She Only Cares About Cultivation-Chapter 833 - 781: Famine Era 22 (Second Update)

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Chapter 833: Chapter 781: Famine Era 22 (Second Update)

In late January 1950, the twenty-year-old Ye Huan returned to a home long left behind.

Her little nephew was already a year old and able to walk. Her sister was admitted to high school. Her brother received his middle school graduation certificate. Since the founding of New China, Fourth Brother’s letters had been received smoothly, and ordinary people’s lives had improved with the unification of all of China.

The bodies of her grandparents were still relatively strong, and the best days were those surrounded by children and grandchildren, with enough to eat and drink.

However, the Ye Family’s surprises didn’t end there. At the end of January, Brother Five and Brother Eight returned home to visit family, marking their return home after many years, and Third Aunt fainted from excitement.

In early February, Brother Six and Brother Seven also returned, and the elder aunt wailed and cried in heartbreak as she embraced Brother Seven.

Unfortunately, Fourth Brother couldn’t make it, but in the letter before the year-end, Fourth Brother had already informed them of his basic situation.

He even told his parents not to worry about his marriage; the organization would arrange it eventually.

However, she believed that Fourth Brother might be overly optimistic. As the Korean War began in June this year, the units were soon to undergo major adjustments, initiating the Anti-M Aid Korea war.

After this campaign ended, the top brass would start arranging matchmaking for those with ranks, and marriage matters would likely take another three to four years.

This New Year, because of the return of several brothers, smiles never left the Ye Family’s faces, but as joyful as the year was, the post-holiday period was equally sad as the brothers were leaving again, and she was leaving with them.

She and Brother Seven traveled along the same line, but midway through the journey, Brother switched to a car; with a wave of the hand, it was unknown when they would meet again.

So, one must truly cherish the peaceful era of the past life, especially after experiencing the pandemic of 2020. More and more people would realize that China is the safest country in the world, and they should treasure the hard-won beautiful life, study well while also paying attention to saving food, so they wouldn’t have to endure the disaster brought by the Famine Era again.

That year, amidst national difficulties, diplomatic relations were being established everywhere, and the Korean War broke out on June 25th.

Ye Huan finished her junior year courses, entered the military training and knowledge reserve period, naturally opting not to return home for the summer vacation.

In the second month of Ye Huan’s senior year, on October 19th, the US Army occupied Pyongyang, crossing China’s bottom line, leading to the Chinese Volunteer Army crossing the Yalu River into North Korea.

On October 25th, the Chinese Volunteer Army initiated the first battle of the Korean War.

By the beginning of January 1951, three battles had been launched in total.

Through inquiries, she learned that her Fourth Brother and Fifth Brother participated in this battle, while the other brothers remained at their original units for rest.

At the end of January, the fourth battle was launched.

In April, the fifth battle was launched, with Sixth Brother, Seventh Brother, and Brother Eight also participating.

In the same month, Ye Huan joined a certain army hospital in Chongqing, officially starting her internship journey.

Unlike the hospitals in the past life, Ye Huan’s internship involved traveling with the mentor to various field hospitals.

Here they had to directly handle situations, facing life and death, horror and humanity most directly.

Ye Huan and this batch of novices were sent to Liao Ning, near Dandong City, close to North Korea, receiving the wounded withdrawn from the battlefield.

Among them, Ye Huan was the fastest to get started, though her past life focused more on respiratory diseases, while it was mostly external injuries now.

She didn’t expect to see Liu Meng again under such circumstances; when she saw him, he was on the brink of death, with severe grenade and burn wounds on his back, and the medicines they had were extremely scarce, with rare drugs like anesthetics and Penicillin generally reserved for acute and severe cases.

Initially, it was thought Liu Meng’s situation would just have to be endured, but his rank was quite high, prompting the hospital director to personally operate on him and even inviting an expert from R for consultation. After a day and night of rescue, he was finally out of danger.

Because Ye Huan stood out most among the young generation, the hospital director personally assigned her for 24-hour monitoring of him.

Only then did she discover that his name had changed to Tong Zhan, and she realized this might be his real name. So was this person actually a planted spy within the National D Department? Why didn’t he continue hiding like Yu Zecheng but instead returned to the troops and even entered the battlefield?

Tong Zhan woke up five hours after the operation. Ye Huan extended her fingers to assess his consciousness, ensuring his brain wasn’t injured, and promptly asked the doctor to perform a more detailed examination. Thankfully, the results were good, with the hospital director praising his good physical quality and strong recovery ability.