Why Did You Provoke Her? Even Ghosts Are Scared Into Hitting Walls

The Wen family's long-lost daughter has returned! It’s rumored that the real heiress ranked last in every school exam and even went around deceiving people, promoting feudal superstitions. Ev...

Chapter 132 Shop Opening

Wen Li immediately posted a job advertisement.

As soon as the sign was put up, quite a few people came for interviews that afternoon.

Wen Li personally conducted the interviews, asking no questions, only glancing at the candidates' faces and identification documents before asking them to start work the next day.

Wenli also recruited three older craftsmen to mentor the newly recruited apprentices.

Despite the rush, the funeral parlor located on the busiest commercial street in City A opened in a high-profile manner the day before Wen Li was to report for duty!

Wen Li even held a simple ribbon-cutting ceremony.

Passersby found it strange that on the opening day, many men and women dressed in suits stood in a row, and red cannons roared loudly. The whole process looked very bizarre.

Afterwards, a content creator who reviews restaurants posted a video of the funeral parlor, which quickly garnered hundreds of thousands of likes.

[This is the first time I've ever seen someone open a funeral parlor in a busy downtown area; it's amazing.]

[How disgusting! Why would anyone open such an unlucky shop in such a busy place!]

[Does the shop have a business license? How could they approve it in a place like this?]

[Why are funeral parlors considered unlucky? Do people think their deceased relatives bring bad luck?]

[While I can't understand why a funeral parlor would be opened in such a place, I can't understand even more the netizens who say it's unlucky. Besides selling products for the dead, don't they sell other things? We bought our firecrackers and fireworks here when we were kids, is that really unlucky?]

...

The video received a very strong response, and upon seeing this, the blogger who posted the video immediately decided to go live to visit the store.

Before even reaching the next day, the blogger walked into the funeral parlor that afternoon with his live-streaming camera, a place completely out of place in the modern city.