Chapter 6357 (Six Thousand Three Hundred and Fifty Seven) Forced by


Chapter 6357 (Six Thousand Three Hundred and Fifty Seven) Forced by

The man with brown hands said, "Are you feeling sorry for yourself too?"

"I must be feeling sorry for you," said the gray-hand man, "I always thought that I shouldn't have treated you like that at that time."

"You also said it was at that time." The brown-hand man said, "It's not now."

"I did that to you back then," the gray-handed man said.

"Are you under pressure from the user?" the brown-hand man asked.

"Aren't you?" asked the man with gray hands.

"Me too." The man with brown hands said.

"Then what else is there to say?" the gray-handed man said with a smile.

"You treated me like that under pressure, shouldn't I feel sorry for you?" the brown-hand man asked.

"What's the point?" asked the gray-handed man.

"The truth is, I was forced to do that to you, and I felt sorry for it." The brown-handed man said.

The gray-handed man smiled and said: "What you said makes sense, but it doesn't make sense."

"Why doesn't it make sense?" said the brown-hand man, "regret is naturally directed at the things I did in the past. If I didn't do those things myself, what's the use of feeling sorry?"

"Even if you did it yourself, what's the use of regretting it?" asked the man with gray hands.

"The purpose is to strengthen an idea in my mind." The brown-handed man said.

"What do you think?" asked the gray-handed man.

"I should treat you well." The brown-hand man said.

"You have treated me well now." The gray-handed man said.

"It can still be strengthened," the brown-hand man said.

The gray-hand man said: "Tell yourself again and again?"

"Just tell me silently." The brown-hand man said, "Do you think regret is useless?"

"Since you have said it, let's understand it as you said." The man with the gray hand said, "Actually, I know what you were going to say." "What?" the man with the brown hand asked.

"You want to ask me if I think regret is useless. According to what I said just now, I will admit that it is useless." Gray Hand Man said, "Next, you can say, 'Since it is useless, then why are you regretting it? 'That's what happened."

The man with brown hands said to the man with gray hands: "Have you figured it all out?"

"Is what I came up with correct?" asked the gray-hand man, "Does it match the actual situation?"

"You're right," said the brown-hand man.

The man with gray hands said to the man with brown hands, "I guessed it all."

"Do you understand it the way I do now?" the brown-hand man asked with a smile.

"Yes, my regret is still useful." The gray-handed man said, "It just strengthens the idea in my heart that I should treat you well."

The man with brown hands smiled and said: "You don't need to strengthen it."

"Why?" asked the gray-handed man.

"Just because you have treated me well now." The brown-handed man said.

"Why do similar words sound so familiar?" the gray-handed man asked.

"After all, I just said the same thing." The brown-handed man said.

"So I have to say 'it can still be strengthened'." The gray-handed man smiled.

"Repeat?" said the brown-hand man, "You repeat what I said again."

"I think so too." The gray-handed man said.

"Okay," the brown-hand man said, "but it's exactly what I just said."

The man with gray hands smiled and said: "I just repeated what you said deliberately. That's what I think, and it doesn't affect my repeating what you said; and if I repeat what you said, it doesn't affect that that's what I think."

The man with brown hands said: "However, although regret seems to have some meaning according to what I just said, speaking it out has a somewhat unwilling tone."

The gray-handed man smiled and said, "It's natural to be unwilling."

(End of chapter)

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