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Reborn As Lucky Star

The cultivator blessed with good fortunes but known to lead a slothful life was reborn again as Chloe Jones. Upon birth, she was shunned for being born a girl and abandoned by her family. What a pitiful life! Fortunately, she was taken in by a poor family in the village. She thought she would stop leading an idle life in this life, but that was until her senior brothers from her previous life showed up. Among her senior brothers, one was the king of the law industry and another was the wealthy president of an international company. One more turned out to be a doctor who was said to have brought people back from the brink of death and the last was a famous celebrity. Originally, Chloe planned to live a comfortable life with her senior brothers’ help. That was until an unlucky b*stard appeared. Whenever the unlucky b*st ard left Chloe's side, he would develop a bad migraine and fever. It was almost as if the God of Misfortune had possessed him. Someone once commented that he and Chloe were a match made in heaven. However, her senior brothers retorted, “Begone! Don’t trust this wolf in sheep’s clothing! He's been coveting you since your previous life!”

Counting Mushrooms · Tổng hợp
Không đủ số lượng người đọc
559 Chs

Chapter 35 Yue Xiaofang's Decision

After hearing the verdict of the village doctor, Yue Qingqing sighed in her heart.

When she first saw Yue Xiaofang, the latter was enshrouded in a gray haze with a hint of milky white within it.

That belonged to the aura of the fetus in her womb.

During this time, Yue Qingqing had come to understand this world as well.

Resources were scarce, and survival was tough.

Women whose husbands had died found it extremely difficult to live on in such times, not only because of the material conditions but even more so due to the idle gossip and sneering of others.

Lin Chunju's husband died saving someone, yet she was still called a husband-killer, not to mention those whose husbands died of illness.

And those women who were sent back home by their husbands were in an even worse situation; women weren't considered labor force, and their birth families usually weren't very welcoming.