Refers to Wang Xifeng’s daughter Qiao Jie. According to the fifth chapter of the book, Baoyu saw that in the main volume of "The Twelve Hairpins of Jinling" there was a picture of a deserted village and a shop, where a beautiful woman was weaving. The sentence goes like this: Yungui is no longer in power when the situation is defeated, and relatives are not considered when the family is dead. Occasionally, it helps Liu The "Liu family" here, of course, refers to Grandma Liu. "Qiao" is a related term, which refers to the fact that after the Jia family was "defeated" and "the family died", Sister Qiao was finally left helpless. When her "ruthless uncle and traitorous brother" colluded and tried to sell her into Fireworks Alley, she happened to encounter Grandma Liu who had been rescued by Sister Feng and rescued her. Grandma Liu became her "benefactor". Later, Liu Grandma invited Sister Qiao into her family and married Ban'er. Ban'er worked on the family's "two acres of thin farmland", and Sister Qiao relied on hard work and textiles to live a stable life of self-reliance in the deserted village. "Nothing is written without coincidence" is an ancient Chinese novel. According to the writing tradition, Sister Qiao was born on the Chinese Valentine's Day, and was named by Grandma Liu by coincidence. She finally married Ban'er and lived like the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl. It was a series of coincidences. She probably also had an incomprehensible connection with the morning glories growing in the countryside. Let’s go!