Historical
Walking Beside You
For three nights in a row, my maid said the same thing in her sleep:
“It seems one of the chickens in the backyard is missing.”
I simply assumed she was exhausted from her daily chores and thought nothing of it.
That was until we encountered a landslide on our way to the Capital. My maid was killed in the disaster, but I was rescued by soldiers who arrived just in time.
Trembling and lost, I sought out the commanding officer, intending to reveal my true identity as the daughter of the Provincial Commander.
He glanced at the maid’s clothes I was wearing and suddenly asked:
“Are the hens still brooding lately?”
Walking with a Lantern, Guiding Souls, The Marquis’ Lady Returns from the Underworld
Criminal investigations, soul-ferrying powers, a formidable partnership, and a slow-burn romance.
Everyone knew that Ren Fengjue, the Young Marquis of Renxuan Marquis Manor, was an exceptionally capable man. At a young age, he was already a high-ranking court official and one of the Emperor’s most trusted favorites.
With an illustrious background, striking looks, and both brains and brawn, he seemed to move through life without ever meeting an obstacle he could not overcome.
That changed the day a woman claiming to be his fiancée appeared at his door and opened with a sentence that left him stunned.
Xia Ximo: “Write me a letter of annulment.”
Ren Fengjue: “???”
At first, Lord Ren was buried in official duties and had no interest in romance. If she wanted out of the engagement, so be it. He had never intended to marry in the first place.
Later, after one twist after another, the way he looked at his fiancée changed completely.
Ren Fengjue: “I have already petitioned the Emperor for a marriage decree. If we annul the engagement now, it would count as defying an imperial edict, a crime punishable by the execution of nine generations.”
Xia Ximo: “???”
West Third Institute
While everyone else was fighting for the Emperor’s favor, I built an intelligence station in the cold palace.
Until the day he died, the Emperor never knew that the woman stirring up the hidden currents of his harem was someone whose name he could not even remember.
I died in Yongxiang Alley during my third winter there.
Not truly died-only the kind of death where your name is crossed out in vermilion ink on the registry.
They said Noble Lady Li, who had once worked in the imperial garden and was later favored by His Majesty for her beauty, had gone mad.
Because on the late Empress’s memorial day, I let my hair hang loose, went barefoot, and sang a rousing rendition of “Liangzhou Ci.”
In truth, I was not mad. I had simply calculated that the Chief Eunuch of the Directorate of Ceremonial would pass through the imperial garden that day.
Madness was the best pass in the cold palace, and the best armor.
On the day I moved into the West Third Institute, only one lame old eunuch came to lead the way.
The weeds in the courtyard rose past my knees, and the moss on the well curb was as thick as a velvet blanket.
My roommate, Attendant Li, had been thrown in here three years ago after offending the Imperial Consort.
When she saw me arrive, she did not even lift her eyelids. She only kept rubbing a length of hemp rope in her hands, its edges worn fuzzy.
I set my only bundle down on the crumbling earthen kang.
Inside were two sets of worn palace clothes, a bald writing brush, and half a ream of yellow paper.
The paper pasted over the window lattice had a hole in it the size of a fist. The north wind poured in with a howl, carrying the faint sound of pipes and flutes from far away.
I stared at that hole, but in my heart, a sliver of light slipped through.
In a madwoman’s world, there were the fewest rules.
Here, perhaps, I could live.
What to Do if My Kept Mistress Is the Crown Prince?
I was a widow starved for a man.
While I was burning incense and praying for a good match, some villain broke into my boudoir.
I knocked him out with a vase.
Then I took a look and-oh. A beautiful man.
So I tied him up, hid him in my little courtyard, and had my way with him every day…
Later, he ran off.
When we met again, I knelt on the ground and stammered in terror, “Th-this humble woman greets His Royal Highness the Crown Prince…”
When He Forgot Me for the Third Time, He Personally Sentenced Me to Death
Crown Prince Bai Xiuzhu had been afflicted with the Southern Border Love-Forgetting Gu.
Every time he clawed his way back from the brink of death, he would forget the person he loved most. The first time, he forgot his mother.
The second time, he forgot the marriage vows we had exchanged before Heaven and Earth at the border.
The third time-after I had slit my wrists to feed him my blood and save his life-he sat high atop his throne in the Hall of Golden Chimes and personally marked my death warrant with a stroke of vermilion ink.
When the Emperor Transmigrates into a School Torture Novel
I transmigrated into a school angst novel-but I’m an emperor.
When my childhood friend fell in love with the new transfer student, I immediately bestowed a marriage upon them.
“Lowborn wretches, why aren’t you kneeling to thank Us for Our grace?”
The class monitor accused me of cheating and listed a whole pile of motives.
Me: “You don’t get the final say. I am the emperor. What I say goes.”
“Spout any more nonsense, and I will exterminate your entire clan.”
The school bully confessed to me and said he was willing to do anything for me.
Me: “Merit deserves reward. I appoint you Chief Eunuch.”
When the Grass Blossoms in Rage
After my eldest sister took her own life, her marriage to the Heir of the Marquis of Changping was passed down to my second sister.
After my second sister took her own life, the original betrothal landed on my head.
Less than half a year after marrying into Changping Marquis Manor, I wanted to take my own life too.
Just as I was hesitating over whether to hang myself like my eldest sister or swallow gold like my second sister, the heir returned from disaster relief.
And he brought back a concubine.
I looked at the delicate, beautiful concubine and nearly wept with joy.
Wonderful. In this grand, suffocating mansion, I was finally not the only unlucky one anymore.
When the Moon is Full and the Flowers Bloom
Madam Shen was unable to bear children, so she wanted to buy a respectable concubine to carry on the family line for Eldest Master Shen.
A respectable concubine received two taels of silver every month, and even got to eat white rice with braised pork.
The moment I heard the news, I immediately told my mother to take me into the city to sign up.
My mother smacked me on the head and snapped, “I’ve given birth to three children, and you’re the stupidest of the lot!”
When Transmigrators Are Everywhere
I had transmigrated into an unfavored consort in the imperial harem.
Before I could even process that, a line of blood-red text appeared in midair:
[Your identity as a transmigrator has been exposed. Run!]
What?
My life came first, so I immediately made a break for it.
But along the way, as I fled, I discovered something.
The palace matrons, eunuchs, guards, and even the consorts from every palace began joining in one after another.
Every single one of them claimed to be a transmigrator.
Had I stumbled into a whole nest of transmigrators or what?
After we crossed the final palace gate, the emperor, leading the Imperial Guard, had us surrounded on all sides.
The young ruler looked at me at the head of the group and let out a cold laugh. “Su Cairen, are you planning to rebel?”
I glanced back.
Good heavens. The runaway party behind me had nearly grown into an army!
Where Spring Winds Shape the Realm
Nan Jinping was an unfavored concubine-born daughter of the Nan Family.
To escape the fate of being sent by the principal wife to become a powerful nobleman’s concubine, she searched everywhere for a marriage that might keep her alive.
At the Bamboo Grove Elegant Gathering, she provoked Wang Yu, the aloof and distinguished legitimate son of the Langya Wang Clan; later, during the turmoil at Hong’en Temple, a twist of fate led her to save his life.
After that, as the world descended into chaos and friends and family were scattered, Nan Jinping rushed from place to place to save her maid, Xiao Mei, and ventured deep into danger to find Wang Yu.
Under the crushing weight of life and death, and of social rank, the two gradually developed feelings for each other.
When the realm was thrown into upheaval and the glory of the old clans collapsed, she finally went from a concubine-born daughter at the mercy of others to someone capable of choosing where she belonged.