Text|High baby.
In the previous article, the five members of the expedition team, after a strange and terrifying night in the village of Suolobon, fled non-stop from the place that made them lose their souls when they remembered it.
However, Mr. A, who was left behind, unfortunately died in Luopen Village. Then, they found that all the ** in the camera were gone.
All of this makes the already mysterious and unpredictable Suoluopen Village even more bizarre and weird.
What did the expedition team see and hear in the village that night? Why did Mr. A die? The **went again** in the camera?
Next, please continue to listen to the story.
After that, a large number of curious citizens came to the foot of the mountain where Suoluopen Village is located, and wanted to climb the mountain into the village.
*Fearing another accident, the mountain road leading to Solabon Village was blocked on the grounds of "protecting the ruins of the ancient village" and the public was not allowed to enter.
However, this move did not let that mysterious urban legend fade from the lives of Hong Kong citizens. On the contrary, rumors about the "mystery of the disappearance of the villagers of Suoloban Village" have become more and more fierce among the people.
Claim 1:Originally a feng shui treasure in Hong Kong's New Territories, the stream behind the village has supported the men, women and children of the village for thousands of years. Industrious and intelligent, they cultivated terraced fields, raised chickens and ducks on that fertile land, and lived a life of seclusion but contentment.
But one day, a strange disease was prevalent in the village, and many people began to have fever and vomit.
Due to the limited medical facilities in the village at that time, and the location was extremely remote, it was very difficult to go out of the village to seek medical treatment, so the villagers burned wormwood at home and then sprinkled the ashes of the plants and trees in every corner, hoping to drive away the disease.
But apparently, this did not help, as there were more and more patients in the village.
Later, for the sake of the safety of the whole village, the villagers gathered all the sick people in the same room, forbade them to leave, and did not allow them to visit.
Patients who lost the care of their families became more and more serious day by day, and it was not long before they passed away one after another.
However, what is even more terrifying is that their death did not take the disease away - more and more people in the village, who were originally healthy, also began to develop symptoms such as fever and vomiting. In the end, the whole village was spared, and all of them fell ill and died.
As for the strange phenomenon that the members of the expedition team later saw in the village at night, it was because there was no one to bury the villagers after they died, so their souls could only wander around.
Mr. A, on the other hand, died violently because he accidentally saw something he shouldn't have seen when he returned to the village that day, and induced heart failure in extreme fear.
As for what Mr. A saw, I'm afraid it's a mystery forever.
Claim 2:The village has a long history, and the villagers have lived and thrived here for thousands of years.
But during the Japanese occupation, a Japanese army stumbled upon this small, isolated village. They broke into the village and began to burn and loot with impunity.
After the executioners had seized the villagers' belongings, they killed them all unarmed.
Since then, the village has been completely abandoned and turned into an uninhabited village.
Claim 3:The magnetic field in the village is unusually huge, so the relevant departments intend to conduct some secret experiments and research here. As a result, the villagers were relocated to other places.
Because of the need for secrecy, everyone was kept tight-lipped throughout.
The myth of the disappearance of the villagers of Suolobon Village has not been broken for decades. However, it is only limited to word of mouth, and its authenticity cannot be verified. And people who secretly go into the mountains to explore out of curiosity have never stopped.
It wasn't until 2007 that an old man in his eighties stood up.
He told ** that he was from Suoluopen Village, and the people who originally lived in Suoluopen Village were all Hakka people of the Huang family. Their ancestors moved here from the north to escape the war.
Initially, they lived in Lychee Wo Village, but in the early Qing Dynasty, as the number of people grew, the limited land resources could not support more people. So, after consultation, they decided to move somewhere else.
An independent village was formed, and it was called Suolabon Village.
The old man said that at first, there were many villagers with another surname, the Yang Hakka people, who lived in Suoluopen Village, but later because of the increase in population, they collectively moved to Taguling and established a new village.
Since about the 70s, some villagers who have ideas in Suolabon Village have begun to leave the village one after another to make a living in the city. Some have even left Hong Kong to seek better development abroad.
In this way, the villagers moved out one by one, and by the 80s, the last family in the village had left. The originally lively village suddenly became an uninhabited deserted village.
The old man said that although he had already moved to the city to live and his living standard had improved, he still missed the land where his ancestors had lived with him for generations, and missed the life of the sun rising and ploughing and sunset, and having no quarrel with the world.
Therefore, the establishment of the "Suoluopen Village Committee" and the re-establishment of Suoluopen Village have become his last wish in his life.
After the news came out, some people came forward one after another to say that they were also villagers of Suoluopen Village and descendants of the Hakka people of the Huang family.
Soon, with the help of former villagers and well-wishers, the old man raised 830,000 Hong Kong dollars. But just as they brought in a construction team and equipment to clear the weeds and trees that had fallen into the village road, environmentalists stepped forward.
The old man's plan to restore the village was shelved and became far away.
Regrettably, the old man, whose health was deteriorating, finally passed away with regret before he could wait for the day when his wish was fulfilled.
Later, the old man's 63-year-old nephew Huang Qingxiang took the initiative to ask Ying to pick up his father's unfulfilled wishes. They erected signs on the road along the way into Suoluopen Village, and the Bogong Altar in the village, which had long been destroyed, was also rebuilt.
At the end of each year, Huang Qingxiang would organize the descendants of the Huang family to return to the village. They cleaned the dilapidated ancestral hall, pasted spring couplets, and placed offerings.
Just like ever.
I don't know if there will be a moment when time seems to take them back to the not-so-distant past: the sun is setting, and the earth is sprinkled with golden afterglow. Not far away, in the place where the smoke rises, the food has been served, the dishes and chopsticks have been arranged, just waiting for them to go home.
Which one do you prefer to believe is the truth of the "urban legend of Solabon Village"?
Whatever the truth, it leaves us in awe. Because the world is far more mysterious and full of unknowns than we see.
No matter who it is, whether it is past, present or future, in the heart of each of us, there is a lost home, which is the warmest place in our life and soul.
At the end of the play, thank you for reading.
Your ** is the greatest support.