Ongoing

Transmigrating to the 1970s Novel: Turns Out My Mom Is the Ultimate Green Tea

Raw Title: 穿書七零,發現我媽是大綠茶

Author: 遇見

Translator: Miumi

Update: 4 hours ago

Translated Chapters: 70

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【Era + Female Lead’s Refined Self-Interest + Entire Family of Scumbags + Playing the Pig to Eat the Tiger + Everyone Has Eight Hundred Schemes + Double Clean + Later Joins the Army as a Military Wife】

As soon as she transmigrated, Zhao Qianqian offended her stepsister by stealing her fiancé! And this was inside a book, where the man she stole was the female lead’s cash-cow male side character, who was about to face the traps and targeting of the reborn heroine.

Then she discovered that her mother was far too pitiful.
In order to marry an old man, she actually signed a humiliating contract: the three children she brought with her would not be allowed to divide the family property in the future, would not get any share of the house, and she would even have to serve the old man and his four children every day, without compensation, handling all their food, drink, and chores.

But you—widowed and ten years younger than your stepfather—marrying over wasn’t it just so someone else could help raise your three children?
How did it end up that you were the one making the loss instead\~!

Later, she slowly realized something wasn’t right.
Although her mother didn’t demand any inheritance for her own children, she did insist on equal treatment in daily food, clothing, housing, and living standards from the stepfather—even better than for his own biological children.

What’s more, all the wages and work points earned by the stepfather’s four children had to be handed over, while the three children she brought with her could keep their own savings.

The two step-sons, as long as they didn’t have money to build a new house, could always continue living at home, which was equivalent to having two extra rooms.

Although the savings book was held tightly in the stepfather’s hands, he would give her mother thirty yuan in living expenses every month.

In this era of earning work points, where grain was distributed by the commune and vegetables were home-grown, even with a family of more than ten people, they couldn’t spend much money. Every month they still cleared more than ten yuan.

With such a rotten hand of cards, her mother could still play them into a royal flush—how formidable was that! Since she was the daughter of such a big green-tea mother, she couldn’t afford to cower either. She had to press the female lead to the ground and rub her face in it. As for her own man’s money—only she herself was allowed to spend it!

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