Quick Transmigration: The Cannon Fodder's Comeback in the Era Tales-Chapter 174: The Daughter Who Was Sold Off 38
The marriage between Shen Jinbin and Tian Zhaodi was set for half a month later, as he was a local educated youth and she was a local girl, the old village chief specially allocated them a plot for their home.
Shen Jinbin took out five hundred yuan and built a three-room brick house on the plot, and at Tian Zhaodi’s request, enclosed a large yard, which made all the young women and brides in the village quite envious.
He also gave Tian Zhaodi a dowry of three hundred and sixty yuan and the "three rounds and one sound," but Tian Zhaodi didn’t like the sewing machine, so she left it at the Tian family for her two sisters to use.
Over the years, Tian Laodi and Tian Pandi earned work points and saved a lot of money.
After receiving the sewing machine, they didn’t take advantage of Tian Zhaodi for nothing; instead, they went to the village carpenter and ordered a set of furniture for her as a wedding gift.
Tian Zhaodi had various kinds of furniture in her space, originally intending to display a set of solid wood furniture, but since her two sisters had helped her, she accepted their generosity.
Later, Tian Zhaodi arranged for her two sisters to marry two quite honest and straightforward young men from the village. 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝒆𝒘𝙚𝓫𝙣𝙤𝒗𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢
The three sisters all married in the village and supported each other.
Most importantly, Tian Zhaodi hoped to make her two sisters wealthy landlords one day.
So, within a few years, she helped them split households and live independently. When policies changed, she came up with ways for them to make money, and once they had money, they returned to the village to build houses.
Build many houses.
Later, when Ge Family Village was demolished, the Tian sisters each received about ten houses and over a million yuan in compensation.
Tian Zhaodi then urged them to take their money and buy properties in Beijing.
Eventually, the Tian sisters became real landlords, lying at home, doing nothing, yet having endless money.
And with Tian Zhaodi as a big sister, the two brothers-in-law and Shen Jinbin never turned bad due to wealth; they were always good to their wives and children.
Therefore, the Tian sisters all led happy lives.
The task of 001 was very successful.
Meanwhile, on Yuan Chun’s side, after graduating from high school, she didn’t want to work; she enjoyed doing farm work and going up the mountain to hunt, earning meat to eat and living leisurely, making more than a factory wage.
Qian Xiaoying was reluctant to let her daughter do farm work, wanting to pass the scorer job to her daughter and go farming herself.
Yuan Chun smiled, touched, "Mom, you hardly ever do farm work, you’re not stronger than me, so forget it, mom, remember, I planted all the vegetables in the backyard myself, I work fast and definitely won’t hold everyone back."
Qian Xiao San chimed in, "Auntie, don’t worry, if sister can’t finish, I’ll help."
After graduating high school, Qian Xiao San voluntarily applied to go to the countryside, and through a high school classmate’s connection changed his countryside location to Ge Family Village.
Now, Qian Xiao San is an educated youth in Ge Family Village, but he didn’t live at the educated youth station, he directly moved into his own home.
Graduating a year before them, Qian Xiao’er, unable to attend university due to the cancellation of the college entrance exam, joined the army.
Qian Zhongxin, who had long gone to Beijing for college, was only in the second semester of his sophomore year when the college chaos began.
But he always remembered his sister’s advice, behaving well in school, unlike others who were mischievous everywhere, secretly helping several teachers who were dragged down.
While helping one teacher, he happened to be seen by the head of the distribution department.
The director, seeing his good character, uncorrupted by others, quietly helped him graduate, gave him a diploma, and found him a job at the best government unit in Beijing.
Whereas, those university students who lashed out and caused trouble didn’t receive diplomas and were soon forcibly sent to the countryside as educated youths.







