Iron Snow Clouds

Chapter 7445 The Cave



Chapter 7445 The Cave

Chapter 7445 (Seven Thousand Four Hundred and Forty-Five) The Cave

Grayhand said, "Are you saying such absolute things again this time?"

"Is this an absolute statement for you?" the brown-handed man asked.

"Whether a statement is absolute or not depends on who it is for," Grayhand asked.

“I think it is necessary,” said the Brown-Handed Man.

"So, for whom do you think this statement is absolute, and for whom it isn't?" Grayhand asked.

The brown-handed man said, "I haven't thought about that."

“You can think about it,” said the gray-handed man.

"I don't want to think about it anymore. Anyway, what I said isn't absolute in my opinion," said the brown-handed man.

"If it's not absolute, then I'm going to argue," Grayhand said with a smile.

“Feel free to argue,” said the brown-handed man.

"This is the first time I've seen this kind of welcome," said the gray-handed man.

The brown-handed man said, "Never seen this before, have you?"

“I already said ‘first time,’ of course I’ve never seen it before,” said the gray-handed man.

“That’s perfect, it’ll give you a chance to meet,” the brown-handed man said.

The gray-handed man asked with a smile, "Should I thank you?"

“Not really. I don’t think seeing this is particularly lucky,” said the brown-handed man.

The gray-handed man said, "At this moment, a question suddenly occurred to me: Is it possible that I have actually seen this welcome before, but it was not obvious enough for me to notice?"

The brown-handed man chuckled, "Well, even you don't know, so I know even less. But I think it's still a possibility."

The gray-handed man said, "Why did you suddenly say that this possibility exists? Did something suddenly come to mind in this short time?"

The brown-handed man replied, "I must have thought of something." The gray-handed man said, "Thought of what? Do you want to tell me?"

"Do you remember that time you went with the Lord to talk to the villagers in the cave?" the brown-handed man asked.

"I remember, the cave left a deep impression on me," said Grayhand.

"Did the Lord give us any hints that time?" the Brown-Handed Man asked.

"There's no need to mention that time, is there? Doesn't the Master often give us hints?" the Grey-Handed Man laughed.

Brownhand said, "They often give us hints, but not all hints are the same."

"What's the difference you're trying to say?" Grayhand asked.

The brown-handed man laughed and said, "It's what we were just talking about, implying that we should argue."

The gray-handed man said, "That's exactly what I wanted to hear you say."

"Why do you want to wait for me to say this?" the brown-handed man asked.

"Let me give you a clear answer," said the gray-handed man.

“We’ve been talking about this topic for a while now, and things weren’t exactly unclear, were they?” the Brown-Handed Man asked.

“If I think about it, I can figure out what you’re going to say, but that’s different from hearing it directly from you,” the gray-handed man said with a smile.

"What's the difference?" the brown-handed man asked.

“The certainty is different,” said the gray-handed man.

“Okay, I understand,” the brown-handed man said. “I guess you already know what I’m talking about, right?”

The gray-handed man replied, "That was the time when the Lord hinted to you and me to argue with him in front of the villagers, wasn't it?"

The brown-handed man laughed, "I knew you'd know! You see, that time, couldn't we interpret it as the Lord subtly welcoming you and me to argue with him?"

The gray-handed man laughed and said, "I think that's indeed a valid view."


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