Diary of an Exile (2)

Mohan Pohl said that he can make public all his manuscripts and the data taken from the memory card at hand, and hopes that the world will join the research to fight the fall of the moon.

It is clear that Mohan Bordeaux did not meet good media, and the local TV reporter who came to interview him said that he would make it public immediately before he took the data.

But apparently three days after the incident, only one video of the shooting was shown on television.

But manuscripts and memory cards, the TV station did not wait for anything.

The journalist who was filming was Sara Dry Red, and all the contact information was no longer valid.

The journalists, along with the photographer and the driver who had been there that day, disappeared into India, and they flew to the United States the day after they got the manuscript and memory card.

At that time, he was in a hurry, and because he did not trust the manuscript, it was divided into three equal parts.

The manuscript was preserved in transit, but the memory card was unfortunately bent.

The content is unreadable and the data cannot be repaired.

Christie's, the largest auction house in the United States, announced to the world a week later that it would auction the data manuscript of the moon's fall.

The news was undoubtedly shocking, and many scholars, wealthy businessmen, and even high-level officials from various countries gathered in the United States to witness the auction.

There was nothing else in the collection that night, and at the request of the auctioneer, Sarah Dry, the driver, and the cameraman, the three copies of the 378-page manuscript were again divided into six parts.

Each copy of sixty-three sheets is bound into a book made of crocodile skin, with sable fur stitched with Hindi for the fall of the moon and the number number one to six.

Six book chairs are lined up in the hall, and the original yellowed and worn manuscripts have been restored into immaculate works of art.

Filming starts at 12 o'clock at noon, and one book lasts for two hours until 12 o'clock in the evening.

At the auction that day, everyone was asked to cover their faces with a black veil.

I don't know if it's because of the impact of the end of the world.

There is an endless stream of people holding signs, and the money is like flowing water with no value.

The first copy was sold for $60 million, which is more than even the most expensive painting in the world.

After that, the price of the five books fluctuated slightly, but none of them exceeded the high price of 60 million.

The worst was the fifth, which also fetched a whopping $27 million.

The six books totaled 270 million, and were divided equally between Sara Ganhong and the driver and the cameraman.

None of the six manuscripts fell into the hands of the same buyer, after which the identity of the buyer and Sara Dryred and others disappeared.

And because the black veil covers the face, except for the reporter because the video annotated Sara Gan Infrared. The names of the rest are unknown, and Mohan Bordeaux, who is far away in India, has no idea that his ten years of hard work will be disposed of in this way.

India learned of the news seven hours after the auction and immediately transferred Mohan Bordeaux to the Indian capital, New Delhi, for secret protection.

And wanted Sara Ganhong and the driver and the cameraman and others to the world, but apparently it was too late.

Mohan Bordeaux did not have any backup of his theory of the fall of the moon, because he believed that the reporters who came to the local television station would make it public as he said.

Although the moon fall has indeed been made public at this point, no one knows that it is such a disclosure.

The data is not saved, everything has to be started all over again.

Mohan Bordeaux also disappeared, but the last news about him was that he said that the arrival of the moon would not take more than a century at most.