Watteau.
After listening to Wang Ailun's long speech, Woolf stared at him for a moment, then turned his face towards the valley and did not say anything for a long time. His eyelids were wrinkled and half-closed as if he had no strength to open them, and it seemed that he had fallen asleep.
But Wang Ailun didn't say a word, not even an extra glance, he just waited quietly by the side.
The Secretary-General has always been a patient man. In the past few years, he has become even more calm and less impatient. He obeys orders and talks at the right time. When Wolfe asks him to speak, he speaks with reason and evidence. He says whatever Wolfe wants to hear. If Wolfe makes any expression or action to tell him to shut up, he will firmly shut up - not only his mouth, but also his eyes and expression, as if he has never had curiosity or desire to express himself, and is just an artificial intelligence that looks very much like a human.
If Woolf really fell asleep in the middle of the journey, Wang Ailun could just pull down the protective cover in the pavilion halfway up the mountain for him, cover him with a quilt, adjust the temperature and humidity, arrange everything in the Marshal's Mansion properly, and then walk away, as if he was just there to make a living, being gentle, respectful, frugal, and cautious, and not caring at all about his "insights" being neglected.
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