
Gunshots on the Grand Canal
About This Novel
This book tells the story of the 1926 Northern Expedition, when both the Kuomintang and the Communist Party sent female underground party members to instigate Xia Zhao, the acting governor of Zhejiang, in order to seek Zhejiang's independence. Sun Chuanfang was attacked from both sides. Tian Yingqi, an underground member of the Communist Party of China with dual identities, skillfully maneuvered among various forces in Hangzhou, secretly coordinating and protecting Qiu Maihua, a female underground member of the Communist Party of China. Xia Zhao saw the situation clearly and designed to force Zhou Peisheng, who was also a double agent (actually the Kuomintang who had infiltrated the Chinese Communist Party) to cooperate with him. He used Qiu Maihua's ability to imitate handwriting to prompt Xia Zhao to revolt with a fake telegram announcing the victory of the coalition forces on the front line. After the Zhejiang Uprising, in order to prevent Xia Zhao from falling to the CCP, Zhou Peisheng and the "beheading" team sent by Sun Chuanfang jointly launched a sniper attack. Tian Yingqi rushed to the hospital first, deliberately hijacked Xia Zhao's father, sabotaged Zhou Peisheng's plan, and finally died to protect Qiu Maihua.
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