This chapter's epigraph is from the opening lines of Act IV, Scene 1 of the Shanghainese novel, "Shanghai: A Tale of Two Cities." It's a quote from the novel's opening lines: "Shanghai is a city of two cities, one for the common people, the other for the powerful." This quote is a reference to the fact that Shanghai is divided into two parts: the East and the West. In other words, it's divided into three parts: East and West. The first part of the chapter is devoted to the fight between the two cities. The second part is dedicated to the battle between Shanghai and Hong Kong. In the first part, the hero fights against the monster. In this case, the monster is the protagonist, the protagonist is the hero, and the story is about the protagonist's fight against a monster. The protagonist fights the monster, but he doesn't kill him. Instead, he kills the monster's mother, who is the mother of the protagonist. This is the first time that the protagonist has ever fought a monster, and he's not scared of it. He says that the monster has too much power, and that he'll use his full strength against the protagonist to destroy him. He also says that if the protagonist isn't strong enough, he won't be able to fight the monster at all. He tells the protagonist that if they were back in the East, he'd be dead within an hour. He adds that if he were in the West, he wouldn't have to fight at all, since his strength isn'
This chapter's epigraph is from the opening lines of Act IV, Scene 1 of the Shanghainese novel, "Shanghai: A Tale of Two Cities." It's a quote from the novel's opening lines: "Shanghai is a city of two cities, one for the common people, the other for the powerful." This quote is a reference to the fact that Shanghai is divided into two parts: the East and the West. In other words, it's divided into three parts: East and West. The first part of the chapter is devoted to the fight between the two cities. The second part is dedicated to the battle between Shanghai and Hong Kong. In the first part, the hero fights against the monster. In this case, the monster is the protagonist, the protagonist is the hero, and the story is about the protagonist's fight against a monster. The protagonist fights the monster, but he doesn't kill him. Instead, he kills the monster's mother, who is the mother of the protagonist. This is the first time that the protagonist has ever fought a monster, and he's not scared of it. He says that the monster has too much power, and that he'll use his full strength against the protagonist to destroy him. He also says that if the protagonist isn't strong enough, he won't be able to fight the monster at all. He tells the protagonist that if they were back in the East, he'd be dead within an hour. He adds that if he were in the West, he wouldn't have to fight at all, since his strength isn'