Chapter 235 He came against the light (2)
“Aren’t you going to make it clear?”
Priest Han Xiemei narrowed his eyes and looked Ji Xiangnuan up and down.
“Hey, look, this meat is roasted, you try it first!”
Ji Xiangnuan acted as if he didn’t hear what the priest Han said, and took the meat to himself. The priest Han had a flattering look on his face.
"Should I do this or not?"
Of course Priest Han was a little unhappy. What is this? Are you perfunctory with yourself?
"Try it first! This is really delicious!"
No matter whether the priest Han wanted to eat it or not, Ji Xiangnuan was stunned and just stuffed it into his mouth. !
Hmm. It seems pretty good.
The priest Han tasted it carefully and found that it was quite good.
"When did you come back?" This time it was Ji Xiangnuan who asked. She was initially surprised to meet the priest Han at school today.
“It’s early today.”
The priest Han said while grilling meat.
"You have been rescuing this month? Why can't I find you?"
Ji Xiangnuan sat solemnly. After they separated at Luohan Temple, Ji Xiangnuan followed Gu Qiyu in the direction where the priest Han left within a few days.
However, after walking for more than half a month, he did not meet the priest Han again. During this period, there was also a particularly large aftershock. In order to save himself, Gu Qiyu blocked a piece of land that collapsed from above. cement board.
In the end, the two had to return to Ningcheng, and Ji Xiangnuan also took care of Gu Qiyu in the hospital for half a month, feeling very guilty.
After seeing that Gu Qiyu was nothing serious. Ji Xiangnuan just returned home.
"We received arrangements from above and went to the center of the earthquake." The priest Han said very calmly, without any fear. The center of the earthquake means there is danger at any time, and if the intensity of the earthquake is slightly larger, it may cause the ground to collapse and people will be buried alive inside.
Priest Han did not tell Ji Xiangnuan how dangerous his trip was. He spoke calmly, as if he was just going on a very ordinary mission.
When they actually arrived at Cross Village, the epicenter of the earthquake, Priest Han and his accompanying brothers were actually surprised at first.
Cross Village is a national tourist attraction with dozens of ethnic minority tribes living in it. The priest Han had seen the appearance of Cross Village on TV before, and it was completely different from what it is now.
The original Cross Village had beautiful scenery.
There are the most beautiful maple leaves in autumn, and the snowflakes hanging on the branches in winter are beautiful. In autumn, everything revives and awakens life. There are dozens of national first-level protected animals. In summer, it is very cool here, and people who come here from the city come here to escape the summer heat. Countless.
But after the earthquake, Cross Village has been razed to the ground. Coupled with the heavy rain, the ground has become a river of blood. The sky is gray as if it is about to press down. The bottom of the five-color lake has cracked and is bottomless. .
This picture looks like the end of the world.
The further you go in, the more you can smell the unpleasant smell of blood. Trees have collapsed, and corpses of humans and animals are scattered everywhere.
The search and rescue team used life detectors to scan over and over again.
No one survived
The search and rescue team members stood in front of the ruins and observed a moment of silence for half an hour.
At that time, the sky was filled with dark clouds, and everything on the ground was silent. The most lively and peaceful Cross Village in the past has become a place of death.
The song of the lark can no longer be heard.
A tree called Eucalyptus globulus also lives here, which was also destroyed in the earthquake.
The bird named the red-billed blue magpie no longer has a place to live, no harbor to rely on.
Legend has it that this tree called Eucalyptus globulus is poisonous and domineering and will kill all the plants and animals around it, but it gives all its tenderness to the red-billed blue magpie.
(End of this chapter)