Mystery
Yu Chaolan Investigates: The Death of Yuanyang
A bloody, brutal murder had shaken the city.
The prostitute Yuanyang was found dead and naked on her embroidered bed, her body slashed again and again, drenched in blood.
The authorities proved utterly useless at catching the killer. They could not find so much as a single suspect.
Just as rumors were flying everywhere, a young victim came to my stall.
With the only five copper coins she had, she begged me to find Yuanyang’s murderer.
Me: “?”
But I was only a fortune-teller.
Yu Chaolan Investigates: The Tragedy of Ning’an
The second young lady of the Guardian General’s Residence was young, beautiful, and of noble status.
After attending a gathering of noble ladies, she suddenly hanged herself.
She left not a single word behind.
Her elder sister, Wang Ping’an, the Guardian General stationed at the border, rode back to the capital overnight.
Then, with lightning speed, she abducted the other four noble ladies who had attended the gathering-
the Grand Tutor’s daughter, the daughter of the Minister of Personnel, the legitimate daughter of the Censor-in-Chief, and the County Lady of Zhongwang Mansion-and brought them to a farmstead on the outskirts of the capital.
I, along with Yuan Nanshan, the Vice Minister of Dali Temple, was also dragged here to help uncover the truth.
Seeing me stare worriedly at the four top-ranking noble ladies, the Guardian General gave a chilling sneer.
“Master Yu, I hear your divinations are infallible, and that you can see the past and the future.”
“I want to know how my sister died!”
“If you can’t get to the bottom of it today, all of you can accompany her to the grave!”
Wait. I’m going to die too?
I’m just a fortune-teller.
Yu Chaolan Investigates: The Noble Concubine of the Marquis
The Marquis of Ningyuan’s favored concubine had been brutally murdered.
She had been arrogant, domineering, and spoiled by his favor, making countless enemies in the marquis’s mansion.
For a time, the authorities had no idea where to begin.
So Yuan Nanshan, the Vice Minister of Dali Temple, tossed this hot potato to me.
“The Marquis of Ningyuan’s concubine came from an official family, bore him children, and held a status no lower than the Marchioness.”
“You’re a woman, so it will be more convenient for you to investigate. You must find the murderer and give the deceased justice!”
“…”
But I was only a fortune-teller.
You Call Fishing Ascension?
Disciples knelt all across the mountain, crying out in unison, “We respectfully send off the Patriarch on his ascension!”
But what I saw was a silvery-white hook piercing Master’s throat, dragging him up into the clouds.
His feet had left the ground. He couldn’t make a sound.
Like a fish.
I lunged forward and wrapped my arms around Master’s legs. “Let him go!”
Eldest Senior Brother struck me with his palm and sent me flying. “You madwoman! Can you bear the consequences of ruining the Patriarch’s ascension ceremony?”
Blood spilled from the corner of my mouth.
I laughed.
“Ascension? Are you all blind? That’s fishing!”
Chasing the Missing Boy
The parents of a missing boy came to me for help. They wanted me to find their son.
But every sign pointed to the boy already being dead-while his heart was still beating.
The Fate-Bound Marriage Contract
On the eve of my wedding, my future mother-in-law forced me to press my bloodied handprint onto the paper. She told me the Shen Family wasn’t marrying me for love, but because my fate could save her son.
What she didn’t know was that the way to break that Marriage Contract had been left to me by my grandmother herself.
The Blind Girl’s Sacrifice
I am blind.
Inside the refrigerator, I felt my boyfriend’s corpse.
And someone was standing right behind me,
waiting to see how I would react.
The First Law
After Lin Min, a prodigy from Tsinghua University, dies in an accident, her soul takes over the body of Sun Shuyi, a bullied high school senior.
Faced with terrible grades, indifferent classmates, and a family in pieces, she relies on the elite abilities she once possessed to fight her way back to first place.
In this new body, she also begins, little by little, to repair Sun Shuyi’s life. As academic competitions, the college entrance exam, and the truth behind an old case draw ever closer, she must find her own rules for coming in first amid revenge, growth, and the chance to live all over again.
Awakening the Orchid Fate
Spending the night in an abandoned temple, I found a thin gauze handkerchief wreathed in fragrance. After nightfall, someone murmured beneath the window:
“My lady, have you perchance seen the handkerchief this humble scholar left behind?”
Through the crack in the door, the figure outside looked so ethereal that it seemed he might drift away on the wind at any moment.
At his words, I couldn’t help recalling the rumors about this place.
They said this temple had been abandoned for ages, and that seductive ghosts haunted the area. Any traveler who got entangled with them would either have their essence sucked dry or be dragged into another world, vanishing without a trace.
With that in mind, I hurriedly cracked open the window and tossed out the piece of cloth I had used to wipe the floor, the windowsill, and my stinky feet.
The other party caught it with lightning-fast reflexes.
Then he stared down at the gauze scarf in his hand, now crumpled and ruined like dried pickled greens, and fell into deep contemplation.
Husband with Terminal Cancer
My husband was sick and dying.
But before he died, he insisted on divorcing me.
He transferred every asset under his name, including the company, to me and left himself without a penny.
The night we signed the divorce agreement, he held me and cried like his heart was being ripped out.
He said this was the last thing he could do for me. He didn’t want me, after his death, to become the widow everyone pitied-the woman whose husband had died.
It was his one and only wish before he passed. As the wife who loved him so deeply, how could I possibly refuse?
The night before we were supposed to pick up the divorce certificate, he suddenly fell into a coma and was rushed to the hospital.
The doctor issued a critical condition notice.
And I signed the consent form to forgo treatment without hesitation.
They couldn’t save my husband. He died on that rain-lashed night.
I turned away, wiped the tears from my eyes, and tore the divorce agreement to shreds with a smile.
That same night, I called the funeral home. Before dawn broke, I had him sent into the cremator and burned down to a handful of ash.