Chapter 184 The Daughter Sold 48
Yuanchun's two twin brothers happened to graduate from high school that year and took the college entrance examination. One of them went to Hai City and the other went to Jing City. After graduation, they returned to Hangzhou City to work together.
Yuanchun gave birth to three children in this life, two sons and one daughter, and the four of them were registered in Gejia Village.
After the reform and opening up, Yuanchun contracted the land distributed in the village to a family with the most sons in the village for cultivation. She bought a large piece of wasteland at the entrance of the village and built a two-story building of 400 square meters.
She also built three interconnected gatehouses in front of the building and opened a small shop.
She set up several tables in the other two gatehouses and bought several chess boards, a billiard table, and two sets of mahjong tiles for the villagers to play cards, chess, and ball.
Later, this place became the most lively entertainment venue in the village.
Yuanchun also instigated her adoptive parents to buy a large piece of vacant land at the foot of the mountain, and built a two-story building of 300 square meters next to the old house for her twin brother to marry.
Qian Lao Da and Qian Xiao Er are also married.
Boss Qian married the niece of his boss. Both of them were government officials and lived in a welfare house provided by their work unit. As they were busy with work, their two children were sent back to Gejia Village to be taken care of by Mrs. Qian.
Qian Xiaoer married a young nurse, who was the only daughter in the family. His father-in-law was a senior leader in the department and they all lived in the department.
Qian Xiaoer had two sons, one with the surname Qian and the other with the surname Zhong after his wife. His mother-in-law helped raise both children. Qian's aunt would only visit her two grandsons during the winter and summer vacations.
Although Qian Lao Da and Qian Xiao Er are not at home, it does not prevent Yuanchun from getting benefits for them in their hometown.
Yuanchun wrote to them and used sweet words to coax them into sending a large sum of money. She bought the wasteland next to her second-story building and built a 300-square-meter two-story building for them and also enclosed a large yard.
Originally, the money they sent was not enough to build the house, so the four elders of the Qian family took the opportunity to divide the property among the three brothers. The four elders gave each of the three brothers 2,000 yuan as a division of the property.
After that, every Chinese New Year, Qian Lao Da and Qian Xiao Er returned home with their wives and children and had their own house to live in. In the early 1990s, Gejia Village received a demolition order.
The whole village was in an uproar. Every household was allocated two or three houses or more and a large sum of money. Yuanchun and Tian Zhaodi received the most houses and money in the village.
Over the years, Yuanchun built two two-story side houses on the east and west sides of the yard, and also built a row of two-story buildings in the backyard, making the entire yard form a U-shape with an extra horizontal line.
Yuanchun still has the old house that she built when she got married, and she has built houses in the yard.
There are two large courtyards, one large and one small, covering an area of two acres of land, and houses of more than 2,000 square meters. Her family was allocated 20 houses and 6.8 million yuan.
The house of Qian Lao Da and Qian Xiao Er was still the original 300 square meters. No matter how Yuanchun encouraged them, they refused to spend money to expand it. When the house was demolished, they only got five houses and one million yuan.
It was at this time that they regretted not listening to Yuanchun at the beginning, but they were also satisfied to have unexpectedly obtained such a large sum of money.
The Qian family also had an old house, and they received four houses and 480,000 yuan after the demolition.
The four houses were registered under the names of four elderly people, one for each of them.
Mrs. Qian also took out 240,000 yuan and gave it to her son and daughter-in-law.
Her grandchildren all got more than she did, so she didn't give any more to them.
(End of this chapter)