Chapter 1135: Domestic Sales of Commodities Originally Produced for Exports
Pet King
Translator: Nyoi-Bo Studio Editor: Nyoi-Bo Studio
The small argument seemed to have ended with He Heâs win. She showed off a victorâs smile, sweetly chirping, âI just knew Senior Gao treated me the best!â
If that didnât just make Gao Keâs legs weak. If only a few more idiots would come their way and give him a chance to save the damsel in distress.
âCome, come. Let Xiao He walk in the middle. Letâs go see the market.â He showed off his leadership abilities with all he could. âIâll walk in the front. Tianyu, stay by her left, Xuetao by her right, and Zian...you can be at the back. As for Jack... Do as you see fit.â
He regretted it the moment the words came out of his mouth. If he arranged it in this manner, he wouldnât have much of a chance to talk with He He since heâd be standing in front. Heâd instead given Xiao Tianyu and Du Xuetao an advantage. But as the vice-leader, it wouldnât be good for him to take his words back either, so he could only go with it.
Zhang Zian had to admit that he was pretty satisfied with this arrangement. He had wanted to walk in the back anyway, since it was more convenient to talk to the elfins that way. He shot Jack a look, and Jack understood, slowing his footsteps to match his.
Jack initiated the conversation, explaining himself. After Zhang Zian had left the hotel, Gao Ke and his crew had gradually come down too, but they chose to have their breakfast at the hotel. During this period of time, He He didnât come down at all. Gao Ke explained that she was still sleeping in, plus she had to put on makeup, so it took up a lot of her time. After they had decided to come to the Khan el-Khalili market, Jack had offered to get two taxis for them. He and Xiao Tianyu got in the taxi in front, leaving first, and they hadnât seen He Heâs outfit.
Zhang Zian could only shake his head. This lass had really been spoiled rotten by Wei Kang and her three seniors, and sheâd most likely been spoiled like a princess back at home too.
She wasnât wrong. Females did have the right to wear whatever clothes they wanted, as long as it was still publicly decentâat least in theory.
The UN Womenâs wing had done a survey in 2013, indicating that 99% of women had suffered from some form of harrassment in Egypt. Some of them mentioned that they would be harassed no matter whether they were in their traditional garb or Western clothing.
But anyone with two functioning brain cells would be able to deduce that the more revealing your clothes were, the higher the chance of getting harrassed. The more traditional and conservative a culture was, the more pent-up frustration and twisted psychology there was underneath the layers. The women had a choice to wear whatever clothes they wanted here, as long as they were willing to shoulder the relative risk. Their bodies were theirs, after all.
Jack noticed the silver hookah in Zhang Zianâs hands, seemingly used, and asked where heâd gotten it from out of curiosity.
Zhang Zian answered that an Egyptian friend that he had met had gifted him the hookah, but Jack didnât quite believe him. Most Egyptian men viewed the hookah as their lifeblood. How could they just gift it to a random stranger like that?
After a few words, before Jack could ask any further, He He called him over to bombard him with questions, brimming with curiosity for everything.
Zhang Zian lagged behind so that it was easier to observe what was happening. Even though he didnât like what He He was doing at all, he still didnât wish for anything bad to happen to her. Everyone was Chinese, after all. They should look after each other when overseas. Secondly, he didnât want the trip to prematurely end because she had an accident. That would be a huge regret for both him and Wei Kang.
Jack was very familiar with this place. He tried his best to bring them to places with great value and even helped them to bargain.
The group had attracted a lot of attention, especially He He, walking in the middle. Those long, pale legs of hers were just like walking hormones. Zhang Zian could almost hear the men around them swallowing as they walked past.
Egyptians liked sparkly things. Most of the Khan el-Khalili market was selling sparkly things: traditional Arabian gold and silver jewelry, gold containers, and a whole array of gold products. It was a dizzying sight.
These youngsters were interested in anything and everything and wanted to bring everything back home, since the things werenât expensive either.
All of the store owners that they had walked past had tried to greet them with accented Chinese, asking them to come in. Sometimes it sounded like âHelleow,â and sometimes it was âHell,â but not one person had said âHelloâ correctly.
This place wasnât bigger or more posh than Yiwuâs trinket market, but the things that they were selling were Arabian and Egyptian in nature, so the few Chinese thought they were interesting. If the things that they sold were instead Chinese in nature, like dragons and phoenixes or fat kids hugging carp, they probably wouldnât even have spared them a pity glance.
âWow! Is this a statue of a cat? So cute!â He He saw a shop selling all sorts of Egyptâs godly creaturesâ statues, like hippopotamuses, crocodiles, dingoes, eagles, and of course, cats. She immediately rushed over, wanting to buy a few as gifts for her friends.
The one that sheâd seen was a statue that had been made to look just like the Holy Cat statue. This small statue, along with a few others, had been cartoonified and had lost the ferocity of the real Holy Cat statue.
âDonât buy, donât buy.â Jack hurriedly stopped her. âUnless you want to bring back something from China from Egypt. This is Chinaâs product.â
âWhat? This is Chinaâs product?â
He He didnât believe it, and the others couldnât either. A statue like this was so full of Egyptâs specialty, so how could it have been made in China?
He He picked up the statue, inspecting it all over. âThis doesnât say âMade in Chinaâ!â
Jack lowered his voice, explaining in Chinese. Most of the items here were made in China. In the beginning, the items all said âMade in Chinaâ in Chinese, and it was changed to English after they realized that Chinese people wouldnât buy the products. But they saw that most tourists were able to understand some basic English and still didnât buy their products, so they ended up writing âMade in Chinaâ in Arabic. Finally, Chinese people didnât understand it and really thought that the products were made in Egypt, so they bought them enthusiastically.
He pointed at the curved sentence in Arabian at the bottom, meaning âMade in China.â Everyone was speechless.
He He hesitated with the statue in her hands. She quite liked this cartoon Holy Cat statue and thought it would make a great present.
Jack added on that it was okay to buy it back since most of the things sold here werenât sold back in China, so they werenât really losing out.
He bargained for He He, cutting the sellerâs price by 70% the moment he started and settling the price at around 40% of the original. He He felt like she had gained a huge deal since her friends didnât know Arabic anyway.
But although Egypt was conservative, it wasnât as if they didnât sell raunchy things. There was actually one shop that sold bikini swimsuits just to earn touristsâ money.
As they walked, Zhang Zian noticed that Fina had stopped. It was staring at something in the shopâs window, so focused that it was as though it had forgotten about everything else in the world.
That was a womanâs statueâCleopatra the Seventh.