Horror
Soul-Whip 5: The Daughter’s Sedan Chair
At midnight, I woke up in a strange place.
Someone knocked on my truck window and said they were holding a celebration tonight, and asked me to join them.
Still groggy, I got out of the truck.
The village before me was decked out in lanterns and colored streamers.
“Is it a wedding?” I asked the villager. The villager didn’t answer.
Instead, a hazy thought came to me: I seemed to have come here to escort the bride.
I turned back to look at the heavy truck I’d driven here.
It was empty. But why did I remember it being packed full of things when I arrived?
What had I been carrying? For a moment, I couldn’t recall.
When I turned back again, the villager who had come to call me was gone.
Mother’s Death List
While sorting through my mother’s belongings, I found a crumpled notebook tucked under her pillow.
Four words were scrawled unevenly across the title page: “The Kill List.”
The first name on the list was the obstetrician who had delivered me.
The date noted beside it was the day I was born.
The second name was my father’s.
The date was the day he died in a mining accident.
The third name belonged to a stranger.
The date noted was yesterday.
The police told me that this person really did die yesterday, but my mother was buried over a month ago.
The Mountain God’s Bride
The Mountain God’s Bride The day I was sold into Blackstone Village, they told me I was to be the Mountain God’s bride.
One month later, I walked back out from the mountains wearing a red bridal gown, stilt-walking, and wearing a Nuo mask.
Behind me, a three-mile-long Fire Dragon illuminated the main street.
On behalf of the Mountain God, I asked them: “We remember every girl you’ve sent in over the years. Are your own daughters ready?”
Glass Slipper Filled with Ashes
On the night of my wedding, the Queen ordered her guards to pin me down and force those Glass Slippers back onto my bleeding feet. She said that if the shoes were not sated by my blood before the thirteenth bell toll of midnight, she would carve out my heart to feed the mirror. The entire hall waited for me to become a Princess Consort, but only the groom, Su Zhichuan, leaned in and whispered into my ear, his voice trembling and hoarse. He said, “Don’t believe in fairy tales. Kill me before dawn, or you’ll be the one who dies.”
The Kiln
In our village, there was an abandoned Brick Kiln rumored to be haunted.
During my first year of middle school, a few classmates and I went to the kiln for an adventure. We unexpectedly stumbled upon a swarm of rats worshipping a wall, all of them throwing themselves against it until they died…
In that moment, I realized there was truly something in that kiln that shouldn’t be provoked.
Unfortunately, it was already too late. From then on, my friends began to die one after another.
Until one night, that thing finally stood at the head of my bed…
The Dead Bride
At my grand wedding to my Boyfriend, a stranger pushed open the door and walked in elegantly.
Who is he? What does he want? Is he here to bless me, or to destroy me?
When the man smiled, raised his hand, and lightly pushed me off the rooftop, I finally remembered who he was.
After fate destroyed me once more, it granted me the chance of Rebirth.
Since then I have decided: I will never bow my head or admit defeat. Even if I fall into Avici Hell, I will stop at nothing.
The Non-Existent Thief
I am a Thief.
While I was stealing, the homeowner came back.
With no other choice, I had to hide Under the Bed.
But in the next second, the Man pulled out a Knife and slit the woman’s throat, then took out his Phone to make a call.
Just as he dialed, from the pocket of my clothes,
came the sound of vibration.
Soul-Whip 4: Seven Human Heads
When I first started driving freight trucks, I once asked Master out of curiosity: Why did truckers need to perform Chongsha, while bus drivers didn’t?
Master said it was because trucks carried cargo, not people, so what they feared most was running into trouble on the road.
Buses, on the other hand, were always picking people up and dropping them off, so their greatest taboo was disaster striking onboard.
That was why buses didn’t pay much attention to warding off the road itself.
What they cared about was ballasting the vehicle.
Most bus drivers I’d met used stones for it.
Some used stone statues.
Whenever the passenger count hit four or seven, the driver would bring out the Vehicle-Ballasting Stone, treating it as one extra passenger onboard to keep misfortune away.
But recently, I took on a strange job.
A bus driver came to me and asked me to ballast his bus as a living person.
He said that before me, three Vehicle-Ballasting Stones had already shattered on his bus.
Soul-Whip 3: Transporting the Buddha
A buddy of mine who drove long-haul trucks took a job delivering a Buddha Head.
The Buddha Head had clearly arrived safely, yet he came down with a fever that wouldn’t break and was plagued by nightmares.
By the time I heard the news and rushed to the hospital, he was already delirious from the fever.
His scalding-hot hand clamped tightly around mine.
“Brother Long, I… my Buddha Head was stolen. The Buddha Head is gone!”
“Dashun, the Buddha Head was delivered. It wasn’t lost.”
His wife and mother stood around him crying, but no matter what anyone said, he insisted that his Buddha Head had been lost.
A perfectly healthy man was down to his last breath.
I turned to Dashun’s boss and said, “Where is the Buddha Body? I’ll deliver it.”
Special Romance
I was scammed by a real estate agent into moving into a Columbarium. To my surprise, the place was already occupied by a handsome, young, and tsundere ghost. When I took a closer look, I was even more shocked-it turned out we were old acquaintances.