143: Chapter 19 The ritorious Little Policeman_1 143: Chapter 19 The ritorious Little Policeman_1 If a score were to be attributed to the skill of skinning a wild rabbit, Yan Fei would undoubtedly score full points.
Not only was he swift, but he also managed to skin the rabbit without harm to its fur or flesh.
Yan Wenhai blinked, and in a blink of an eye, his son had skinned the rabbit as if performing acrobatics.
“Just like Butchering the Ox, just like Butchering the Ox!” One elderly man said learnedly.
Yan Wenhai chuckled, as if praising himself: “Everyone co here and have so rabbit in a while…”
It was a re courtesy, nobody took it seriously.
If you really wanted to share sothing with soone, it was customary to deliver it personally.
Health instructions emphasised a hearty breakfast, preferably a light one.
This was a rule for those who indulged in at every day.
For students who had to abstain from at for a month once they entered the campus, it didn’t matter whether it was early in the morning or midnight, they would still wake up to a pot of red-braised pork.
So, naturally, the greasy wild rabbit at delivered by Yan Fei early in the morning was warmly received.
After breakfast, Yan Fei took Yan Chao, the nauseating little fellow, to buy clothes.
Describing this brat as nauseating was certainly not wronging him; this boy wanted to eat stinky tofu, orchid beans, cotton candy, and various snacks throughout the journey.
Yan Fei always thought he was too slow eating while walking, so he let him ride on his neck.
As a result, Yan Fei’s head was peppered with droplets of stinky tofu juice and countless bits of orchid beans.
Worse still, the kid farted after eating too much, much to Yan Fei’s disdain.
Yan Fei felt quite pitiful.
However, there were others even worse off than him.
Officer Li nibbled on the cucumber Yan Fei had given him, rested for quite a while, then went to a breakfast shop where he gulped down two big bowls of tofu pudding and ate fifteen small fried buns, only then did he feel sowhat reenergized.
He didn’t even have ti to catch his breath upon arriving at his office when Uncle Wang pulled him away.
En route, Uncle Wang pedalled so fast that it was nearly airborne, leaving no chance for Li to ask what was going on.
Exhausted, they arrived at the living district near Zhang Laosan’s house.
There was already a crowd of spectators gathered, and so early-arriving colleagues were inquiring about the situation.
Li approached a familiar colleague intending to ask about the situation.
The colleague pointed: “Go and see for yourself!”
After making his way through the crowd, he imdiately thought: Was I crazy this morning?
Why did I eat that much?
By the dung pit, a corpse covered in fecal sludge lay.
The sight was nauseating – a man suffocated to death by fecal sludge, how could that be pleasant?
He was plagued by extre fatigue and a stomach full of food.
He felt like he was dying.
To resist the urge to vomit, Li had to imagine all sorts of pleasant things, but what kind of sll was around the dung pit?
It had been fernting for decades.
Because of retrieving a dead body, it had been stirred up, the sll was unimaginable.
In short, he was utterly disgusted and uncomfortable.
When his colleagues started declaring that the deceased had fallen in by accident, Officer Li grew discontent.
He turned to Uncle Wang and said: “Just yesterday his brother had an accident, he had just announced a reward, and now sothing happens to him at night, could it be a re coincidence?”
Uncle Wang glared at him before whispering: “Don’t ask now.
We will first placate the surrounding residents, when we return we can quietly investigate.
Can we directly speak of the situation here?”
“Oh!” Li replied, choking back his nausea, finally understanding.
As soon as he returned to the office, a eting was called.
In the end, it was concluded – there were many doubts, but insufficient evidence.
Zhang Laosan’s family and friends had played cards for a long ti before they realized he hadn’t returned – then, they began searching and calling for him everywhere.
No one noticed until dawn when soone discovered two feet in the dung pit while taking out the garbage.
An uproar arose, and soone pointed out that the shoes could belong to Zhang Laosan.
Then there was the overall retrieval process.
To talk about rescue at this point would be nothing but delusion.
Retrieving the body wasn’t difficult.
Even though Zhang Laosan was by no ans a good man while alive, the sanctity of death was respected and many good-hearted neighbors ca to help.
With the use of a few large wooden boards, several n managed to retrieve his body.
However, the cri scene was completely destroyed.
By the ti the police arrived, there weren’t any clues to find.
