Romance
The Little Liar
When my younger sister went to Songshan Temple to pray for blessings, she saved Prince Rui, who had been gravely wounded and fallen unconscious.
After Prince Rui woke, he left her a jade pendant as a token and promised that if she ever found herself in trouble, she could come to Prince Rui’s Mansion for help.
Two months later, I went to the mansion.
I said to Prince Rui: “Do you still remember what happened outside Songshan Temple?”
I claimed her deed as my own and successfully became his princess consort.
But in the second year after our marriage, my younger sister came to visit.
Right in front of Prince Rui, she took out that jade pendant.
Lucky All My Life
While the concubines of the harem fought for favor, the Empress was wondering when the emperor would finally die.
The emperor and I had been married since our youth, but ours was a match arranged without either of us having any say.
After all these years, we had only ever treated each other with distant courtesy.
And as my son grew older by the day, I found myself hoping more and more that His Majesty might depart this world sooner rather than later-if only so all my years of diligently managing his harem would not have been in vain.
The General Above
I woke up in my arch-rival’s bed.
His clothes were in disarray, his body was covered in red marks, and his eyes were clouded with the lingering haze of intimacy.
Shocked and enraged, I pointed at him and yelled, “Traitorous Chancellor, how dare you defile me-”
“This Chancellor has fulfilled every custom from the three letters to the six rites. Why would I not dare?” he countered calmly.
“Nonsense!” My eyes widened. “When did I ever marry you?”
“Not long ago,” he said, his long eyes narrowing as he looked at me, “while you were suffering from amnesia.”
The Bodhisattva’s Curtain
I was a female scripture teacher who recited sutras for the madam of the household.
Yet in the middle of the night, someone cornered me behind the incense-draped curtains and asked me who was better-looking: him or the Bodhisattva.
That night, I did not choose the Bodhisattva.
Unfortunately, after barely three months, he came to bid me farewell.
I thought he had simply grown tired of me, so I agreed without fuss.
From then on, he lived beneath the glow of red lanterns, lost in endless pleasure, while I returned alone to the ancient Buddha and my solitary lamp.
Who would have thought that later, when he learned I had been drowned in a pond… He went mad.
The Chaotic Hibiscus
The Han army captured Luoyang. My husband, His Majesty himself, knelt at the rebels’ feet, trembling like a lamb waiting for slaughter.
“The Empress is in Jiaofang Hall. Please, don’t kill me…”
I had been married to him for five years and had given birth to our daughter, Princess Heqing.
Yet at the moment of crisis, he offered me up without the slightest hesitation.
Top-Tier Knockoff
Just now, I found the note my fiancé had saved me under in his phone.
“Top-tier A-grade knockoff.”
Those four words were enough to make my blood run cold.
No wonder he always said I looked so much like my older sister.
Turns out he’d been harboring those kinds of thoughts all along.
I couldn’t accept it. I immediately packed up my things and was about to leave, only to run straight into his gorgeous twenty-year-old younger brother-and in that instant, I changed my mind.
“At least I’m an A-grade knockoff. Look at you-you’re at most your brother’s 9.9-yuan free-shipping bargain-bin version.”
The Widow Remarries
I was the famous beauty for miles around.
Oval face, shapely figure, hardworking. Suitors came asking for my hand from one end of the village to the other.
After weighing my options again and again, I chose Shen Jingzhi.
He was the only scholar in the several villages near us, with clean, handsome features, a gentle way of speaking, and a scholarly air no one else had.
My parents said he had a bright future ahead of him.
If I married him, maybe I’d even end up a government official’s wife someday.
They were only half right. Shen Jingzhi did indeed earn an excellent ranking later on.
But he was also unexpectedly taken back by the General’s Mansion and, in the blink of an eye, turned into a young master from a powerful family.
He didn’t want anything to do with his past anymore.
Neither I nor my mother-in-law was wanted anymore.
Before the Mulberry Leaves Fall
Yuan Lina was the kind of teenage delinquent who wore bizarre outfits, dyed her hair strange colors, and caked on dramatic makeup.
Yuan Lina smoked, drank-she did it all. She had once poured Erguotou into a mineral water bottle and brought it to school to drink openly.
Yuan Lina liked forming little gangs and bullying people.
Plenty of people had been beaten up by her.
Ah Man
I was born a beggar.
Maybe some wealthy young lady had made a mistake, or maybe some brothel woman had simply had rotten luck.
Either way, I came into this world. I grew up begging for bowls of slop.
At my most wretched, I even fought mangy dogs for food.
Later, to stay alive, I sweet-talked a human trafficker into selling me into the palace.
On the day I entered the palace, I saw the red sun rising at the edge of the sky.
It looked just like the duck egg yolk that had once gone rolling and wobbling to my feet in the Drunken Fragrance Pavilion.
I smacked my lips and savored the memory for a moment, then turned and stepped onto that long, long palace road.
From a beggar hated by all, I became a palace maid within the towering imperial palace.
That year, I was nine.
Rose City
“I once blew thirty-five thousand on a man in a single night.”
Everyone thought I was drunk and talking big, and the room burst into laughter.
Only one person remained expressionless. He was the star of the night.
The entire department had taken turns playing Truth or Dare, all for the sake of buttering him up and securing the seven-figure ad placement case in his hands.
When the drinking was over and everyone had left, the man looked at me, the only one who had stayed behind.
His gaze was indifferent, his tone laced with mockery.
“Director Yu, how many years ago was that? And you still remember it so clearly?”