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Chapter 746 The Missing Gaming Bride

The waiter said to Cao Jiao: "I can't tell you where the bride has gone. The people in your Xuanwu Kingdom are rich, but not everyone welcomes you. You are sometimes too savage."

Cao Jiao took out a stack of cash, including US dollars and euros. He said to the waiter: "Maybe, you want to change to the latest phone, maybe you want to go to a massage parlor and have fun with those black beauties, or local native beauties, or even those beautiful white girls. No matter what fun you are looking for. But, you need money, as long as you can give me reliable news, I will pay you money. What do you think?"

The waiter said, "I don't think so. You leave with your money, don't insult me."

Cao Jiao said: "Do you dislike the money being small?"

The waiter smiled and said, "No, I'm afraid I'm not going to take it."

Quiet it and block it when necessary.

She could feel the howling in its throat, its muscles tensed, ready to leaps up at any time. She looked up at Chodara. A thin layer of powdery dust wrapped around the tall man's shoulders and long yellow hair, and turned the fur of his dark brown mount into the more ordinary yellowish brown color. She and Venei were the same. Although it was only early summer, the strong wind from the vast glacier in the north had dried up the vast grasslands in the south of the glacier.

She felt Wolf pressing her arm nervously, and then saw another man stepping out from behind the dart holder, dressed as if Mamut might have worn at a major ceremony, wearing a mask with bison horns and clothes coated with mysterious symbols.

The Mamut shook a big stick at them and shouted, "Go away, ghost elves! Get out of here!"

Ella felt that the voice of a woman was coming from the mask, but she was not sure, although the words were spoken in Mamuta. The Mamut shook his rod again and rushed towards them, while Ella stopped the wolf. Then the figures in strange costumes began to sing monotonous songs, danced, shaking the rods, and jumped high and rushed towards them quickly, then retreated, as if they wanted to scare them away or drive them away, at least successfully frightened the horse.

She was surprised that Wolf was so happy to attack, and that wolves rarely threatened humans. However, when she recalled her previous observations, she thought she understood. She used to observe wolves frequently while practicing hunting alone, so she knew that wolves were enthusiastic and loyal to their own gangs.

However, they are good at driving strangers away from their areas, and, people also know, to protect what they think is their own, they sometimes bite other wolves to death.

To the young wolf cub that Ella found and brought back to the Mamuta land house, the Lion Camp was its group, and the others were strangers. When it was less than half a year old, it screamed at the strangers who came.

Now, in this strange area, perhaps another group of areas, when it first saw strangers, especially a group of strangers holding spears and hostile strangers, it naturally felt like it was going to defend. Why did the people in this camp hold spears and darts?

Ella felt that there was something familiar in that monotonous song, and then she realized what it was. The lyrics were sung in a sacred and ancient language.

Only Mamut can understand. Ella cannot fully understand because before she left, Mamut just started teaching her this kind of language blindness.

However, she did realize that the loud and monotonous song was basically the same as the ones shouted to them earlier, although now they were sung in more beautiful words. This was to warn the strange wolf and horse gods to leave them and return to the world of gods they belong to.

Ella told Chodara the words of Mamut. She spoke in Zelandani so that the people in the camp would not understand.

"They think we are gods? Of course! I should have known for a long time. They are afraid of us. That's why they threaten us with rattles. Ella, we may have this problem every time we encounter people on the road. Now, we are used to animals. But most people never thought that horses and wolves could be tamed, and they always treat them as food and clothes." He said.

"The Mamuta were also very uneasy at the beginning at the summer convention. It took them a while to get used to having horses and wolves nearby," Ella said.

"When I first opened my eyes in the cave in your valley and saw you helping Venei give birth to Reser, I thought I had been killed by a lion, and I woke up in the world of gods," said Chodara. "Maybe I should dismount, let them see that I am alone, not with Reser, like some kind of human and horse god."

Chodara got off the horse, but he still held the rope of the bridle. Reser swung his head, and like Tu avoided the Mamut, who shook his hand and sang loudly and got closer and closer.

Veney stood behind the kneeling woman, lowered her head and rubbed her. Ella used neither rope nor bridle to guide her horse. She directed the horse entirely by the pressure of her legs and the movements of her body.

After hearing a few strange words spoken by the gods, and seeing Chodara descending from the horse's back, the wizard sang even more vigorously. She begged the gods to leave, promised to hold a ceremony for their devotion, and tried to seek their understanding with gifts.

"I think you should tell them who we are," Ella said. "That Mamut is very upset."

Chodara held the reins closer to the horse's head, but Reser was frightened and tried his best to retreat, while the Mamut, who was holding a big stick and shouting, was even more scared.

Even Venezi was ready to escape, and it was usually much better than its thrilling child's temper.

"We are not gods," when the Mamut stopped to breathe, Chodara shouted, "I am a visitor, a traveler. And she," he pointed at Ella, "It is a Mamuta, belonging to the Mammoth Fire Pond."

People looked at each other with confusion. The Mamut stopped shouting and dancing, looked at them carefully, and danced the sticks from time to time. Maybe they were gods playing tricks, but at least they were forced to speak in a language that everyone understood. Finally, the Mamut spoke.

"Why should we believe you? How do we know you are not trying to deceive us? You said she belongs to the Mammoth Fire Pond. But where is her mark? There are no thorns on her face."

Ella spoke. "He didn't say I was a Mamut, he said I belonged to the Mammoth Fire Pond. Before I left, the old Mamut from the Lion Camp was training me, but I haven't learned it yet."

(End of this chapter)
Chapter completed!
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