Chapter Thirty-Nine: The Old Nun Opens Up and Confesses The Diary Reveals Information

The five people walked into the meditation room, and the abbot Huijue was already standing at the door of the meditation room.

In the eyes of the comrades, Abbot Huijue did not welcome the arrival of the comrades, and he suddenly visited the West Zen Monastery this evening, which was something that everyone did not expect.

Han Lingling led Abbot Huijue to a chair and sat down.

Five people sat on a meditation bed.

"Abbot Huijue, it's so late, you haven't rested yet!"

After much thought, the poor decided to tell you what she knew. I hope that the comrades will not blame the poor nun for deliberately concealing it. โ€

"How so?"

"The poor nuns don't want to see the comrades working too hard, and they don't want the comrades to be busy in vain and take detours."

"Thank you."

"Poor nun once promised Jingping to keep it a secret forever, poor nun is the abbot of Mingchen Temple, and he has never broken his trust in others, but Buddhism is not as big as the law of the country, I believe that Jingping will not blame Lao Sheng."

"Speak, please."

"Captain Ouyang looked at this diary and knew why Jingping came to Mingchen Temple to become a monkโ€”and maybe why she suddenly left Mingchen Temple." Abbot Huijue said as he took out a black-colored notebook from his bosom.

The size of the notebook is exactly the same as the blue notebook in the hands of the comrades, and the thickness is about the same.

Ouyang Ping took the notebook from the hand of Abbot Huijue and turned to the first page, the first diary was dated July 19, 1991.

"Captain Ouyang, the contents of the diary, you have time to read it slowly, and the poor nun will give you a general explanation of what you know."

"Abbot Huijue, thank you."

"No thanks, Buddhism is compassionate, and it is the duty of Buddhism to do good deeds and accumulate virtues, and Captain Ouyang Ping doesn't have to be polite. As the old saying goes, good deeds don't always lead to good results. Although the poor nun lost his words in silence, he consciously took it for granted. โ€

What Abbot Hui Jue said must be related to the contents of the diary.

Ouyang Ping was in awe, and he changed his opinion of Abbot Huijue in an instant.

"When Jingping went up the mountain, I talked with her for a long time, and in the judgment of the poor nun, Jingping was inseparable, and under the circumstances at that time, the poor nun could not help but take her in."

"Why is that?"

"Jingping came to Mingchen Temple to become a monk, completely because of an unspeakable fate in the world."

"What misfortune?"

It should be mentioned in the diary.

"Her adoptive father ruined her when she was twelve."

The three of them looked at each other: Lian Luodan's temperament had undergone a fundamental change at the age of twelve, which had already been reflected in several photographs. Abbot Huijue's words confirmed Chen Jie and Han Lingling's superficial analysis of several photos.

Ouyang Ping's expression was solemn, and his originally deep gaze became more and more profound.

"Jingping is a very kind girl, the problem is in her kindness, and there is a weak side in her overly kind character. Her adoptive father took advantage of this. โ€

Peng Jiazhen and the neighbors also commented on Lian Luodan.

"These contents are written in the diary more obscurely, but the meaning is very clear, in fact, Jingping's original intention was not to escape into Buddhism, but she encountered a hurdle that she couldn't pass."

"What's the hurdle you can't overcome?"

I am afraid that there is something more unbearable than enduring the ravages of Alchemia for a long time.

"Do the comrades know that Jingping has suffered such a thing and still studies hard?"

"Abbot, please."

"Although Jingping is kind and cowardly by nature, her heart is very strong, and she wants to study hard so that she can leave that home one day earlier."

Lian Luodan is really hard at studying, and she has also tutored her younger brother Peng Yaozong in his homework.