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Back To The 80s: President's Doted Wife

What's it like to be wrongfully killed? Cheng Su felt she'd really hit rock bottom when she was yanked out of a building by someone who jumped. Talk about a true miscarriage of justice! But when she opened her eyes again, she found herself back in the eighties, replacing the 'culprit'? In her last life, she was clear and alone, but in this life, she had a promising, dazzling military husband, as well as a cocky and domineering third child? Ugh, spit on that! She had died with cheats, so since the husband was hers, she'd beat anyone who dared to snatch him—pummel one, annihilate two. She'd make gourmet food to sell at a stall, start a chain of restaurants, and earn the money herself. She'd have the children, flirt with her husband, and fight off any mistresses; as long as her military husband doted on her, all was good. With this cheat-code life, she wanted to eat well, drink well, gain both fame and fortune, and together with her husband, make a home anew! "This story is purely fictional. Please do not take it seriously or imitate it. Any similarities are purely coincidental."

Yan Xiaomo · Urban
Not enough ratings
253 Chs

Chapter 61: Neighbor's Pantothenic Acid

The restaurant was secured, but Cheng Su didn't rush to open it. She planned to sell fast food, but of course, the restaurant would also serve individual stir-fried dishes.

Fast food required a food cart, the type that could hold water and heat up, which she had seen in her previous life and even patronized. A food cart with dishes neatly arranged inside for customers to pick from was still common in the twenty-first century; it was just that the prices got more expensive with each passing year.

Cheng Su asked around and found a kitchenware manufacturer. She provided her own design for a food cart and dishes, paid a deposit to have them made quickly, and then went to scout the market.

The market was bustling. Besides the market's own stalls, villagers from several nearby villages brought their produce to sell—meat, vegetables, rice—all available without the need for grain or meat coupons, which was very convenient.