If Joseph's words could be trusted, then even pigs could fly. Waverly sat opposite Joseph, while Boris took a look at them and sat in the seat behind Waverly. "Have I seen you before?" the woman asked Waverly. Waverly looked at her and said, "I'm Waverly. When I was young, I stayed with the Mccarthy family." "Oh, I remember now. You're Joseph's cousin, the daughter of his aunt," the woman raised her smile and held Joseph even tighter. With her face leaning on Joseph's shoulder, she continued, "I once went to the Mccarthy family to play, but you came looking for Joseph angrily and said that he had drawn on your books. Then, you insisted on drawing on Joseph's books too." The woman's words reminded Waverly that there was indeed such a thing. Back then, the first thing she usually did after returning home was to do her homework. When she returned home that day, she had opened her school bag and taken out her exercise book, only to see that every page of
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