Adventure
The Mighty Toddler Transmigrates, Running Wild on the Road to Exile
In her previous life, Jin Bao was a little zombie king. After transmigrating, she became weak and helpless, beaten by an aunt and uncle who weren’t even related to her by blood.
By a twist of fate, she was bought by the Marchioness of Loyalty and Bravery. One moment, she had just become the legitimate daughter of the Marquis’s Mansion; the next, the entire household was destroyed, its property confiscated and the whole family sentenced to exile.
Jin Bao awakened a random Heavenly Eye, granting her glimpses of the past and future.
On the road to exile, while others gnawed on tree bark and dug up grass roots to survive, the people of the Marquis’s Mansion picked up gold, unearthed ginseng, and ate fluffy white steamed buns with roasted meat.
The path of exile was fraught with danger: assassinations, ambushes, plagues, swamps…
Guided by Jin Bao’s Heavenly Eye, they quietly defused every crisis, then turned around and sent their enemies a delightful surprise package.
Everyone believed the bitterly cold Northern Frontier was nothing but barren wasteland.
But Jin Bao led her family to build a city there, reclaim the land, open trade routes, and train soldiers.
When chaos engulfed the realm and the people were plunged into misery, the world finally realized that the great city of the Northern Frontier, once dismissed as a savage, desolate land, had become the only sanctuary under heaven.
The Unspoken Bond
My senior brother was both pitiful and broke.
His sect had been destroyed, his master captured, and his junior brothers and sisters were missing.
As for him, he carried a battered sword on his back and would go hungry for three days after every meal.
Even so, he still kept me by his side and bought me big steamed buns to eat.
“Once you remember your parents’ names, make sure you pay me back!”
“Mm-hmm!”
I prayed in secret that I must have been born into a wealthy family, so I could properly repay Senior Brother.
But before I could regain my memories, Senior Brother lost me again.
All he left behind was a bag of steamed buns and a letter.
[Dongze will execute my master at the Four Regions Assembly. I have to go save him.
[After I leave, eat the buns sparingly. You don’t have to pay me back anymore.]
I sobbed until my heart felt torn apart, clutching the letter as I chased after him.
But in my carelessness, I missed my footing, rolled down a hillside, and struck my head.
And then I remembered.
I was originally from Dongze.
And the Dongze Sect Leader who was going to execute Senior Brother’s master was none other than my father.
Born as a Yin Official
In the unluckiest year of my life, a wandering Daoist priest came to town.
He gave my father an idea: have me worship a Household Guardian Immortal to suppress my bad luck, and maybe I would live past the age of ten.
My father was a rough man who had made his fortune in troubled times by the barrel of a gun.
He called his adjutant over and did the math for him. “One Household Guardian Immortal keeps her alive to ten, two keep her alive to twenty, and twenty keep her alive to two hundred. Right?”
The adjutant counted on his fingers. “Marshal, your math is absolutely correct.”
My father hardened his heart and rounded up all the pigs, cattle, and sheep from miles around as offerings.
“My damn girl is going to live ten thousand years!”
That year, my father rode into the old mountain forest on a pig with me and took eleven Household Guardian Immortal into our household.
He flew into a rage. “Damn it, that’s still one short of the twelve zodiac animals!”
Later, who knew where he bought a Daoist boy from, but that made the twelfth.
My Heart Can Be Seen
In the tenth year after I was abducted and forced to take part in ability experiments, I finally escaped.
Only to discover that the apocalypse had descended outside, and zombies had broken out everywhere.
My former best friend was being forced by her newly awakened husband to hand over her food.
“Everyone else turned theirs in. Why are you so selfish? You’re even hiding a few pieces of chocolate?”
My best friend defended herself in a small voice. “I wanted to save them for Tongtong.”
But the young woman beside her cut her off with a scornful laugh. “Sis, every time you get greedy, you use the kid as an excuse. Honestly…”
Under the contemptuous stares of everyone around them, I threw a backpack full of chocolate over.
It hit her squarely on the head.
“Is that enough?”
Expressionless, I said, “Say one more word, and I’ll kill every last one of you.”
Earth Master Girl 24: The Yin Guest Beneath the Lake
My dad was a “Yin Guest”-or, in plain terms, a grave tester.
When rich people picked out a burial plot, they would hire someone to spend a night there and see whether the gravesite was clean.
My dad had been in that line of work for years.
Until his last job. When he came home, his body was covered in livor mortis.
Earth Master Girl 23: Shanxi Buddha Caves
Bootleg Black Wukong was all the rage among my classmates.
One of its scenic areas was called the Land of Mahayana.
Everyone who played it became obsessed and went there to check in.
But not a single one of them came back.
I received that pirated disc too.
What they didn’t know was that I was the only Earth Master successor.
Earth Master Girl 22: The Bride of the Doll Village
I was a bridesmaid at my friend’s wedding, but the bridesmaid’s red envelope I received was stuffed with spirit money.
My friend got into a fight with the groom’s side.
The groom stormed in with a group of people, trapped us in the room, and even threatened that when they came to “tease the bridesmaids” that night, he’d make sure I paid for it.
What he didn’t know was this: seal paper money inside a red envelope, and a hundred ghosts will come to feast.
That night, every ghost for miles around came to offer their congratulations.
And I was the sole Earth Master successor.
Earth Master Girl: Battle Against Sand Ghosts
“Earth Master”
The village had suffered drought year after year, yet the villagers still received us warmly and treated us to baths.
After we finished bathing, the next day, spring water began bubbling up from the dried-up well at the village entrance.
The villagers were ecstatic.
“You have been chosen by the Spring Spirit. Stay here forever.”
What they didn’t know was that I was the only Earth Master successor.
Trapped in the Lonely City
My parents had always favored me most.
But on the eve of the imperial capital’s fall, they fled with the entire family-and somehow forgot to wake me from my sleep.
When I woke up, the courtyard was deserted.
Yet the moment I turned my head, I realized I wasn’t the only one who had been left behind.
The illegitimate son my father had with his mistress was still here too.
He stared at me without blinking, the look on his face hovering somewhere between a smile and a sneer.
“Second Sister, how did you end up reduced to the same state as me?”
Father and Mother will definitely come back for me.
The words were about to burst from my mouth, but I paused.
Then I cleared my throat and put on a calm, unbothered expression.
“I was the one who refused to leave.”
Is It Hard to Be the Chief?
The Battle for First Seat.
Just as the match between my junior sister and me was about to be decided, my life-bound sword suddenly turned its edge on me and gravely wounded me.
The sword spirit said, “Your swordplay is too fierce. You would have hurt her. I didn’t want you to bear the infamy of injuring a fellow disciple, so I had to act as the situation demanded. I’m sorry.”
They all say swords have souls, and that they are loyal to the masters they acknowledge.
But I had rescued the Muyuan Sword from the abyss, then carried it to fame throughout the world. For decades, we were inseparable.
Even so, he remained proud and untamed. Everyone advised me.
A bond with a divine sword could not be forced. What was not mine would never belong to me, no matter how tightly I held on.
In that case, I might as well give the Muyuan Sword to my junior sister.
I thought they were right. After all, in all these years of using the Muyuan Sword, I had never been able to draw out even seventy percent of my strength.
It was time to choose a new sword.