He also says that the king isn't as rich as he thinks he is, because there are lots of people who bet on the winner of the lottery in the underground marketplace before every war. The narrator says that he's hiding the portrait away so that he won't get any money until the lottery is over. He says that if he won the lottery, he'd be able to sell lanterns in the marketplace and be bullied. But if he lost, he wouldn't have any money. He'd have to go to the king and tell him to protect his people. The king says that's fine, but the people shouldn't treat the king like a god. They should respect their king, but they don't need to treat him like god. He tells the narrator to pray with him. He asks the lord god if he can help him change his fate. The lord god tells him that the jade is a war, but if he wants to change his destiny, he has to wait another hundred years. He adds that the only way to do so is to retake the jade after defeating it. This sounds like a
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