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Chapter 328 Diary and Treasure

 Du Fei was also a little anxious inside.

While listening to Lao Yang's words, he picked up the top diary.

When I opened the cover, I saw two messages written in Japanese on the title page, with Nohara Hiroshi's signature underneath.

The handwriting of the signature is exactly the same as the diary in Du Fei's hand.

Turn the page. .??.

The date of the first diary entry is Thursday, December 7, 1944. The weather was snowy.

Although the entire diary is written in Japanese, "Taiyuan" is mentioned several times, indicating that Nohara Hiroshi should still be in Shanxi at this time.

Du Fei only glanced briefly.

He was not interested in what Nohara Hiroshi, a Japanese devil, did every day.

Turn directly to the pages that Lao Yang said were torn out.

These torn-out diaries are not coherent, and the earliest entry is from June 6, 1945.

And to Du Fei's surprise, these torn-out diaries have been translated!

However, it is not a complete translation, but only some Japanese hiragana and katakana words are translated and directly marked on it with Chinese characters.

Although this kind of translation is not fluent, the meaning can be roughly understood.

Du Fei estimated that Fan Ming was the one who tried to find someone to translate.

He was afraid of revealing the secret of the treasure, so he only cut out the words and showed them to others.

It's a pity that his behavior can only cover up the truth.

At this time, anyone who can translate Japanese is not a smart person. I am afraid it won’t take a few times to guess what he wants.

But Du Fei was too lazy to guess what the specific situation was at that time.

Simply take these diaries and read them carefully.

In June 1945, there were only more than two months left before Japan surrendered.

At this time, Germany in Europe had surrendered unconditionally.

As a senior Japanese military officer stationed in China, Sumita Raishiro has realized that failure is inevitable.

Begin to transfer the wealth collected over the years to the country.

As his confidant and a descendant of his close family friend, Nohara Hiroshi also participated in it.

According to Nohara Hiroshi's diary, Sumita Raishiro's treasures were loaded onto seven trucks and divided into three batches.

The convoy plans to start from Taiyuan, pass through the capital, go to Tianjin Port, be transshipped and shipped, and finally be transported to Ehime Prefecture of Shikoku Island, the hometown of Sumita Raishiro...

Du Fei quickly read these diaries of Nohara Hiroshi.

I finally have a clearer understanding of the ins and outs of Sumita Raishiro’s treasures.

Although North China was still a Japanese war zone at that time, after Germany surrendered, anyone with a discerning eye could see that the Japanese were like grasshoppers after the fall and could not survive for a few days.

Those original
The puppet soldiers and traitors who were keeping their peace also had other thoughts and no longer obeyed the Japanese.

In addition, money and silk are attractive to people.

It is really not that easy for Sumita Raishiro to transport these seven truckloads of fine gold and silver from Shanxi back to Japan.

For safety reasons, the entire fleet was divided into three batches.

There are two cars in the front, two cars in the middle, and three cars in the last batch.

Setting off two days apart, even if something happened to one of the groups, the entire army would not be wiped out. According to Nohara Hiroshi's diary.

On July 21, 1945, the first two trucks set off from Taiyuan and were mixed into a transport convoy of a chamber of commerce.

The journey turned out to be very smooth, passing through Beijing and Tianjin, and then directly transferred to the ship.

And twelve days later, it successfully arrived at Matsuyama Port in Ehime Prefecture.

But in the next two groups of convoys departing on the 23rd and 25th,

Not so lucky.

The general situation is similar to what Du Fei had grasped before.

The second batch of two trucks were blocked in Tianjin.

The third batch of three trucks was trapped in a warehouse near the Lumi warehouse in Beijing, and all the treasures were eventually lost.

The treasures that Gu Bingzhong, Lou Hongyi, and Fan Ming are looking for are the belongings of these three trucks.

It is a pity that although Nohara Hiroshi participated in the concentration from beginning to end, he was also among the third batch of evacuation convoys at the end.

But after his convoy was trapped in the capital, he decisively chose to escape alone.

At this point, his diary came to an abrupt end.

I don’t know if it’s because he lost his luggage, changed his diary, or simply died.

However, after reading these diaries, Du Fei finally understood why Fan Ming searched so hard but found nothing in the end.

Because these diaries actually do not record the real key information.

The real reason why Sumita's three truckloads of treasure have not been found yet is not that the Japanese hid them somewhere.

In fact, after Japan's unconditional surrender, someone found the cargo boxes pulled by the three trucks in the warehouse near Lumicang.

What’s really amazing is that when people hurriedly opened these cargo boxes, they found that they were actually empty inside!

Therefore, Fan Ming thought that he could find the so-called treasure with these diaries.

However, this diary is not completely worthless to Du Fei.

At least this is first-hand information, which can confirm that the so-called treasure is not groundless.

Another point is that it is certain that at least before Hiroshi Nohara escaped, the three trucks of treasure were still there.

Because he wrote in his diary that he secretly pried open one of the wooden cargo boxes and stole ten large yellow croakers from inside.

