When Wu Dongheng led his men to Tokyo, Ye Zi had just finished placing the nuclear bomb. He knew exactly who had what he needed.
In fact, as soon as the shockwave from the nuclear explosion subsided, Wu Dongheng took immediate action. He directly seized the antiques from those Japanese soldiers whose ancestors had been to China. Only those who collected antiques would be bought back by Wu Dongheng.
It has to be said that grabbing them is much more efficient than spending money to buy them back.
After drifting at sea for several days, Yezi's cargo ship successfully docked. After disembarking, Yezi immediately rode away on her motorcycle.
Several days have passed, and China's evacuation plan is progressing smoothly. However, some people who have already given up their Chinese citizenship are trying to slip through the cracks.
If Chinese citizens had acquired citizenship in another country at that time, the evacuation warships might have been considered out of consideration for their Chinese heritage.
But they hold Japanese citizenship, so there's nothing we can do but feel bad. They'll just have to stay obediently on the four Japanese islands, enjoy the radiation, and wait for Mount Fuji to erupt.
Back at the gates of hell, Ye Zi's biggest concern was the eruption of Mount Fuji, but the greater the expectation, the greater the disappointment. Mount Fuji only emitted a plume of smoke and then fell silent.
This is equivalent to the neighbor's family being murdered, and the animal only farting out of fright; the imagined scene of excrement and urine flowing out did not occur.
This disappointed Ye Zi. Looking at the last nuclear bomb in the space, Ye Zi immediately suggested to Gui Men Guan that he go again.
Guimenguan agreed, but the higher-ups' response was ambiguous, because according to news from Japan, although Mount Fuji did not erupt, the underground magma activity was even more intense.
This means that the eruption of Mount Fuji was brought forward significantly.
Given the crater's shape, once a nuclear bomb is thrown in and explodes, it will erupt, leaving Ye Zi with very little time to escape.
The higher-ups' message was clear: whether or not to go was up to Ye Zi and Gui Men Guan to decide.
As for the eruption of Mount Fuji that submerged civilians on the four Japanese islands, that is not within the scope of consideration.
Izakayas, the most common type of small pubs in the four Japanese islands, 95% of the time they don't serve Chinese people, and the remaining 5% who do are treated badly, and the prices are several times higher than what Japanese people pay.
Sex shops are ubiquitous in Japan, but they do not cater to Chinese people.
The Japanese soldiers were taught from a young age that China was rich in resources and was the best place to live.
Don't assume that the Japanese had much conscience. During World War II, countless Japanese invaders sent letters back to China to show off their power, including photos of massacring Chinese civilians and descriptions of what the Japanese soldiers did and how many people they killed.
If they had any conscience, why didn't they use these things as evidence of their crimes of aggression against China?
The Japanese soldiers who invaded China are dead, and China will not hold their descendants accountable; all that is needed is justice.
So, did China receive any evidence? No.
The letters their ancestors sent back during the invasion of China were used by them as a way to show off, as evidence of how brave their ancestors were on the battlefield.
From mid-level officers onward, all Japanese Self-Defense Force personnel were required to speak Mandarin, or at least be able to understand some of it.
The intelligence agencies have made Mandarin a compulsory subject, giving it a higher priority than English.
Why? Ultimately, it's because they always keep the land of China in their hearts.
China is currently incredibly strong, but if it were to decline, the first to pounce wouldn't be the bald eagle, but the Japanese.
At that time, Japanese men aged eighteen to forty would immediately become soldiers, and the rest would become various reserve forces.
Therefore, if given the opportunity to wipe out the entire Japanese nation, China will absolutely not show any mercy. It is time to end this hatred that has lasted for over a thousand years.
The plan was simple: Ye Zi would drop the nuclear bomb into the crater of Mount Fuji and then evacuate as quickly as possible. The shape of the crater would cause radioactive material to erupt upwards, but the shockwave from the explosion would trigger the eruption of lava.
The leaves need to avoid the lava while trying to escape.
Ye Zi asked the system, and it said that as long as he wasn't submerged in lava, he wouldn't die.
The Ghost Gate prepared a motorboat, a motorcycle, and an oral locator for Ye Zi, and the entire journey was transported by submarine.
After preparing everything, Yezi let her parents and Tongtong know she was safe and sound, and then set off.
Two weeks later, Ye Zi stood atop Mount Fuji, looking at the semi-solidified lava in the crater, with a nuclear bomb chained to her feet.
At this point, there was no one at the foot of Mount Fuji, and no one would risk a sudden eruption to stay there.
Japanese experts did say that Mount Fuji would not erupt in the short term, but the experts' words cannot be trusted; this is a global consensus.
I glanced at Tokyo, 80 kilometers away. The Japanese disaster relief operation was still underway. Most of Tokyo was deserted, but it didn't matter. As long as Mount Fuji was detonated.
Whether these Japanese soldiers survive or not depends on their fate. If they are lucky, the eruption of Mount Fuji will not be enough to submerge the four Japanese islands. If they are unlucky, then they will all die.
Turning back, Ye Zi used an iron chain to slowly lower the nuclear bomb into the crater.
When the iron chains ran out, the nuclear bomb was less than ten meters from the magma.
The other end of the chain was an anchor, stuck firmly in the soil.
This was a method devised by the mechanic, giving Ye Zi ample time to escape.
Ten minutes later, Ye Zi appeared on her motorcycle five kilometers away from Mount Fuji when a violent explosion suddenly came from behind her.
Ye Zi glanced in the rearview mirror and saw a plume of smoke rising from the summit of Mount Fuji, vaguely resembling a mushroom shape, but more like the black column of smoke seen before a volcanic eruption.
He grinned, twisted the throttle to the floor, and the motorcycle beneath him sped forward at an even higher speed.
Ye Zi quickly arrived at the seaside, put away her motorcycle, took out her jet ski, swallowed an oral GPS device, and then went out to sea.
The sudden eruption of Mount Fuji startled the Japanese soldiers in Tokyo who had not yet evacuated, and also terrified the high-ranking officials of the Japanese government.
The eruption of Mount Fuji means that a large area of land centered on Mount Fuji will become uninhabitable, which is absolutely adding insult to injury for the Japanese, whose land area was already insufficient.
Moreover, the scale of the eruption is uncertain; if it is massive, they will face annihilation.
Sure enough, more and more sparks were mixed in with the thick smoke, and then a stream of magma replaced the smoke and rose into the sky, eventually turning into a rain of fire that fell from the sky.
The entire Mount Fuji was quickly enveloped by the gushing lava. More and more lava flowed out, eventually turning into a torrent of lava that rushed out in all directions from Mount Fuji as the center.
The erupting magma column not only did not decrease in height, but instead grew taller and taller, and the falling magma rain became increasingly heavy.
The Japanese soldiers who had not yet evacuated began to despair. How could mortal bodies possibly withstand such a natural disaster?
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