
Twelve Salt Pickers
About This Novel
A year later, Shi Pei, a young boy, became the captain of the anti-Japanese guerrilla team. The guerrilla team he led fought a beautiful ambush at Monkey Rock and captured a group of Japanese soldiers and a Chinese porter. The porter was none other than Wangbai's nephew Yangpi. It turned out that the sheepskin fell to the bottom of the cliff that day, and the Japanese thought that he would definitely die. In fact, he did not die; even a shot fired at him did not hit the fatal place. It was a pity that he limped back after waking up, and was caught by the Japanese on the way. They did not beat him. As long as he was a porter, he did his duty. The guerrilla team leader sent someone to send Yangpi home, and asked the person to tell the truth about Yangpi's performance at Monkey Rock a year ago. Yangpi's mother was sick and was furious to death; Yangpi's father kicked him out of the house and reported to the family, disowning him as his son and crossing out his name from the family tree. Sheepskin wanders around without knowing his whereabouts. The wheel of history rolled into the new century. A water plant was built in Monkey Rock, and the mineral water was sold both inside and outside the province. To commemorate the massacre that occurred at Monkey Rock more than 70 years ago, the Mineral Water Factory built a monument. The inscription was written by retired veteran cadre Shi Egg, which included the following sentence: "No one begged for mercy, and no one killed our compatriots!" A slight revision of history.
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