& Bedina Daagdo ... | Don Bacho
Halfway down, the path turned into a sharp, muddy ledge. Bacho, sweating and puffing, shouted back, "Bedina! Is it steady? Don't let it slip!"
And so, they walked back up the mountain, leaving the "dropped" history behind, already planning how to tell the village they had fought off a pack of wolves to save the empty air. DON BACHO & BEDINA daagdo ...
) literally means "to drop," "to leave behind," or "to throw down." In the context of a story about these two characters, it often implies a moment where someone is outsmarted, abandoned in a funny situation, or where a "heavy" truth is dropped. Halfway down, the path turned into a sharp, muddy ledge
Bedina, who had spotted a wild blackberry bush and was currently occupied with a handful of fruit, replied with his mouth full, "It’s fine, Bacho! I’ve got it!" Don't let it slip
Bedina arrived, leaning lazily against his donkey, Gogi. "Bacho, that wardrobe is larger than my house. Why not just burn it and tell people it was stolen by a ghost?" "It’s an heirloom," Bacho insisted. "We carry it."
Bedina walked over, wiped purple juice from his lip, and pointed down at the river. "Look on the bright side, Bacho. You wanted it in the valley. It’s in the valley. And we didn’t even have to walk the rest of the way."