White Dragon Village was very poor, and the distance between the village school and the village office was very short.
In a dilapidated courtyard a hundred meters next to the two-story village office, overgrown with wild grass, stood three decrepit tile-roofed houses. This was the village school.
Because the conditions were so bad, no one really wanted to come here to teach. Each time a teacher was sent, they would resign in a few days, and the village children often faced the risk of dropping out.
There was a distance from the school, but from afar, one could see the yard filled with people.
Almost everyone from the village had come, totaling up to seven or eight hundred people.
The yard was so full that some people were squatting on the walls outside to watch.
In the countryside, there was not much entertainment, and no one wanted to miss out on something exciting.
Most of the troublemakers in the yard were from families who had bought their wives.