Tragedy
Seeing the Starlight
On the eve of our wedding, I discovered a spreadsheet on Ji Qing’s computer.
It was filled with information about every girl he had ever dated.
In my column, it read: [Law-abiding and dutiful; suitable for marriage.]
Meanwhile, the entry for his first love read: [You are a bird of the air; you should fly proudly toward the horizon.]
He once said he would never marry her.
Because being his wife meant laboring over three meals a day, raising children, and serving one’s in-laws.
He couldn’t bear to subject her to that.
I didn’t argue, and I didn’t make a scene.
The next day, I went back to the television station.
Ji Qing didn’t know that I had a form of my own.
It was an application for a transfer to Africa to serve as a war correspondent.
The person I truly love is still there.
I’m going to find him and bring him back.
Shadow Play
Before she died, my closest friend gave me two things.
A piece of skin she had cut from her own body, and her lover.
She asked me to use that skin to make a shadow puppet for the opera…
I think I understood what she meant. She was telling me: Ah Mei, I’m giving you a generous gift. You should return the favor-kill someone for me.
She Has Been in the Wind for Two Years
She Has Been in the Wind for Two Years
Synopsis: Two years after my wife passed away, I still received messages from her every day and ate the dinners she had “arranged” for me.
I thought she had never truly left-until one late night, when I followed a text begging for help back home and realized I had been living all along inside the Fengli she left behind for me.
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.
She Was My Radiant World
I was beaten and driven out of the Chancellor’s Mansion with clubs.
As I lay dying of illness in the pouring rain, a scholar picked me up and took me home.
He didn’t mind my filth, nor did he mind my stupidity.
He cared for me in silence, acting even more like a mute than I did.
Once my injuries had healed, I prepared to bid the scholar farewell.
He went out to buy supplies for my journey, but he did not return that night. When I finally found him, I discovered that someone had broken both his legs and left him on the street to die.
He saw me and looked dazed for a moment, his face tinged with regret.
“Zhizhi, why haven’t you left? You should have gone.”
I wanted to ask myself that too-why hadn’t I left? Perhaps it was the few scraps of conscience I had left that made me unable to walk away, unable to avoid the trouble.
I dragged him home and nursed him with care. Before long, he recovered.
Neither of us ever mentioned my departure again. Later, his name appeared on the golden roster.
He was named the Top Graduate during the palace examinations, and he was on the verge of achieving fame and fortune.
Yet, he knelt and pleaded with His Majesty to thoroughly reinvestigate the case of the deposed Crown Prince from years ago.
His Majesty was furious. He threw him into the Imperial Prison and ordered his exile to the frontier.
I had no money and couldn’t get into the Imperial Prison.
I could only wait at the city gates, hoping to run into him and ask what on earth had happened.
But I waited through several dawns and dusks, and he never came.
Later still, I entered the palace as a study companion for the Fifth Princess.
Only then did I learn that a scholar in the Imperial Prison that year had died to prove his resolve, smashing his head against the blood-stained walls of the cell. Naturally, there were no guards to escort a prisoner out through the city gates.
But the Song Duhe I knew was never a reckless man, and he certainly wasn’t one to choose death so easily.
Shen Cuo
The day I was cast aside for jealousy, more than half the capital applauded.
My mother-in-law wept and complained that I controlled her son, forbidding him from drinking and from taking concubines, making him the laughingstock of the city as a henpecked husband.
What no one knew was that my husband, Qi Chong, used that “henpecked” reputation as an excuse to turn away people asking to borrow money, dodge social obligations, reject beautiful spy-concubines sent by political rivals with ill intent, and rise smoothly through officialdom.
In the end, I alone bore the infamy of being a shrew and a jealous wife. I angered my father to death, and I myself fell gravely ill and died.
When I opened my eyes again, I had returned to the first year of my marriage to Qi Chong.
At a banquet, Qi Chong didn’t dare refuse the beautiful spy sent by his superior, and pushed me forward instead. Lifting his cup, he put on a troubled expression and said,
“I like the beauty very much.
“But if I bring her into the household, my wife will be upset again.”
What he didn’t know was that I took the beauty’s hand, then turned back to him with a gentle, magnanimous smile.
“Since my husband is so fond of her, and I’ve already checked that your birth dates are compatible, why not bring her into the household today?”
Qi Chong’s face filled with shock. He froze where he stood.
Shroud of Clouds
I was the daughter of a noble house, personally chosen by the emperor to enter the palace. With a single imperial edict, I was made Noble Consort. Everyone envied my good fortune, never knowing that within a gilded cage, even a sparrow cannot fly free. On the day I entered the palace, the matron attending my bath told me: “His Majesty is gentle and kind. Your Grace, do not be afraid.” But in this fathomless palace, the very earth was piled with bones. Every terror within these walls had been wrought by his own hand.
Slaying Evil and Vanquishing Wickedness
After I died, my bones became the sword in his hand.
Little did he know that I rarely exercised while I was alive, and I’d developed osteoporosis at a young age.
The sword forged from my bones was sharp enough, but it lacked resilience.
The very first time he used me, someone lopped off his head.
Snow and Bodhi
The day I died was the day my betrothed celebrated his wedding.
In a ruined temple on the outskirts of the city, blood poured from my eyes, ears, nose, and mouth. I lay collapsed over a prayer mat, weeping before the long-dust-covered statue of Guanyin.
In this life, this humble believer had never wronged Heaven or Earth. So why had I ended up betrayed and abandoned by everyone?
Guanyin did not answer. She only gazed down at me with compassion.
Outside the door came the hurried thunder of hooves. Someone, carrying the chill of the night on his shoulders, was walking toward me.
My eyes could no longer see. I could only turn uselessly in his direction and beg in a hoarse voice,
“Whoever you are, please… give me a proper burial. In my next life, I will repay you.”
Trembling, he gathered me into his arms. A single scalding tear fell onto the center of my brow.
On the night of the first snow, the cold was bitter.
The young granddaughter, cherished like a pearl in the palm of the Marquis of Loyalty and Valor, died in the wilderness at the age of sixteen.
Snow White’s Chains
I held my little sister’s hand as we crossed the street.
A police officer stopped me and asked, “Whose hand are you holding?”
I glanced at the empty space behind me and smiled.
From the moment I decided to become a criminal, I never thought of regretting it.