They couldn’t tell the position the man had been in when he died, and thus couldn’t determine whether he had fallen in on his own or if soone had thrown him in.
Upon questioning the nearby residents, there were also no clues; no one had heard anything unusual.
Let alone people, the distance from Zhang family’s place to where the dung pit was, a detour of about two hundred ters, and several households in between had dogs, but none of those dogs alard.
It was as if the man had flown in – this idea was indeed close to the truth, but no one thought of it that way.
Zhang Laosan was not a good man; his family couldn’t even count the number of people he had offended.
Moreover, assuming it was a homicide, how did the murderer manage to silently get this big man to the dung pit?
Zhang Laosan might have been short in stature, but he was all muscle, weighed about two hundred catties.
Is it possible to take him away right under a crowd’s watchful eyes?
A group of louts were clamoring that Laosan hadn’t got drunk, several people hadn’t even finished a bottle of alcohol, how could he fall in by himself?
Well, the police now had a clue – the deceased had consud a large amount of alcohol before his death.
Of course, a thorough investigation was necessary every ti an incident occurred, but there’s a matter of priority and there were many other things to deal with at the precinct.
It was sumr vacation, and the pre-scheduled sumr safety education promotion work still needed to be allocated.
Each child who drowned usually led to a broken family, that was the current top priority.
In addition, as people’s lives improved, gambling still happened occasionally in the countryside.
Mmm, and incidents like cattle theft, all required manpower to investigate.
In fact, even the case of Zhang Laowu should have been transferred to the Criminal Police Team for investigation.
But they were too busy, so they handed it over to Officer Li and Old Wang for investigation.
As a result, Officer Li, who still hadn’t figured things out, soon received the task assignnt.
He was very dissatisfied.
He had finally gotten a murder case and he wasn’t allowed to investigate it.
After dawdling for a long ti, unwillingly and dragging his exhausted body, he prepared to pack up and head to the countryside.
In fact, the junior officer did “make a ritorious service,” it’s just that no one knew about it.
Yes, he “made a ritorious service” for Yan Fei – successfully proving that Yan Fei didn’t leave the residential area all night and only went out for physical exercise at dawn.
Yan Fei didn’t know that the junior officer tailing him not only did him a huge favor but also went down to the countryside.
In the afternoon, he did nothing again but honestly play with his younger brother.
Not only that, but this was also the case for two consecutive days.
Except for returning to the cattle farm once and soaking so dicinal wine, the rest of the ti was spent running around with his brother.
In the morning he went around the cattle market, in the afternoon he strolled in the streets and lanes, fully implenting Fifth Brother’s idea of ‘forgetting the whole thing.’
In fact, if it weren’t for Zhang Laowu’s elder brother, the day he unintentionally killed Zhang Laowu he could have chosen not to run around.
Killing a thief unintentionally is genuinely not a big deal these days, of course, deliberately murdering Zhang Laosan later is another matter.
Luckily, he inadvertently created a ‘suicide’ scene and had a “helpful” junior officer indirectly providing his alibi – he even gave the poor guy half a cucumber as a “thank you gift”!
Initially he thought he would continue living like this for the next few days, but Yanfei’s mom had had enough.
The young kid Yan Chao was living like a god these days, with a ‘horse’ to ride and eating whatever he saw, his life was too leisurely and carefree.
Unfortunately, too much happiness breeds sorrow.
The kid was eating so much outside and was not hungry at ho anymore.
His parents could put up with it once or twice, but they had allowed it for three to four days, and that was enough.
So on the fourth day, the little guy was sent to kindergarten early in the morning with a runny nose and his ear twisted by his mother.
So, when Yan Fei had finished delivering food to Xu Xiaoyan and stepped out of the school gate, he was at a loss.
What should he do now?
There’s nothing much to see at the Cattle Market, and thinking about his usual als of big chunks of at cooked in a pot, it was just a change of flavor even though there were not really any variations.
These past few days he’s been coming up with ways to prepare food to deliver to Xu Xiaoyan, and now he was running out of ideas.
Alright then, let’s go to Fifth Brother’s restaurant, let’s see how their head cook prepares the als.
After all, he could learn a few tricks!
When Yan Fei arrived at the beef restaurant it was still early, at that mont Fifth Brother was helping others butcher a cow.
Fifth Sister-in-law, who was rarely up this early, was in the courtyard watching the carpenter work.
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