After Lu Huaining died, the Lu family did not hold a funeral for him, and they did not even carry the coffin into the Lu family's ancestral grave.
Mr. Lu no longer recognized his son. After all, the eldest wife still cared about his son. She secretly gave money to Kunshan and asked Kunshan to collect the body and bury him secretly.
Kunshan did not ask for her money, but thinking that the brother was already dead, he obtained Lu Huaining's body through Mayor Li's relationship, and found a remote place to bury it. He was afraid of being disturbed, so the plaque included
I didn't even dare to write his name, so I set up an anonymous monument for him.
After the incident calmed down, Kunshan asked Ye Rongqing to choose a place and buy her a house wherever she wanted.
Thinking that he could be taken care of closer to home, Ye Rongqing asked Kunshan to buy him a small yard in the suburbs of Hong Kong. When he was free, he took his children to the Lu family to visit Mr. Lu.
In 1937, seeing that the situation was not right and that Shanghai might become a battlefield, Kunshan moved the headquarters of Zhihetang to Hong Kong, leased the rented aircraft to a newly opened official airport in Hong Kong, and stopped making aircraft.
running a business
Kunshan was evacuated in a timely manner. Not long after Kunshan was evacuated, Sino-Japanese war broke out everywhere.
Because Hong Kong is a British colony, it is temporarily safe. Many wealthy people have fled to Hong Kong to take refuge.
But by December 1939, Hong Kong also became a Japanese-occupied territory.
A Japanese named Sato Dairo thought of Lu Kunshan as soon as he invaded Hong Kong. Lu Kunshan cheated his brother Sato Jiro many years ago. He came here to avenge his brother. When he broke into the Lu family mansion, he saw
The door to the Lu family's mansion was closed, and there wasn't even a gatekeeper.
Thinking that I couldn't find your people, I smashed up your mansion. As a result, he led a large group of Japanese officers and soldiers and kicked the door open. As soon as he stepped inside, he suddenly stepped on something and was blown away several times.
rice, heavy casualties
Dairo Sato was very angry and called a demining expert. They searched the Lu family's yard, but no more landmines were found.
Dairo Sato thought angrily that Lu Kunshan was just a businessman. There might be an ambush because of the few landmines he got from nowhere at the door. He kicked the door open and a bucket of water-like substance spilled from the top of the door.
It was a bucket of concentrated sulfuric acid that splashed on the Japanese soldiers, disfiguring them and severely injuring them. A Japanese soldier who was not seriously injured walked into the house and saw a large white paper hanging in the empty living room.
Paper, written in Japanese: Whoever touches my house, whose life I will touch
Strangely enough, it seems that from that day on, any Japanese who wanted to take advantage of Kunshan's house or bully the people would be injured or missing without knowing it. From then on, the Japanese people's talk about Lu Kunshan and his Lu family army changed.
In fact, he has always been in Hong Kong, but he was just hiding in a secret place
After the fall of Guangzhou some time ago, he had sent his family and valuables to his private island in the United States. He built a villa there and his family lived there. He was very relieved.
They were safe, and Kunshan could deal with the enemy with peace of mind. Kunshan and his Zhihetang brothers protected the people of Hong Kong in their own way until Japan surrendered in August 1945.
Kunshan, who was nearly fifty years old, finally took his family back to Hong Kong. Mr. Lu, who was over eighty years old, handed over his family heirlooms to Kunshan with confidence.
Kunshan chose to retire and handed over the position of hall leader to a young reserve. As for the arms production line and the unsold arms, he secretly sent people to deliver them to Shen Jiliang, who was in need of advanced weapons.
So far, the family is living safely and happily in Hong Kong