Chapter 1203 Strange Room
These nine people originally planned to squeeze Benitez to death, but he seemed to be lucky. When he was about to die, a group of thieves broke into the monastery.
The arrival of this group of thieves allowed the nine people, including the dean, to finally eat their fill, but this was also their last meal.
And after that Benitez told these thieves what happened to him, he probably couldn't bear the supreme life surrounded by nine people, and then chased them.
This story became known to many people through those thieves, and was written into a book by a French author after the Renaissance.
Eleanor Nixon At this point, the story is complete,
Her last words reminded Han Li of Giovanni Boccaccio, an Italian representative of the Renaissance movement, a humanist writer and poet.
Many of his works tell unknown stories about the church, among which the most satirical ones are the nuns.
The works of Giovanni Boccaccio brought down the so-called "D-Bride" or "G-D Bride" from the altar.
Let the ordinary and ignorant people see how unbearable the mysterious and pure devout nuns who used to be in their eyes are in mysterious places that they don't know much about.
The stories in Giovanni Boccaccio's works may contain water, but it is undeniable that he tore apart the veil of the Church for everyone and allowed many people to learn some news that they had never heard before.
There were many authors like Giovanni Boccaccio during the Renaissance era, which caused endless scandals in the church.
The works of these people have reduced the majesty and prestige of the church to the freezing point of history in the hearts of many people.
At that time, the vast majority of people were illiterate. If it were a later era when the Internet was developed, it was still unknown whether the church could survive under the impact of these works.
Even so, because of the impact of these works, the church had to return some of its rights to the royal families of various countries.
At that time, the royal families of various countries on the Western European continent were in a fierce fight. They needed to win over the church to join the local camp, and they also needed the church to prove their legitimacy and use this name to appease the ordinary people in the territory.
Therefore, many things have been suppressed, at least on the surface, with the tacit approval of the church and various kingdoms.
But no kingdom likes to have an emperor sitting on its head, so they also tacitly agreed not to stop this situation, and did not even arrest the more famous authors.
Because the works created by these people are very useful and can help various kingdoms wrest more rights from the church until the emperor exists in name only.
Countries have never stopped attacking the prestige of the church, and Han Li did the same thing after he came to England, because he saw a movie released in 1978 called "Story in the Monastery".
That movie tells the story of a girl who was rejected by her parents and sent to a convent, where she was entertained by lunatics, psychopaths, and hypocritical people.
This beautiful, intelligent girl suffered unimaginable mental and physical damage, which caused her life to take another path.
Those contents, those scenes.
Closer to home, these words are very long to describe, but from the beginning to the end of this Eleanor Nixon's talk, it only takes about half an hour.
Next, the two of them drank wine and listened to the playing of the organ. There was no confirmed topic, and they just chatted one after another.
A bottle of low-alcohol champagne was simply not enough to drink, but when Han Li ordered another bottle here, he discovered that the wine that originally cost only 300 yuan on the first floor actually cost 400 yuan on the second floor.
Han Li knew that the extra 100 yuan was for chatting, so he ordered a bottle without blinking, but he complained bitterly in his heart.
"I really don't know if the owner of this store is stupid. The same wine is sold at two prices in the same store. It's better to just clearly mark the cost of chatting."
However, I have to say that Eleanor Nixon has a relatively wide range of knowledge, and she also holds Han Li in her arms when talking, so it is very easy to chat with her.
After the two of them ordered a bottle of wine, Han Li mentioned the third floor again. Eleanor Nixon gently patted her face that was red from drinking, stretched out her hand to hold her crooked headscarf and said.
"We have been chatting for such a long time. Anyway, I am quite interested in you. If you don't object, I can take you to the third floor in person. Of course, if you don't want to, you can."
Han Li still didn't understand what he heard here. The second floor is a medium for drinking and chatting, and the third floor is a place for people to chat with each other.
Although the room rates here are relatively expensive, the asking price of this Eleanor Nixon is also relatively high.
But Han Li wanted to go up there and experience what was different, whether there was a cross.
Moreover, Han Li was very interested in this woman with extraordinary conversation. This person should be the most educated person he had come into contact with since arriving in England. Whether there was any difference between them, he could only find out after he did some research.
Han Li placed two fingers on the other person's pulse, and looked Eleanor Nixon up and down. Soon the two fingers turned into a hand that grabbed her wrist, and pulled the other person forward three times. Went upstairs.
After Han Li paid the fee on the third floor, he found that these small rooms were decorated so uniquely.
The room was not big, with a bed, a sofa, a table and chairs. In short, everything was there. What puzzled Han Li the most was that there was a small wooden house here. There was no cross or anything like what he imagined. This was a bit inconsistent with the style of the first and second floors.
But before Han Li could speak, Eleanor Nixon pushed him into the small room and asked him to sit on a chair facing the window and wait.
After Eleanor Nixon did all this, she put her index finger on her mouth and made a silent gesture. After reaching out and touching Han Li, she took off the headscarf on her head, smiled, opened the door and walked out.
After Eleanor Nixon closed the door and walked out, the headlights in the room outside went out.
Han Li looked through the small window and watched her turn on a low-brightness bedside lamp, press the recorder on the table to play music, and then she began to twist a little bit.
The limited lighting and vision made Han Li feel like he was watching a hazy movie.
The heroine in the movie was dancing a dance that all men liked. The most important thing was that her clothes were being removed piece by piece as she danced.
This scene