And he described the process in detail in his diary. Du Fei was also a little anxious in his heart.

While listening to Lao Yang's words, he picked up the top diary.

When I opened the cover, I saw two messages written in Japanese on the title page, with Nohara Hiroshi's signature underneath.

The handwriting of the signature is exactly the same as the diary in Du Fei's hand.

Turn over the page.

The date of the first diary entry is Thursday, December 7, 1944. The weather was snowy.

Although the entire diary is written in Japanese, "Taiyuan" is mentioned several times, indicating that Nohara Hiroshi should still be in Shanxi at this time.

Du Fei only glanced briefly.

He was not interested in what Nohara Hiroshi, a Japanese devil, did every day.

Turn directly to the pages that Lao Yang said were torn out.

These torn-out diaries are not coherent, and the earliest entry is from June 6, 1945.

And to Du Fei's surprise, these torn-out diaries have been translated!

However, it is not a complete translation, but only some Japanese hiragana and katakana words are translated and directly marked on it with Chinese characters.

Although this kind of translation is not fluent, the meaning can be roughly understood.

Du Fei estimated that Fan Ming was the one who tried to find someone to translate.

He was afraid of revealing the secret of the treasure, so he only cut out the words and showed them to others.

It's a pity that his behavior can only cover up the truth.

At this time, anyone who can translate Japanese is not a smart person. I am afraid it won’t take a few times to guess what he wants.

But Du Fei was too lazy to guess what the specific situation was at that time.

Simply take these diaries and read them carefully.

In June 1945, there were only more than two months left before Japan surrendered.

At this time, Germany in Europe had surrendered unconditionally.

As a senior Japanese military officer stationed in China, Sumita Raishiro has realized that failure is inevitable.

Begin to transfer the wealth collected over the years to the country.

As his confidant and a descendant of his close family friend, Nohara Hiroshi also participated in it.

According to Nohara Hiroshi's diary, Sumita Raishiro's treasures were loaded onto seven trucks and divided into three batches.

The convoy plans to start from Taiyuan, pass through the capital, go to Tianjin Port, be transshipped and shipped, and finally be transported to Ehime Prefecture of Shikoku Island, the hometown of Sumita Raishiro...

Du Fei quickly read these diaries of Nohara Hiroshi.

I finally have a clearer understanding of the ins and outs of Sumita Raishiro’s treasures.

Although North China was still a Japanese war zone at that time, after Germany surrendered, anyone with a discerning eye could see that the Japanese were like grasshoppers after the fall and could not survive for a few days.

Those original
The puppet soldiers and traitors who were keeping their peace also had other thoughts and no longer obeyed the Japanese.

In addition, money and silk are attractive to people.

It is really not that easy for Sumita Raishiro to transport these seven truckloads of fine gold and silver from Shanxi back to Japan.

For safety reasons, the entire fleet was divided into three batches.

There are two cars in the front, two cars in the middle, and three cars in the last batch.

Setting off two days apart, even if something happened to one of the groups, the entire army would not be wiped out. According to Nohara Hiroshi's diary.

On July 21, 1945, the first two trucks set off from Taiyuan and were mixed into a transport convoy of a chamber of commerce.

The journey turned out to be very smooth, passing through Beijing and Tianjin, and then directly transferred to the ship.

And twelve days later, it successfully arrived at Matsuyama Port in Ehime Prefecture.

But in the next two groups of convoys departing on the 23rd and 25th,

Not so lucky.

The general situation is similar to what Du Fei had grasped before.

The second batch of two trucks were blocked in Tianjin.

The third batch of three trucks was trapped in a warehouse near the Lumi warehouse in Beijing, and all the treasures were eventually lost.

The treasures that Gu Bingzhong, Lou Hongyi, and Fan Ming are looking for are the belongings of these three trucks.

It is a pity that although Nohara Hiroshi participated in the concentration from beginning to end, he was also among the third batch of evacuation convoys at the end.

But after his convoy was trapped in the capital, he decisively chose to escape alone.

At this point, his diary came to an abrupt end.

I don’t know if it’s because he lost his luggage, changed his diary, or simply died.

However, after reading these diaries, Du Fei finally understood why Fan Ming searched so hard but found nothing in the end.

Because these diaries actually do not record the real key information.

The real reason why Sumita's three truckloads of treasure have not been found yet is not that the Japanese hid them somewhere.

In fact, after Japan's unconditional surrender, someone found the cargo boxes pulled by the three trucks in the warehouse near Lumicang.

What’s really amazing is that when people hurriedly opened these cargo boxes, they found that they were actually empty inside!

Therefore, Fan Ming thought that he could find the so-called treasure with these diaries.

However, this diary is not completely worthless to Du Fei.

At least this is first-hand information, which can confirm that the so-called treasure is not groundless.

Another point is that it is certain that at least before Hiroshi Nohara escaped, the three trucks of treasure were still there.

Because he wrote in his diary that he secretly pried open one of the wooden cargo boxes and stole ten large yellow croakers from inside.

And described the process in detail in his diary.


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