Short Story
Tug His Tie, Tempt His Composure
Fu Shiyu, the crown prince of Beijing’s elite circles, was famously untouchable.
I worked as his chief interpreter for three years.
He still never managed to remember my full name.
Until the day I “ran into” him at the gallery he often visited, my fingertip brushing over his Adam’s apple.
“CEO Fu, your tie is crooked.”
He pinned me against the floor-to-ceiling window and bit my earlobe.
“Who are you calling CEO Fu?
“Say that again. I dare you.”
The Imperial Consort
I have a secret.
From the moment I was born, I carried memories of my previous life.
I buried that secret deep in my heart and never dared reveal the slightest trace of it.
Until the year I entered the palace as a maid.
The other maids warned me never to provoke Shen Ruyun, Imperial Consort Shen.
They said she was a vicious, ruthless woman, and that countless eunuchs and palace maids had died by her hand.
I did not believe it.
Because I had once seen Shen Ruyun’s portrait.
And I recognized her.
She was my daughter from my previous life.
When I died, she was only ten years old.
I wanted to understand why that sweet, sensible child had become such a wicked ghost now…
Soul-Whip 9: Five Ghosts Transporting Wealth
At a construction site, five coffins were dug up-four with something inside, one empty. Strange things kept happening at the site.
In less than three days, two workers had already been sent to the hospital.
Someone had asked me to go there and haul the coffins away.
But the expert the site had hired kept blocking me at every turn, refusing to let me move them.
With a dark, sinister look, he told me: “These five coffins can’t be moved by anyone within seven days. Whoever moves them will be the one buried inside.”
Bite Me Before Dawn
Synopsis While working the night shift at the hospital morgue, a man on the autopsy table who had died from blood loss suddenly opened his eyes and called out my name.
Only later did I learn that he was a vampire who had lived for two hundred years, and I was the one he had been searching for through seventeen lifetimes-the only person who could both save him and kill him.
I Treat the Horror World as an Otome Game
I fell into a world of Strange Tales, but I thought I was playing a romance otome game.
At the stroke of midnight, the cobweb-covered landline rang. A raspy, eerie voice drifted through the receiver.
“You watched that videotape, didn’t you? In seven days… I will come for you…”
Me:
“Why seven days? Are you just not going to contact me at all during that time? Is this the silent treatment?
“And you’re only messaging me at midnight? Ah, I get it. You probably just finished spending time with someone else, and now your conscience is pricking you, so you’ve come to check on me.
“What’s the point of just calling? If you actually cared about me, you’d be by my side constantly. I absolutely hate long-distance relationships!”
Strange Tale: “Uh… I’ll come sooner, then.”
The other participants struggling to survive: “? No, wait, man! He said he’d take our lives in seven days-why the hell is he starting his shift early?”
Earth Master Girl 25: The Missing Fiancé
On the night before our engagement, my fiancé got a call from his first love.
He left without a word and vanished for the entire night.
Calmly, I packed my things and called him to break up.
But when the call connected, a stranger answered.
“Who are you looking for?”
I contacted my fiancé’s parents, but they told me they were DINKs. They had no children, and they didn’t know me.
Everyone around me had forgotten that my fiancé had ever existed.
I touched my slightly swollen belly, horror crashing over me.
“Then who is the father of this child?”
Top Green Tea Enters the Horror Game
A top-tier Green Tea found herself in a horror game.
Watching the Bloody Senior Sister crawl in the dark toilet,
I screamed:
“Damn it! How could you let the Bloody Senior Sister crawl on such a filthy floor?”
Facing the Murderous Little Lolita with her split personality, I tied her hair into cute twin ponytails:
“While everyone else worries about whether the Murderous Little Lolita’s axe is sharp, I only worry if she gets tired from all that chopping.”
The Anomalies exchanged glances:
“Why do the corpses feel kind of warm?”
Advising Breakup Eight Hundred Times, Finally Drinking at the Best Friend’s Wedding
I tried to persuade my best friend to break up eight hundred times, but in the end, I attended her wedding and drank her wedding wine.
On the wedding day, I sat at the main table with the guy’s strategist, both of us checking our phones and comparing notes.
We realized that every time the couple threatened to break up, it was always the two of us who got dragged into it.
Our chat histories were eerily similar.
[We broke up. This time it’s for real.]
[But what about him/her? What should I do?]
Guy’s strategist: [Maybe you should change jobs. You’d make a great clown in a circus.]
Me: [Pay me some compensation.]
My Name in History
On the day I came of age, the snow fell heavily, and he said he wanted to break off our engagement.
Later, he knelt before me and begged me to spare him.
They drove me out of the family.
Later, with my own hands, I sent them into military exile.
Suisui, Safe and Sound
Ever since I was little, I had been slow and lacking in wit, while Elder Sister was extraordinarily gifted.
At a poetry gathering held at Marquis Manor, she was afraid I would embarrass myself, so in private, she composed a poem for me.
None of us expected that the true purpose of the gathering was to choose a wife for the Second Young Master of Marquis Manor. And the poem she wrote for me was the very one that caught the Second Young Master’s eye.
Later, I married into Marquis Manor.
After the wedding, Pei You discovered just how dull and ignorant I truly was.
Only then did he realize I was not the person who had written that poem that day.
Pei You resented me, blamed me, despised me.
He said his wife should not be someone like me, a woman with nothing but a pretty face and not a drop of learning inside her.
Whenever we were intimate, he would lean close to my ear and mock me, saying I had none of the dignified bearing of a proper main wife, only a body full of vixenish allure that was of some small use in bed.
I was terrified.
So when I returned to the day of that poetry gathering, I stopped Elder Sister before she could write a poem for me. My voice trembled as I said,
“Thank you, Elder Sister, but there is no need.”