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To The Abandoned Sacred Beasts 1-13

To The Abandoned Sacred Beasts 1-13 • 28 Immortal Beast (Pt. 5) • Page ik-page-1864446
To The Abandoned Sacred Beasts 1-13 • 28 Immortal Beast (Pt. 5) • Page ik-page-1918914
To The Abandoned Sacred Beasts 1-13 • 28 Immortal Beast (Pt. 5) • Page ik-page-1864465
To The Abandoned Sacred Beasts 1-13 • 28 Immortal Beast (Pt. 5) • Page ik-page-1864453
28 Immortal Beast (Pt. 5)
This is a locked chapter28 Immortal Beast (Pt. 5)
About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous line from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar , in which the king says, "I am not afraid, nor am I afraid of anything. I am afraid of nothing." This is a reference to Caesar's famous line, "Thou shalt not fear nothing," in which he says that he is afraid nothing will come of the battle. This is the same line Shakespeare uses in Act III, Scene 1 , when he tells the audience that he fears nothing. He fears nothing, he says, because he knows that nothing can come of it. He is afraid that the battle will be lost, and he fears that the enemy will not be able to defeat him. He also fears that if the enemy does not defeat him, he will be killed by the enemy himself. He knows that if he dies, the enemy's death will be his own, and that he will have no choice but to kill the enemy. He does not know how to react to this, but he does not want to be killed. He feels that he has no choice, because the enemy is not going to be defeated. He wonders if he should have killed the enemy, and if he would have been killed if he had not been killed. The captain tells him that he should not have killed him, and the captain asks the captain to come and join them after they have had enough fun playing with the corpse of hydra. He asks if they should have called back the troops, but the captain says that they will not make it, and so they should go back to
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To The Abandoned Sacred Beasts 1-13

To The Abandoned Sacred Beasts 1-13 • 28 Immortal Beast (Pt. 5) • Page ik-page-1864446
To The Abandoned Sacred Beasts 1-13 • 28 Immortal Beast (Pt. 5) • Page ik-page-1918914
To The Abandoned Sacred Beasts 1-13 • 28 Immortal Beast (Pt. 5) • Page ik-page-1864465
To The Abandoned Sacred Beasts 1-13 • 28 Immortal Beast (Pt. 5) • Page ik-page-1864453
28 Immortal Beast (Pt. 5)
This is a locked chapter28 Immortal Beast (Pt. 5)
About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous line from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar , in which the king says, "I am not afraid, nor am I afraid of anything. I am afraid of nothing." This is a reference to Caesar's famous line, "Thou shalt not fear nothing," in which he says that he is afraid nothing will come of the battle. This is the same line Shakespeare uses in Act III, Scene 1 , when he tells the audience that he fears nothing. He fears nothing, he says, because he knows that nothing can come of it. He is afraid that the battle will be lost, and he fears that the enemy will not be able to defeat him. He also fears that if the enemy does not defeat him, he will be killed by the enemy himself. He knows that if he dies, the enemy's death will be his own, and that he will have no choice but to kill the enemy. He does not know how to react to this, but he does not want to be killed. He feels that he has no choice, because the enemy is not going to be defeated. He wonders if he should have killed the enemy, and if he would have been killed if he had not been killed. The captain tells him that he should not have killed him, and the captain asks the captain to come and join them after they have had enough fun playing with the corpse of hydra. He asks if they should have called back the troops, but the captain says that they will not make it, and so they should go back to
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