Supernatural
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.
Selling Talismans in My Live Stream
I run a science-debunking channel.
I’m also a Taoist priest.
Every day, I livestream ways to expose feudal superstition for what it is.
One day, a young woman asked me to help sever a toxic romantic entanglement.
The next day, her boyfriend was dead.
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.”
Skin Changer
My younger sister gave birth to a son in the Eastern Palace.
I brought a fortune in family wealth and cartloads of rare medicinal pills with me to the palace to visit her.
The moment she saw me, she nestled into my arms and began to cry, tears falling one after another.
Her movements were intimate, her voice soft and spoiled. There was not the slightest trace of distance or unfamiliarity between us.
And yet my entire body went rigid, a chill crawling up my spine and sinking into my heart.
Because the face before me, identical to my sister’s in every way,
was not the dead woman’s skin I had sewn onto her with my own hands.
Seven Mirrors Bureau: Demon Queller
While escorting a shipment through the mountains, I found a woman out in the wilds.
I immediately had someone take her back to Cloud City, and even wrote a letter to my husband.
But half a month later, when I returned,
I found An Chao tangled up with that woman in bed.
An Chao kissed her and murmured, “Ning Qiniang is coarse and rough. She can’t compare to your sweet gentleness.”
I kicked the door open.
Even in his panic, An Chao did not forget to shield the woman behind him.
“Qiniang, Rou Rou is a helpless orphan girl. Since you sent her back here, didn’t you mean for me to take her as a concubine?”
I was so furious I laughed.
An Chao had been blinded by the woman’s beauty. He clearly hadn’t read my letter carefully.
She was no orphan girl.
She was a fox woman!
Diary of the Fourteenth Year of the Republic
By sheer chance, I stumbled across a diary from a hundred years ago.
Its owner seemed to have been the young master of some wealthy household. Inside were little records of his daily life: “May 7, Year 14 of the Republic of China. Clear skies. I skipped class to play cards with my classmates, and my teacher chased me all the way home and scolded me. So annoying!”
I found it amusing, so I added a line beneath it: “May 2024. Been working for too long. Exhausted.”
The very next second, a sentence surfaced on the diary page: “Who are you?”
The Ex-Husband Keeps Courting Death
In my third year of living the high life in the Underworld, my ex-husband suddenly developed a passion for courting death.
To save him, I called in every favor I had, spent fortune after fortune, and kowtowed to King Yan until my head nearly fell off.
After a few months of this, I went from the richest soul in the Underworld to a homeless drifter.
Not only was I penniless, I also owed the Heaven and Earth Bank a massive loan.
King Yan had no idea what to do with me. After brooding over it for ages, he finally made a grand stroke of his brush:
“Permission granted for you to return to the mortal world for one day. Go collect money from the living to repay your debt.”
Bone Weighing
Fu Qiu had always accepted her lot in life.
When she was a child, a blind man read her fortune through bone-weighing and said her bones were light, her fate was lowly, and that in this life she could only sell her body.
As it happened, her family was going through hard times, so her father simply sold her to a brothel.
When she was still young and first put on display, the madam said that although she was beautiful, her face carried a pitiful, sorrowful look, and the customers she attracted would never be decent men.
Sure enough, every few days, she suffered another bout of abuse.
By middle age, her looks had withered, and she married a merchant. The neighbors said her thin lips and fox-like eyes meant she would never be the faithful sort.
Before long, rumors were flying everywhere. The merchant could not bear it, and on a rainy night, he drove her out of the house.
Even so, she never hated anyone. She only hated that her own fate was so poor.
As she lay on the verge of death, the Old Blind Man happened to pass by drunk, bragging to the crowd.
“Twenty years ago, I saw a little girl in another town. She was so young, but she already had the looks to topple a kingdom.
“So I pretended to be blind, did a bone-weighing for her, and told her she had a lowly fate-that in this life, she could only become a whore.
“And guess what? Her whole family believed me!”
She Is a Star
Chapter 0
After my father beat me to death in a drunken rage, I was reborn as my grandmother’s best friend-an obstetrician-gynecologist.
Grandma asked anxiously, “Xiao Fang, is the baby healthy?”
I said, “It’s brain-damaged. I recommend aborting it.”
Born as a Yin Official
In the unluckiest year of my life, a wandering Daoist priest came to town.
He gave my father an idea: have me worship a Household Guardian Immortal to suppress my bad luck, and maybe I would live past the age of ten.
My father was a rough man who had made his fortune in troubled times by the barrel of a gun.
He called his adjutant over and did the math for him. “One Household Guardian Immortal keeps her alive to ten, two keep her alive to twenty, and twenty keep her alive to two hundred. Right?”
The adjutant counted on his fingers. “Marshal, your math is absolutely correct.”
My father hardened his heart and rounded up all the pigs, cattle, and sheep from miles around as offerings.
“My damn girl is going to live ten thousand years!”
That year, my father rode into the old mountain forest on a pig with me and took eleven Household Guardian Immortal into our household.
He flew into a rage. “Damn it, that’s still one short of the twelve zodiac animals!”
Later, who knew where he bought a Daoist boy from, but that made the twelfth.