Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - Have you ever met anyone who looks ordinary but is rich?

Have you ever met anyone who looks ordinary but is rich?

There are three books in the university, a classmate who is very rustic. . . Tell people who run restaurants in our family that extracurricular books are usually best-sellers in management and are often said to have a good relationship. Graduation marriage tells us that although we used to be a fourth-tier county, we stayed in hotels named after local place names, such as XX (county name) hotel. More people go, fewer rooms. I went to ask him to open an extra room. He went to the front desk and greeted the waiter. The waiter asked another person to reserve an extra room for the third young master. . . (In a teasing tone, it's not what you think. I realized that he was talking about this kind of restaurant. . . I think it's like Lamian Noodles. . . Later, I went to his wedding room and found that his parents+big brother and second brother lived in it. Then I looked for his room, and it took me a long time to find out that people bought two 200-room houses at the end of that corridor and got through, and the family lived together. . . On the wedding day, the motorcade consisted of about ten Land Rover vehicles. I also told him that your father's friends bought cars neatly, and he said they were all mine. . . Although he is not rich, he is also a local tyrant in a small county. The year before last, he lost to his father by 300,000. I said you were in pain, and you were terrible from the beginning. He said it's okay. A few years ago, coal prices plummeted, and his father lost 60 million yuan. . . I have to say that although his father's education is not high, his family education is really good. His three sons are all very capable, keeping a low profile and not expanding. They can bear hardships to eat in the school cafeteria, go out to eat a big bowl of Lanzhou Lamian Noodles, wear a 50-dollar T-shirt, go out by bus, and generally don't want to take a taxi. But once he took us shopping together (the shop was shopping and collecting data, and he wanted to be an e-commerce). At that time he kept telling us that he had no money. As a result, he took six or seven big boys to KFC at noon, and made a few hundred dollars without coupons (at that time, he was still at school and only had a fixed living expenses). Don't let him take care of the business if he loses money. Every day, he rides an agricultural tricycle to the village to sell coal to pay off his debts (I especially take this).