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Chapter 129: Chapter 129: The Girl Who Wanted to Go Ho Chapter 129: Chapter 129: The Girl Who Wanted to Go Ho Unlike the usual bullet comnts’ colors, it was the unique golden color of an official certification number, standing out so distinctly among the other comnts.

[Sea City Taoist Academy, “We especially offer this reward to show our utmost support for our outstanding new student Scarlett Jennings in spreading the Taoist teachings!”]

[Sea City Taoist Academy, “Apologies, the official certification took so ti.”]

The livestream audience: …

They were dazzled.

It wasn’t just re showing off.

[I just got admitted to South University this year, so @South University teachers, when will my Ten Thousand Stars be given to ?]

[@Sea University, I advise you to be proactive and give my Ten Thousand Stars, don’t force to kneel and beg!]

[Teachers probably haven’t tipped because they don’t know my livestream ID, I’ll go leave a ssage on the school’s official account!]

[I don’t need Ten Thousand Stars, just a Blue Rose worth 999, considering how sensible I am, when will the teachers reward ?]

[As a child, I couldn’t compare with other people’s children; growing up, I couldn’t even compare with other people’s universities…]

[No wonder she’s the chosen one, not even enrolled yet, and already adored by the official account.]

[I represent the other 29 students admitted to the Taoism Academy and protest!]

[Friendly reminder, the Taoism Academy enrolls no more than thirty students each year, not necessarily exactly thirty each year.]

[That’s not important, what’s important is that it’s willing to pamper !]

Director Clark didn’t miss the content of the Taoism Academy’s official comnts; to say it was a coincidence, it didn’t seem like one.

The appearance of the Taoism Academy seed more like a response to Scarlett Jennings’s previous question.

Director Clark had a strange suspicion that arose inexplicably in his mind.

Maybe the one who greeted the upper managent to let the show continue was not the Carew Family of Capital tropolitan, nor the Jennings Family of Sea City, but … the Taoism Academy?

This academy, rumored to have official national backing, might have more influence than they imagined.

As soon as this speculation arose, Director Clark felt a burst of heat in his heart.

If this was true.

Their show might have struck gold!

Director Clark’s gaze toward Scarlett Jennings imdiately beca intensely heated.

He also didn’t forget to instruct the host through the earpiece.

“Let her talk.”

Whatever she wanted to say, just let her say it.

Anyway, the higher-ups had given instructions, broadcast it all!

William Zeller, receiving Director Clark’s instructions, although surprised and doubtful, reacted quickly on the surface and smiled as he continued the conversation,

“The ‘Inspiration’ program group, use your inspiration to unravel the story, feel free to speak boldly.”

Scarlett Jennings, hearing the host’s words, understood that there was no issue from the director’s side. After a brief consideration, she finally spoke.

“In simple terms, this place, fifty years ago, was the old estate of a capitalist. The female ghost entangled with Mr. Guan was the daughter of that family.”

Scarlett knew the story of the female ghost.

She was a tragedy of that era.

She was the daughter of a capitalist; in the seventies, capitalists represented a bad social status.

Before trouble struck the family, her father, sensing future misfortune, arranged for his daughter to marry into a poor peasant family he had once helped, to avoid implicating his children.

That family was poor, but their only son had made it to high school thanks to her father’s support.

Among the illiterate villagers, the boy was a rare scholar.

The village people believed he had a promising future, deed he could beco an official, live in the city, eat market-supplied grains, and marry a city bride.

And indeed, he married a city bride, but she was a city bride with a bad family status.

The girl’s father prepared a generous dowry for her, entrusting his beloved daughter to the boy.

He believed that with the goodwill of past help, coupled with the dowry, his daughter could live a stable life in the village, even with a bad social status.

Yet, he never imagined human hearts were not as straightforward as he thought.

After the girl married into the rural family, she was not liked by the boy’s family.

On the second day of her marriage, the in-laws, under the pretense of safekeeping, took away all her dowry money.

Her sister-in-law, the boy’s sister, also seized all her valuable and pretty clothes and shoes under so excuse.

Overnight, the girl transford from a cherished lady into a wretched person who could be bullied and scolded by everyone.

In that family, she was responsible for everyone’s als, laundry, cooking, cleaning, grass-cutting, pig-feeding, wood-chopping, and vegetable-planting…

And the boy witnessed it all, yet felt it was only natural.

Though once aided through schooling, the boy wasn’t ungrateful for the capitalist’s assistance; however, when their situations changed, that so-called gratitude beca a stain.

A stain once associated with a capitalist.

Ironically, the other party demanded repaynt by insisting on marrying their daughter into their family.

Though the boy married the girl because of the large dowry, he always felt the marriage was a humiliation to him.

Every ti he saw the girl, he rembered her family’s past charity.

Along with her bad social status, his originally bright future was tarnished.

He believed all his woes were because he married a wife of low status.

So he allowed his family to tornt the girl.

Making her labor like a beast for their family, making her quake in his presence.

Yet, he sanctimoniously claid it was for her own good.

Because of her low status, her miserable life made others look good.

The girl actually believed it.

Later, she beca pregnant with the man’s child. At eight months, she still had to work in the fields. Following an argunt with her sister-in-law, she was forcibly pushed to the ground.

The child was lost. Due to a severe hemorrhage, she could no longer conceive.

The man turned around and blad her, threatening to divorce her.

Only later did she discover the man had already been involved with a factory girl from the city, and even without the sister-in-law incident, their family would have found an excuse to divorce her.

In the coldest days of winter, the girl was left penniless and expelled from that ho.

With nowhere to go, she could only think of her forr ho.

She recalled her once happy youth, and although she knew her family might no longer be there, she obstinately wanted to return to that ho.

Alone, she walked for over five hours in the cold winter, from the countryside to the city, collapsing before reaching it on an isolated road.

Her body was already frail from postpartum weakness, exacerbated by years of tornt; it was in utter ruin.

Perhaps knowing she didn’t have long left, she was so set on seeing her ho.

Yet before she could return, she collapsed on the road leading to the city and could never rise again.

Maybe because her obsession ran too deeply, even with her body dead, her soul still moved toward ho.

Her spirit returned to her forr ho.

But it was already occupied.

The girl was powerless, only able to watch strangers take over her family’s house.

As ti went on, the house was torn down, rebuilt, torn down again, and rebuilt until it beca what it is today.

She kept watching, knowing this place would never belong to her again, yet she never left.

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