Drama
Phoenix Pendant, Winter Heart
It was the fifth year of our engagement, and Meng Cijun still refused to marry me.
The first time he turned me down, he said the King was placing great importance on him, so how could he indulge in the trivialities of love?
That made sense, so I nodded and waited another two years.
The second time he turned me down, he said that since the King had yet to choose a Queen, how could a mere subject like him marry first?
That made me angry. I felt the King was being completely unreasonable-I had waited so long that I was practically an old maid, yet he still wouldn’t allow Meng Cijun to marry me?
Meng Cijun and I had a fight. In a fit of pique, I left home, only to rescue a palace official who was trying to end his life by the river.
One of the girls selected for the draft had run away, and Wang Shiguan was so distressed he was ready to jump into the water.
“If I enter the palace, will I be able to see the King?”
Wang Shiguan looked at my hair, which was not yet pinned up in the style of a married woman, and my youthful face. He nodded with delight.
“Of course! If you find favor, you’ll see the King every single night!”
“Alright then,” I said, nodding as I gathered my skirts and stepped into the carriage.
Once I saw that King, I intended to ask him exactly why he wouldn’t let Meng Cijun marry me.
“Miss, if you leave, how am I supposed to explain this to Master Meng?” Xiao Tao asked, panicked.
I thought about it for a moment, then pulled back the curtain and waved a hand.
“Just tell Meng Cijun that Ah Wu is still mad at him and won’t be coming home for dinner tonight!”
My Dad Took Me to Rebel
My father successfully overthrew the throne, and he didn’t know how best to gloat:
“The Deposed Emperor still has his charms, and the Former Crown Prince is quite the beauty. I bestow them both upon my daughter!”
The father and son were so enraged they spat blood.
I was even more agitated: “Why give them to me? Give them a death sentence!”
Scattered Clouds
I am the most pathetic Marchioness in all of the capital.
Marquis Jing’an married me for one reason only: I was honest, kind, and easy to manipulate.
Before our wedding, he told me quite bluntly, without a shred of hesitation:
“As long as you treat my beloved Concubine Bai well once you enter my home, and as long as you don’t get jealous or pick fights with her, I will grant you the dignity and status you deserve.”
For the sake of my family, I had no choice but to marry him.
From then on, whenever Concubine Bai sat, I stood.
When Concubine Bai ate meat, I drank the broth.
Whenever rewards arrived from the palace, Concubine Bai got first pick; I only received whatever she didn’t want.
I thought Marquis Jing’an was satisfied with my performance over the years, yet when I prepared to leave, he blocked the doorway, his hands trembling.
“You are my wife! You aren’t going anywhere!”
Me: “?”
I’m literally making room for your sweetheart!
Tomorrow Will Be a Fine Day
The way I went from a Little Beggar to the Heir Apparent’s fiancée felt like a dream.
That day, I was crouched on the ground, gnawing on a coarse corn bun while watching two nobles argue.
They were like a pair of fighting roosters. It made for excellent dinner entertainment.
The Girl in Red sneered. “I would rather marry a fool or an idiot than ever marry a useless good-for-nothing like you!”
The Brocade-clad Youth roared back, “I would rather marry a chicken, marry a duck…” Halfway through, he pointed at me.
“I’d rather marry this Little Beggar than ever marry you!”
The Girl in Red looked at my dazed, foolish expression and laughed from sheer anger.
Her voice went taut as she said, “Fine! If you don’t marry her, you’re a cowardly bastard!”
Rose Lock
I’m a good-for-nothing.
My husband, on the other hand, is a golden boy who has appeared on the cover of a finance magazine twelve times.
Later, he told me all of those covers had been bought and paid for.
Then, claiming he didn’t want to drag me down, he decisively asked for a divorce.
Wait… did I marry into a fake wealthy family?
The Emperor’s Daughter is My Prey
My Mother was a courtesan, earning money with her own flesh and blood to support my father’s studies and imperial examinations.
Five years later, my father succeeded and was granted marriage to a princess by the Emperor.
Yet, in the Golden Throne Hall, he refused the marriage at the risk of his own life, and with great fanfare, married my Mother with ten miles of red bridal procession.
The princess was displeased.
Three days later, Mother was found abused and disheveled, dying at the entrance of an alley.
Half a year later, the princess finally married my father as she wished.
She did not know that this was the beginning of her misfortune.
Beauty’s Grave
Pei Qi traded cities for a beauty, a grand gesture that became a legendary romance. Unfortunately, I was not that beauty, nor was I Pei Qi; I didn’t even know him.
My husband was merely a soldier defending the city. Because he refused to surrender, he died in that war, though the city was ultimately held.
The following year, when Pei Qi traded cities for his beauty, I became that beauty’s Foot-washing Maid.
Moon Warning
At 3:00 AM, an official emergency alert jolted you awake. The message read: “Do not look up at the moon.”
At the same time, you discovered that your phone had received hundreds of messages from unknown numbers: “The night is so beautiful. Look out the window.”
How to Get a Daddy-like Husband
My husband is wonderful to me.
He is incredibly considerate and gentle in bed, too.
After several failed attempts to actually make him angry, I finally resorted to posting a plea for help online: [How can I get my husband to be a bit more aggressive?]
[Sweet talk is all well and good, but I really want to try dirty talk.]
[Angry sex? Never tried that either.]
There were plenty of helpful netizens, but unfortunately, their suggestions were underwhelming.
That was until the day I came home drunk after a class reunion.
The living room was shrouded in darkness.
In the fragmented Moonlight, my husband did something rare-he called me by my full name. “Lin Sui, come here and kneel.”
The Difficult Mistress
Marrying Zhao Yunyan, Duke Wei, was hardly a joyous occasion.
He had a cherished concubine, an understanding childhood sweetheart who knew his heart.
He also had a red rose who had once saved his life, a woman he kept outside the manor in a relationship no one could quite explain.
One had accompanied him through childhood; the other had dazzled him in his youth.
No matter how one looked at it, there was no place left for me, his lawful wife.
Mother wept and said I was too simple and straightforward by nature, that I would never be able to warm my husband’s heart.
How was I supposed to live like that?
I comforted her.
I did not seek true love, nor would I harm any concubine.
If I held on to my dignity and cherished myself, how could I not live well?