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My Charming Bandit • Chapter 24 • Page ik-page-3267240
My Charming Bandit • Chapter 24 • Page ik-page-3223090
My Charming Bandit • Chapter 24 • Page ik-page-3223091
Chapter 24
This is a locked chapterChapter 24
About This Chapter
In this short scene, the master and the monk discuss the news that a reward is being offered for the capture of the bandit. The master is worried that the news is true, but the monk assures him that he will not give up his chance to earn a fortune. The monk asks the master if there really are rich people in the world, and the master replies that it is all his fault that he has limited his imagination. He tells the monk that poverty has prevented him from imagining the riches of the world. He asks the monk if there is any superiority among doctors, and he replies that there is no superiority among monks. He says that the monk is just a fake doctor trying to scam the people with blessings from the Buddha. He also says that he is the one who wrote the notice for the search for doctors. He explains that he knows a friend who is suffering from a floating dream, and that she invented the dream out of hatred of her lover. The floating dream is believed to break a woman's heart when she is young, and it is said that the woman who gets poisoned by the dream will lose her memories and live only for two years. There used to be a lot of girl buying the dream from the black-market to take revenge upon the man who betrayed her. He then explains that there are many doctors in the city, but none can cure the floating dream. He knows how to cure the dream too, and says that if the doctor can cure his friend of the dream, he will buy any mansion he likes in the town. He wants the monk to hand over his golden lock.
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My Charming Bandit • Chapter 24 • Page ik-page-3267240
My Charming Bandit • Chapter 24 • Page ik-page-3223090
My Charming Bandit • Chapter 24 • Page ik-page-3223091
Chapter 24
This is a locked chapterChapter 24
About This Chapter
In this short scene, the master and the monk discuss the news that a reward is being offered for the capture of the bandit. The master is worried that the news is true, but the monk assures him that he will not give up his chance to earn a fortune. The monk asks the master if there really are rich people in the world, and the master replies that it is all his fault that he has limited his imagination. He tells the monk that poverty has prevented him from imagining the riches of the world. He asks the monk if there is any superiority among doctors, and he replies that there is no superiority among monks. He says that the monk is just a fake doctor trying to scam the people with blessings from the Buddha. He also says that he is the one who wrote the notice for the search for doctors. He explains that he knows a friend who is suffering from a floating dream, and that she invented the dream out of hatred of her lover. The floating dream is believed to break a woman's heart when she is young, and it is said that the woman who gets poisoned by the dream will lose her memories and live only for two years. There used to be a lot of girl buying the dream from the black-market to take revenge upon the man who betrayed her. He then explains that there are many doctors in the city, but none can cure the floating dream. He knows how to cure the dream too, and says that if the doctor can cure his friend of the dream, he will buy any mansion he likes in the town. He wants the monk to hand over his golden lock.
Close Viewer