Short Story
Deadly Dorm Rules
My roommate Chen Ling was always coming up with strange rules. For example, after the dorm power went out, we weren’t allowed to turn on any lights, and once a bag of snacks was opened, it had to be finished within five minutes.
If we didn’t follow them, she would nag us about it all day long.
Just now, at three in the morning, she woke all of us from a dead sleep and said:
“You have to survive. The drill is officially over now.”
With that, she gave us an eerie smile, then turned and walked out the door.
A scream came from downstairs soon after.
She had jumped from the dorm room below ours.
I Fear Death, So I Sue My Family First
From childhood, Lin Qingcai copied case files and transcribed testimonies in her father Lin Huaizhang’s study, yet she was always kept hidden behind the Lin Family’s spotless reputation. By chance, she discovered a confession in a secret compartment that had been forged to match her handwriting, and learned that her father, elder brother, and mother were preparing to make her take the blame for the Luo Family’s old case.
She was afraid of dying, and long since afraid of being cast out by her family. So before they could speak first, she beat the drum and brought her accusation before the court, charging her father and brother with falsifying testimony and shifting the blame onto her. Using the copied case records she had secretly preserved over the years, along with witness leads and fragments from the old case, she gradually exposed the truth in the prefectural yamen: the Lin Family and Duke An’s Mansion had colluded to alter statements, take silver, and frame innocent people.
Her father was exiled, her brother was stripped of his status, and her mother finally came to see the rift her favoritism had created. Lin Qingcai left the clan and opened Qingcai Writing Service in West Lane, turning the pen she had once used to help others conceal evidence of their crimes into one that wrote the truth for the weak.
Rong Yu
A year after I married Xie Yunye, he met with danger at the border and was saved by a passing female physician.
To repay her for saving his life, he brought her back to the manor and took her in as his sworn sister.
Gu Qinghan never married after that. She practiced medicine all her life, healing the sick and earning the people’s deep respect.
Later, when Xie Yunye was poisoned, she tested medicines day and night. In the end, the accumulated poison took her life.
And I became the Old Madam of the Marquis Manor for fifty years.
My son was afraid I would be hurt, so he never let me enter the ancestral hall.
Only when I was on my deathbed and wanted to offer Xie Yunye one last stick of incense did I discover that a memorial tablet had appeared in the hall. On it were the words: Wife of Xie Yunye, Gu Qinghan.
My son sighed helplessly. “Mother, Father said before he died that only after meeting Aunt Gu did he understand who his true love was. Sadly, Aunt Gu was too proud to become a concubine, so he promised her burial beside him as his lawful wife.”
“Mother, it is only a title. Once a person dies, everything is empty. Please let Aunt Gu have it.”
When I opened my eyes again, I had returned to the day Xie Yunye brought Gu Qinghan home.
“Rong Yu, Qinghan has no father or mother. I want to take her in as my sworn sister. You…”
My expression was indifferent. “As you wish, my lord.”
When the Beijing Drifter’s Boyfriend Changed His Heart
In my fifth year of trying to make it in Beijing, my boyfriend cheated on me with an intern.
The other woman posted his massive pay stub online.
The watermark on the image was clear as day.
He was done for.
Only Spring Knows
Liang Yu had always thought the first time they met was at an amusement park. But in fact, it was not.
Those days were marked by endless rain, and even her memories carried a damp, overcast gloom.
That morning, her older sister developed a fever again. She lay in bed, sleeping through the entire day until night fell.
May the Crown Princess Live Forever
For three years after I entered the Eastern Palace as a concubine, I had never even seen the Crown Prince.
I took it in stride. After all, I was face-blind.
If I mistook someone else for the Crown Prince and committed a capital offense, I would rather have no favor at all.
But after so long without his favor, even my food, clothing, and daily expenses became a problem.
To live a little better, I simply found three lovers to support me.
Zhang San worked in the Imperial Kitchen and could always bring me plenty of delicious food.
Li Si guarded the Garment Bureau and often sent me beautiful clothes.
As for Wang Wu, he was a skilled craftsman in the workshops. Every time we met, he gave me some clever new toy.
Lately, though, all three of them seemed short on money.
So I began thinking that I should try to please the Crown Prince and ask for some rewards to help support them.
I Am the Horror Game NPC (The Ghost Bride Arc)
I am the strongest NPC in a horror game, they call me the Ghost Bride.
I wear a Red Wedding Dress, swaying my crimson nails, wandering freely through the vast ancient mansion, unbound by the rules.
I enjoy watching the terror on the players’ faces and the screams they let out.
Until one day, a middle-aged woman saw my face clearly, neither terrified nor screaming.
She shed tears: “My dear, I am your mother.”
Fishing for Hearts
Under the short video I posted, a girl tagged her boyfriend to come watch.
“Everyone move, my husband likes this kind of thing. Let him see it first!”
I tapped into her profile picture and froze.
She was the girl who had bullied me in high school.
I would know that face even if it were reduced to ashes.
I didn’t sleep all night. I went through every video she’d ever posted, then tapped on the boyfriend she’d tagged.
I sent him a private message.
“Are you there?”
The Palace Walls
“I’m going to be the Empress someday!”
Ten-year-old Song Weiwei stood on a dirt slope facing the imperial city in the distance, shouting those words with all the swagger she could muster.
As for me, I sat on a dirt mound with my chin propped in my hand, speechless.
“Song Weiwei, you still haven’t paid back the two copper coins you owe me.”
Song Weiwei turned around and rapped me on the forehead.
“What’s the rush? Have you ever seen an Empress who welshes on her debts?”
She hopped down from the slope and turned to coax me.
“Just think about it, Du Zeyi. If I become the Empress, you’d be my sister. You can have anything you want. Why worry about those two copper coins?”
As if becoming the Empress of a nation could be that easy.
I muttered under my breath, rubbed my forehead, and raised my voice. “My mother’s calling me home for dinner!”
Then I slipped away as fast as I could.
Leaving only Song Weiwei behind, stamping her feet in exasperation.
Everyone in the Family Is a Top Star, But I’m a Nobody
The world is one giant slapdash production, and I somehow drift through it anyway.
My father is a financial tycoon, but I can barely handle addition and subtraction under ten. My mother is a gorgeous award-winning actress, while I look perfectly ordinary. My brother held his first solo art exhibition at four, while at five I was still toddling after him babbling nonsense.
Even our maid, Wang Ma, and our butler, Uncle Chen, turned out to be retired legends hiding in plain sight.
Thankfully, all of them adored me. I slowly made peace with being ordinary.
Then one day, a genius girl who had gone viral online showed up at our door and demanded that I give her back her place as the real daughter of the Su family.
Wonderful. The worry that had been hanging over me for years finally dropped dead.