According to Mei Yuzhen's plan, she asked the two to drive all the way to El Paso, Texas, and then enter Mexico by land from here.
Mei Yuzhen, who had been rocking in the car all night, was somewhat in a trance because she didn't sleep well.
She suddenly recalled when she first came to America.
In the first two years after arriving in the United States, although I used a false identity, I was indeed conscientious.
Although the money I earned at that time was far from rich in the United States, since the employer provided food and lodging as a nanny, almost all the money I earned was sent back home intact, and not only quickly paid off the time spent on smuggling. The foreign debts borrowed have also greatly improved the poor living conditions of the family.
But the longer Mei Yuzhen stayed in the United States, the more deeply she was subtly influenced by this materialistic society.
Gradually, she began to feel dissatisfied with the treatment of her illegal immigrants.
At that time in Chinatown, Chinese nannies had two different situations.
One is a nannie with a legal status in the United States or a legal green card, and the other is a black nannie like Mei Yuzhen who immigrated illegally and was black in the United States.
Compared with the latter, the price of the former is generally half or more higher than that of the latter.
Sometimes, when the nanny met with the nanny, and everyone chatted about their respective situations, Mei Yuzhen would complain about her meager salary.
She always felt that her work content was exactly the same as others', and she was not cheating, so why her salary was only 60% of others' or even lower.
Therefore, she gradually developed resentment towards her employer's family, always feeling that the other party deliberately bullied and squeezed her, a poor woman who abandoned her husband and son and left her home.
However, Mei Yuzhen ignored a very simple reality. The reason why her employer took the risk to pay her as an illegal immigrant was because the price of illegal immigrant was relatively low.
Considering their limited conditions, employers have to make such a choice.
If the price of the two people is the same, all employers will not consider the latter.
Most illegal immigrants can also understand this truth, but Mei Yuzhen doesn't think so.
She didn't realize the natural gap between herself and the legal nanny, she just kept accumulating her own resentment in her heart, and even gradually rose to hatred.
Just in Mei Yuzhen�s third year in the United States, a fire broke out in her employer�s home. Three of the four members of her employer�s family died. They were a young couple in their thirties and their five-year-old eldest daughter. As for their youngest son, who was under one year old at the time, he disappeared in the fire.
The fire was caused by Mei Yuzhen.
After Mei Yuzhen set the fire, she moved to another city in the United States with her infant baby.
She entrusted a middleman to sell the child to a Chinese couple in their forties who were unable to have a child for a price of 30,000 US dollars.
At that time, this transaction far exceeded the local market price, and the buyer was once dissuaded by the high price.
But Mei Yuzhen is very smart.
She could see the couple's desperate desire to have a child, and she also saw that the one-year-old baby was somewhat similar to a man, so based on the child's facial features, she described to the couple what the child would look like when it grew up, saying that the child When he grows up, he must be very similar to the man.
In addition, the astute Mei Yuzhen also hit the pain point that moved the two of them the most: because they look alike, as long as they take the child to live in another place, when the child grows up, no one will suspect that the child is a child. If he came here, even if he brought it back to his hometown in China in three or five years, no one would doubt that he was his child.
Moreover, she also told the couple that unlike adopted children, the child she brought was not yet a full year old, and when she grew up, she would never have any memory of her original parents.
In Mei Yuzhen's words, as long as the child is bought, the family will be passed on in one step.
So, the persuaded couple paid 30,000 U.S. dollars to buy the child, and Mei Yuzhen got 25,000 U.S. dollars.
At that time, the money was more than what she earned as a nanny for two years. JrNovels.com