Psychological
Time-Space Courier
The celebrity Zhu Yuan is dead. I still hate her. She always made me feel as wretched and hidden as a rat scurrying across the street.
And yet, I found her third gift. It was a plain music box sitting in the hospital corridor.
I casually handed it to the child in the neighboring bed.
She was dying, too.
The Substitute Coroner
I can see the final moments of the deceased through their eyes, a gift that has helped the government solve countless cases.
Everything changed when the body of a drowned man was brought in.
Looking into his eyes, I saw him strangling me just before he died.
And on those hands, he was wearing the Jade Bracelet that had been buried with me.
Blood Rouge
I spent ten years in the imperial harem testing rouge, and not once did I fail to detect a single trace of poison.
That was until Consort Hua dropped dead after applying the “Drunken Beauty Red” I had personally verified.
It was then that a newly arrived talented lady told me: what truly kills isn’t the rouge, but the intent to murder.
Forget Me, Remember
After an argument with Zhou Mingyu, I jumped from the thirtieth floor with my five-month-old daughter in my arms.
When I opened my eyes again, time had actually returned to yesterday.
On this day, because the baby wouldn’t stop crying, Zhou Mingyu snapped at me for the first time: “Chen Ran, you don’t have a mother yourself, so it’s no wonder you don’t even know how to take care of a child!”
Our relationship had always been good, so I thought he hadn’t meant it; I blamed it on my own volatile temper and for taking things too hard.
But time continued to flow backward, and I discovered that this wasn’t the first time Zhou Mingyu had said such things: During my postpartum recovery month, he joked, “If your mother were still alive, my mother wouldn’t be so exhausted.”
On the day I was hospitalized to give birth, in response to the nurse’s questions, he said with a smile, “Her mother passed away, so who else could be her caregiver but me?”
At our wedding, he held my hand and vowed, “Chen Ran, I will definitely take good care of you in your mother’s stead!”
… It turned out he had always cared about the fact that I didn’t have a mother.
But the strange thing was, why didn’t I have any memory of my mother at all?
Had she ever truly existed?
If time continued to flow backward, would I eventually see her?
The Price of a Princess
There is a palace rule in the Great Sheng Dynasty: regardless of rank or status, whoever gives birth to a child must raise that child.
Mother was the most insignificant Cairen in the harem.
Ever since I was born, I lived with her in the neglected Chengze Hall.
When I was eight, the Imperial Physician diagnosed Mother with a severe illness and said she did not have long to live.
That day, Mother jumped into the Taiye Pond and saved the drowning Third Prince.
She saved the Third Prince’s life, but lost her own in the waters of Taiye Pond.
Rumors spread throughout the palace. Everyone said, “The Third Prince stepped on Cui Cairen’s head, pushing her underwater so he could climb ashore.”
They fanned the flames, but I knew in my heart that Mother did it on purpose.
She used her own life to ensure that, after her death, I could be taken in by the Third Prince’s birth mother, Consort Qi.
Mother was so foolish.
She thought she had paved a path for me.
She forgot.
A child without a mother leads a bitter life.
Princess’s Journey: Glory Does Not Betray You
Father Emperor is a transmigrator, and I have been able to hear his inner thoughts since the moment I was born.
[Huh, so this is the future villainess? She’s so soft and adorable; how did she end up turning out so wrong? No, I have to protect her. My daughter can only be the lead heroine.]
In the beginning, that was exactly what he did. He taught me self-respect and self-love, told me not to depend on men, and said that girls could hold up half the sky.
But later, things changed. He looked at me with eyes full of loathing, claiming I didn’t have a shred of the decorum expected of a young lady, and forced me to kneel in the Buddhist hall to copy Buddhist scriptures. And I could no longer hear his inner thoughts.
Princess’s Journey: Eternal Peace and Grace
From a very young age, I knew I was a Villainess Supporting Character.
I knew because of a strange palace maid by my side named Sui’an. Sometimes, she would stare blankly at the top of my head as if there were words written there.
Later, after spending enough time with her, I managed to piece together the truth from countless minor details: There really were words floating above my head, and those words were: Villainess Supporting Character.
Princess’s Journey: Is the Romance Unharmed?
My cousin’s parents passed away, so my Imperial Mother brought her into the palace to live with us.
From then on, she enjoyed the favor of my parents, the protection of my elder brother, and the devotion of my younger brother.
Even my fiancé praised her for being exceptionally gifted and refined.
There was only one exception. His heart and eyes were filled only with me, never swayed by any outsider.
I married beneath my station to become his wife, and for a time, we lived a life of joy and freedom.
But later, he died-stabbed countless times before being hurled off a cliff.
Princess’s Journey: Graceful and Peaceful
While I was offering prayers to Buddha on the mountain, a young gentleman suddenly intruded upon my solitude.
He apologized, his face flushing a deep crimson.
Yet, I heard his inner thoughts: [I have heard the Princess is kind and benevolent; I wonder if she will blame me.]
[I only ended up in the wrong place because I was trying to escape my eldest brother’s schemes.]
[How should I apologize to make the Princess happy?]
He did not know that I had experienced a dream.
In that dream, I followed the guidance of his inner voice to investigate his claims, only to walk step by step toward a dead end.
In the end, my Imperial Father grew to loathe me, my eldest brother was deposed, and I was drowned in a pond.
Only after my death did I learn that this young gentleman could choose who heard his heart’s voice.
It was by relying on this trick alone that he rose from being an Outer Chamber Son to the legitimate second son of a Marquis’s manor.
Now. I looked at the fair-skinned, red-lipped young gentleman before me, who appeared shy and timid.
I gave him a gentle smile. “Someone, come. For trespassing in the Forbidden Courtyard, give him thirty strokes of the cane.”
She Killed Me First Upon Her Return from Purgatory
It took me three thousand years to become an Upper Immortal, and another thousand years to find her reincarnation.
But on the day of our grand wedding, her memories of her past life suddenly awakened.
She held a sword to my throat, claiming that I had personally sealed her within Purgatory for eight hundred years.
During those eight centuries, her soul was scorched by Karmic Fire by day, and she cried out my name by night.
Now that she remembers, her first priority is to make me pay for it in blood.