Drama
Who Is Whose Substitute
Zhou Xingzhi was disfigured while saving the woman he truly loved. In the hospital, I cried my heart out, my sobs echoing through the halls.
I kept pestering the doctor, asking over and over if his face could be fixed.
Everyone thought I was hopelessly in love with him.
Only Zhou Xingzhi’s younger brother handed me a tissue, a smirk playing on his lips. “Sister-in-law, my brother’s face is beyond saving.” “You might as well choose me instead. After all, my face looks much more like Wei Qiao’s now than my brother’s does.”
Gazing at the Dragon
Everyone said I was blessed by fate.
Born behind vermilion gates, I rested my head on jade and wrapped myself in brocade.
At three, I began my education, studying essays on how to govern the realm.
At five, I held an abacus, calculating the empire’s grain and coin.
At twelve, I debated the scholars in the clan school and, though I was a girl, took first place above them all.
At fifteen, during my coming-of-age banquet, warlords from three regions offered mountains and rivers as my betrothal gifts.
And yet, I chose the hardest road of all.
The day I eloped with a lowly soldier who guarded the city gate, the entire city laughed at me for debasing myself.
After one night of passion, I was stricken from the Yin Clan’s rolls, my spotless reputation ruined.
No one knew that the soldier was the last surviving bloodline of the imperial house.
They were fighting for the realm.
What I was fighting for was the right to take history’s iron brush in hand and rewrite the world with a name that could not be questioned.
The Female Profligate
I was Shangjing’s most notorious female wastrel.
To rein me in, my parents somehow had a sudden stroke of genius and betrothed me to the legitimate eldest son of a fallen noble family.
He was taciturn and dull, as stiff and old-fashioned as a lecturer from the National Academy.
So, in front of my pack of disreputable friends, I swore:
“I, Yao Yao, would rather die alone-would rather jump from here-than ever marry Xie Jinghong!”
Half a year later.
The same group of friends.
They imitated me:
“I, Yao Yao~ would rather die alone~ would rather jump from here~ than ever marry Xie Jinghong~”
I recalled the flush at the corners of that man’s eyes, his breaths scented faintly of plum blossoms, his body like white jade suffused with dawn light.
After swallowing softly a few times, I slapped the table and shot to my feet.
“I’ve discovered that all of you take things way too seriously. I’m done talking to you-my husband is calling me home for dinner.”
My Wife Doesn’t Want Me Anymore
My wife suddenly wanted to check my phone.
I wasn’t nervous at all.
Until she sent a message in the Brothers Group.
“Guys, guess which girl I’m with right now?”
Waiting for Your Gaze
On the day we got divorced, Song Zhiyuan and I nearly came to blows right there in the Civil Affairs Bureau. When the clerk asked for the reason behind the split, he had the audacity to claim he had seven girlfriends on the side. I laughed out of sheer frustration. Seven girlfriends? So you really don’t get a single day off all week, huh? I shot him a sideways glare. “Working seven days a week without a break-can your body even handle that?” Song Zhiyuan sneered. “You’re not my wife anymore. It’s none of your business whether I can handle it or not.” Beside us, the clerk actually gave him a thumbs-up. “A real man. Impressive!”
Bone Weighing
Fu Qiu had always accepted her lot in life.
When she was a child, a blind man read her fortune through bone-weighing and said her bones were light, her fate was lowly, and that in this life she could only sell her body.
As it happened, her family was going through hard times, so her father simply sold her to a brothel.
When she was still young and first put on display, the madam said that although she was beautiful, her face carried a pitiful, sorrowful look, and the customers she attracted would never be decent men.
Sure enough, every few days, she suffered another bout of abuse.
By middle age, her looks had withered, and she married a merchant. The neighbors said her thin lips and fox-like eyes meant she would never be the faithful sort.
Before long, rumors were flying everywhere. The merchant could not bear it, and on a rainy night, he drove her out of the house.
Even so, she never hated anyone. She only hated that her own fate was so poor.
As she lay on the verge of death, the Old Blind Man happened to pass by drunk, bragging to the crowd.
“Twenty years ago, I saw a little girl in another town. She was so young, but she already had the looks to topple a kingdom.
“So I pretended to be blind, did a bone-weighing for her, and told her she had a lowly fate-that in this life, she could only become a whore.
“And guess what? Her whole family believed me!”
Puppy, Please Disperse the Gloom
I was married to Chi Ni for three years.
It wasn’t until after his death that I discovered his morbid, obsessive longing for me through his diary.
“I’m so jealous of the Young Lady’s dog. I want her to put a collar on me, too.”
“I dreamed of the Young Lady. When I woke up… I was wet again. I am a sinner.”
Clutching that diary, I was reborn into a time ten years in the past.
These were Chi Ni’s most wretched, downtrodden days.
He looked at me with a cold, detached gaze, like a wild dog that couldn’t be tamed.
I curled my finger at him with a beaming smile. “Smile for me, or I’ll kiss you until your lips are raw.”
The cold indifference he had fought so hard to maintain instantly crumbled.
The Secret of Five Letters
My husband jumped from a building and died in a pool of blood.
The police quickly cordoned off the scene.
A few days later, the autopsy report came back: the cause of death was a massive intracranial hemorrhage, and his body bore numerous signs of a struggle.
The police told me he had committed suicide and that there was no killer. I didn’t believe them.
Grand Princess Anping
The daughter of the Yong’an Marquis Estate had committed a grave breach of etiquette within the palace, accidentally shattering a relic of the Late Emperor.
Furious, Grand Princess Anping ordered her to be seized and brought back to the Princess Manor immediately.
That night. The Heir of the Yong’an Marquis Estate knelt at the foot of my steps.
I reclined on my daybed, my fingertip tapping rhythmically against the armrest.
My gaze swept slowly over him, tracing the line of his brow, his Adam’s apple, and the breadth of his shoulders.
After a long silence, I finally uttered a single word: “Strip.” Those slender hands, which had once composed the most brilliant of essays, trembled as they reached for the buttons of his slate-blue official uniform.