Historical
Picking Mulberries
In the third month after our wedding, Shao Zhi took me back to Luoyang to pay respects to his clansmen. Along the way, he carefully explained the web of interests within his clan.
When he mentioned his eldest brother, his face filled with pride.
“My eldest brother is a very good man. He taught me riding and archery himself! ”
Now he serves in Luoyang as the Central Army Commander.
He is the one we are going to meet today.
” I hated Luoyang. There, someone had once forced me to drink a ladle of water from the Luo River and swear an oath: from then on, we would each marry another and never disturb each other again. Clutching the konghou in my arms, I only lowered my head and tried to refuse. ”
Ah Zhi, I was once a music courtesan.
I fear I might sully your honored brother’s eyes and ears.
It would be better if I did not meet him…
” Shao Zhi gathered me into his arms with pity and held my hand, telling me not to worry. ”
He won’t mind. I’ll secretly tell you a bit of gossip about my brother.
Before he married my sister-in-law, he once turned the whole world upside down over a music courtesan who played the konghou.
Later, afraid my sister-in-law would grow jealous, he forced that courtesan to drink from the Luo River and swear that they would each marry another and never disturb each other again.
“Besides, you are my wife now, and you play a fine twenty-three-string konghou. For my sake, my brother is sure to like you.”
Ah Yu’s Fortune Cauldron
In the second year of the famine, just before my father was about to sell me at the human market, my mother secretly ran back to her maiden home.
The night she returned, she was covered in blood.
There was a hole in her belly, and one of her legs was gone.
She handed my father the tripod cauldron she had carried on her back.
“Take it. With this, you won’t go hungry. Don’t sell Ah Yu.”
The tripod cauldron was not very large, but it was packed full inside.
With one tug, a snow-white leg came out.
If you threw in a piece of cloth, an identical piece of cloth would come out.
If you threw in a chicken, another chicken would come out too.
My father was so overjoyed he nearly went mad.
He never noticed that, before my mother breathed her last, she said one final sentence to me.
Fragrant Grass Year After Year
On the day of my hairpin ceremony, my brother-in-law, tipsy from wine, barged into my room.
That same night, my mouth was gagged and I was taken to the Marquis’s Mansion.
My legitimate elder sister told me she could not bear children and needed to borrow my womb.
A year later, I gave birth to a son.
My legitimate elder sister brought me to the Bamboo Garden, where four old maids covered my mouth and buried me in a pit they had dug long before.
Before I died, I kept wondering what the point had been of someone like me coming into this world.
But I never imagined that I would be dug up again.
The person who found me was small and thin, yet he staggered along with me on his back for ten miles.
He covered me with the only clothing he had and gave me a chance to live.
An old man took me in. From that day on, I changed my name and became someone else.
Five years later, my wonton shop opened in Capital City, and I happened to run into my legitimate elder sister and her family being sold off.
She begged me to save her son.
But I pointed to the young man kneeling off to the side and said, “I’ll only save him.”
Spring Scenery and Broken Joy
For six years after marrying into Xiping Marquis Manor, I spent six years a living widow.
My husband was stationed at the Northern Frontier, yet somehow found time in the midst of his duties to fall madly in love with another woman.
She was beautiful and strong, able to ride tall warhorses, wield a long spear, and read the art of war.
She fought shoulder to shoulder with my husband on the battlefield, killing the enemy.
The people and soldiers of the border city all called her the General’s Lady.
As for me, the true General’s Lady, no one even knew I existed. She was the eagle of the Northern Frontier.
I was a sparrow trapped in the inner courtyard.
But disaster was already creeping closer.
Qingliu and Yuzi
Before I became the bedchamber attendant of the Heir of Dingguo Duke Manor, I was once a “skinny horse” kept in the household of a Yangzhou salt merchant-a girl raised to be sold as a concubine.
To them, I was nothing more than a plaything passed between the powerful.
But they did not know that Qingliu, with her willow-slender waist, could also be a gentle, curved blade.
Hibiscus
I disguised myself as a man and spent twelve years in the barracks as a no-good soldier-only to suddenly learn that I was the Prefect’s true daughter.
The impostor daughter clutched my sleeve, sobbing as she shook it.
“Sister, I know I stole the place that should have been yours. I only beg you not to take away the love Father, Mother, and our brothers have for me.”
What she didn’t know was that I had no interest in stealing her love.
All I wanted was to get my brothers-in-arms some military pay.
The Vanished Heiress
Seven days before the grand wedding, the legitimate daughter of the Marquis Manor, who had gone to offer incense and pray for blessings, vanished at Xiangguo Temple.
The matriarch made a prompt decision.
Taking over a hundred manor servants who had signed death contracts, she surrounded Xiangguo Temple, sealing it off into an impenetrable fortress to suppress the news.
The Old Marquis entered the palace overnight to submit a memorial, claiming that my legitimate sister had made a great vow to pray for the Imperial Family and plead for rain to alleviate the suffering of the common people before her wedding.
On the day of the grand wedding, she would be married off directly from Xiangguo Temple.
A room full of maids and older servant women, along with me, a concubine-born daughter, knelt huddled together, everyone trembling like leaves.
Because we knew that if my legitimate sister wasn’t found in one piece within seven days… We would all die.
The Sprouting Chronicles
Zhao Qingzhu and I were betrothed through an exchange marriage.
The agreement was that his older sister would marry my older brother, and I would marry him.
He was a scholar, which meant his education was a money pit.
My family had to tighten our belts to provide for him, and the entire village laughed at us for being fools.
But five years later, he passed the imperial examinations with top honors and became the most sought-after bachelor around.
Suddenly, everyone was saying I was no longer worthy of him.
A PO Novel Female Lead Meets a Clean Romance Male Lead
I am the female lead of a PO novel, thrown into a clean romance novel by the system to be reformed.
Hilarious. I walked straight up to the male lead and said, “Hey, wanna kiss?” The male lead threw me in jail, claiming I had sexually harassed him.
Later on, he became even more unhinged than the male lead of a PO novel.
Year After Year Without Worry
When I was young, I found the Crown Prince and took him with me as we spent three years begging for a living.
After the Crown Prince was restored to his position, the Emperor took me in as his adopted daughter.
Everyone assumed that I would be betrothed to the Crown Prince. Instead, the Crown Prince became engaged to the legitimate daughter of the Duke’s Mansion.
On my birthday, he remarked with a casual smile in front of the crowd, “How can one of noble blood be matched with a beggar?”
I raised my glass and sincerely wished him a life free of worries, year after year.
He did not yet know that I had accepted the decree for a marriage alliance.
In the years to come, there would be no more Ah Yu by his side.