No romantic pairing, has a space, becomes rich. Others transmigrate into beautiful young women, but Lin Li transmigrated into an old lady. After Lin Li acted heroically, she found herself transform...
By the time Jia Dashan's matter was resolved, it was already April.
Looking at the blooming flowers in Beijing in springtime, Lin Li put down the watering can.
It's time to settle things in the port city.
Back in his room, he took out a map of the underground casino and pondered repeatedly how to destroy it.
After several days of thinking, Lin Li came up with a solution.
The Tung Sing Gang and another triad gang, Hung Shing Tong, have been embroiled in a fierce conflict over territory, and even had a brawl at the docks before the Lunar New Year.
She decided to exploit this conflict to cause trouble for the East Star Gang's underground casino.
She went out and bought some firecrackers and flammable miscellaneous items.
When night fell, he disguised himself and, in a flash, arrived at the back door of the underground casino.
The guards at the back gate were relatively lax, and two thugs were leaning against the wall, smoking and chatting.
While they weren't looking, Lin Li piled firecrackers and miscellaneous items in the corner of the back door, lit the fuse, and then quickly hid behind a trash can in the distance.
Suddenly, the sound of firecrackers crackling and popping rang out, accompanied by bursts of flame, throwing the people in the underground casino into chaos.
The guards, thinking it was Hong Shengtang's men attacking, grabbed steel pipes and machetes and rushed out.
The gamblers also fled in panic.
Taking advantage of the chaos, Lin Li used her spatial invisibility technique to sneak into the small room where the gambling money was stored.
Using a crowbar he had prepared beforehand, he pried open the safe, stuffed the cash inside, along with some valuable gold watches and necklaces, into a cloth bag he had prepared earlier, and then quickly ran out the back door.
Subsequently, she sent the anonymous letter, written with her left hand, to the Hong Kong Evening News, the newspaper known for its outspokenness.
In her letter, she detailed the location and operation of the East Star Gang's underground casino, as well as their heinous acts of kidnapping and extortion, hoping that the newspaper could expose their criminal activities.
Although she knew the newspaper might be afraid to report it for fear of retaliation from the East Star Gang, she still wanted to give it a try.
After everything is done.
She returned to Beijing on a whim.
Looking at the full moon in the night sky, I feel relaxed and happy.
Then, he lay down on the bed and fell into a deep sleep.
The next day.
The April wind swirled the fallen petals of the elm-leaf plum blossoms, sweeping obliquely across the blue brick floor of the courtyard.
Lin Li was awakened by the sparrows in the yard.
She put on her coat and walked to the center of the courtyard, where she saw that the pomegranate tree had sprouted new buds, and the elm leaves and plum petals on the blue brick ground were damp with dew.
Lin Laosan and the two little ones had already gone to school.
She neatly organized the transfer documents for the two children.
She brought her household registration certificate, report card, vaccination record, award certificate, and a family relationship statement that she had transcribed overnight.
They were all put into the file folder.
As soon as I stepped out of the courtyard gate.
The aroma of fried dough sticks wafted from the breakfast stalls in the alley.
Lin Li turned directly into the breakfast shop.
I ordered a bowl of soy milk, two fried dough sticks, and a basket of pork buns, and started eating them with gusto.
It's been two years since the two capitals were established.
She even tasted the sweetness in the old-fashioned soy milk, a specialty of Beijing.
I miss it terribly after not drinking it for a month.
After a hearty breakfast.
After putting the money on the table, I smiled and greeted the owner before returning to the courtyard gate, getting on my bicycle, and heading to the police station.
A postman on a bicycle brushed past her on the road, the People's Daily in his basket revealing the headline "Construction of Special Economic Zones".
Lin Li hurriedly stopped him and bought a copy of today's People's Daily.
Standing on the street corner, I quickly started flipping through the pages.
Twenty minutes later, after reading the key news items, I smiled and continued on my bike.
To keep up with the pace of economic development, she has developed a habit of reading newspapers every day.
Arrived at the entrance of the police station.
A wooden telephone pole stood in front of the blue brick building next to him, and the radio was broadcasting "News and Newspaper Summary".
As the announcer's Beijing accent rose and fell, she parked her car in a public parking lot.
As she entered, Old Zhang from the gatehouse squinted at her.
"Here on business?"
Lin Li nodded and waved the file folder in her hand.
"Get transfer certificates for my two grandsons."
Old Zhang called out into the house, "Wang the Registrant is here," and then continued to mark things on the register with red and blue pencils, leaving a water stain on the table from the enamel mug.
The household registration office was filled with the smell of ink and tobacco.
Wang, the household registration clerk, was hunched over his green-painted desk, writing something. The horseshoe-shaped clock on the desk was ticking, and there was a crack in the glass of the clock face.
He looked up, adjusted his black-rimmed glasses, glanced at Lin Li, and pointed to the bench against the wall.
"Sit down first and fill out this form."
The form handed to her was mimeographed, and Lin Li took out the pen clipped to her chest.
He started writing, rustling away.
"Your guardian wrote it?"
Wang, the household registration clerk, asked while smoking a cigarette. Through the swirling smoke, he saw the word "grandmother" on the form.
Lin Li nodded quickly and took out her household registration certificate.
“The children are with me now, and I am their legal guardian.”
Wang, the household registration officer, took the documents and began to carefully review them.
She would occasionally ask Lin Li about the child's parents.
Lin Lidu answered each question in turn.
If there were still any unclear points, Lin Li took out the relevant materials and showed them to her.
What are the two children's zodiac signs?
Wang, the household registration officer, suddenly asked.
Lin Li counted on her fingers: "Hu Zi is a snake, and Yao Yao is a sheep."
He nodded, added a line to the certificate confirming the information was true, and the pen scratched across the paper, but then suddenly stopped.
Did you bring your school registration certificate?
Lin Li quickly pulled out two yellowed pieces of paper from her cloth bag.
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