Chapter 529: 529: The Village Registry
I Have Yet to Become a Doll Today
This issue wasnât too crucial, but Bai Youwei was still somewhat concerned about it.
Every household in the village had two or three children. Why didnât the Li household have any? To the point that after his death, there was no one left to mourn for him.
The old woman immediately shook her head: âMrs. Li was too frail, too delicate.â
The old man in the house then replied: âMrs. Li was quite young when she married into our family. The first time she gave birth, she nearly lost her life, and although she managed to survive, the child didnât live past a month. The babies she gave birth to afterwards all died in infancyâ¦â
When the old man finished speaking, he sighed, and said tiredly, âI am tired⦠Wife, is there any water?â
The old womanâs face dropped, she got up and went into the house, slamming the door shut with a loud bang.
Once the three questions were answered, the NPC exited the scene.
The four people outside looked at each other.
Fu Miaoxue muttered, âDidnât people in ancient times get married early? They were wed at fifteen or sixteen. If Mrs. Li was younger than that⦠how old was she? Fourteen? Thirteen?â
Bai Youwei reminded her, âLi Laitzi was a poor man with a head full of scabs.â
Fu Miaoxue shuddered dramatically: âThat ugly, how desperate must her parents have been to marry her off to him?ân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
Du Lai said: âPerhaps Mrs. Liâs family was even poorer, and like many families in ancient times, they were so poor they couldnât make a living, hence they sold their daughter in return for dowry, or to save resources for their sonâs future marriage.â
âThereâs another possibility.â Shen Mo said, âMrs. Li herself couldâve been ugly, or ill.â
Like attracts like. If Li Qianggui was a dumb, poor man with a head full of scabs, then Mrs. Li might also have had some kind of defect.
âThis might be tricky,â Du Lai laughed, âWe donât know anything about Mrs. Li â her name, age, where her family lives, nothing. Hence, we still canât infer why her dead body wouldnât rest.â
âAt least we can rule out the possibility of her retaliating against her husband,â Bai Youwei analyzed calmly, âNo children, an ugly husband, and a poor familyâ¦I donât think they were a loving couple under these circumstances. A grudge seems more likely.â
Shen Mo pondered for a moment, looked up at the sky, and said, âThere should be a household register at Lizhengâs house. We should have enough time to go now.â
Du Lai nodded.
In terms of theft, nobody was more adept than him.
Du Lai quickly found a house with laundry hanging out to dry, changed into a villagerâs homespun outfit, grabbed a handful of yellow earth from the ground to smear on his face until he looked dusty and unremarkable, then he hunched over and headed towards Lizhengâs house.
Shen Mo, Bai Youwei, and Fu Miaoxue waited for him outside.
It wasnât long before they saw him coming out.
He came out quickly, his expression gloomy. Everyone thought he had failed and didnât get the register. Much to their surprise, Du Lai pulled a register from his bosom and handed it to Shen Mo.
âGot it.â Du Lai frowned slightly, âBut Mrs. Liâs name isnât in it.â
Bai Youwei froze, and then seemed to think of something. âLet me see.â
Shen Mo had just opened the first page and handed it to her.
The first page was an introduction to the village, roughly detailing its population, how much farmland it had, what crops it grew, and so forth.
The following pages contained information on each household, arranged in order of seniority, starting from the grandparentsâ generation, down to the present.
Bai Youwei found Li Qiangguiâs name.
His parents had long since died, his two brothers had also passed away one after another. Li Qianggui lived to be 70, which was rather old. If he hadnât been decapitated, he might have lived even longer.
Next to Li Qiangguiâs name, there were small characters that read:
âWife, Mrs. Li.â
There was no name, no age, no introduction, nothing. She was like an attachment existing or not, no one would know.
Bai Youwei furrowed her brows, flipped through a few more pages, and took a deep breath.
âMost of the women in this village donât have names.â