2026
The Truth of the Tooth Fairy
In 2016, I was working as a security guard in a residential complex.
A homeowner’s ten-year-old daughter vanished from her bedroom under bizarre circumstances.
On the rumpled bedsheets, all that remained was a pair of bloodstained underwear.
The police and all of us searched for her with everything we had, but we found no leads at all.
Then I remembered a fairy tale the girl had once told us about when she was playing in the complex.
It was called the “Tooth Fairy.” Years later, I got married and had a child of my own.
When my kid reached the age of losing baby teeth, my wife told her a bedtime story.
And once again, I heard the words “Tooth Fairy.” Startled, I asked, “Is that how the story goes?”
“Yeah.”
That night, after lying awake until dawn, I contacted the officer who had been in charge of the case back then.
“We were wrong all those years ago.”
Crown of Pearls
When I was born, the stars showed an omen so strange that the Imperial Observatory calculated until dawn broke at the edge of the sky, yet still could not reach a conclusion.
The National Preceptor, who had lived for more than two hundred years, descended from Tianxuan Pavilion and left behind a single prophecy for me.
“This child will kill the current emperor.”
My father dropped to his knees in terror, kowtowing to his imperial father and begging him to spare my life.
The emperor held me in his arms-his newborn granddaughter, bound to him by blood-and was silent for a very long time.
In the sixteenth year of Shunhe, my imperial grandfather was forty-nine years old, and learned his fate ahead of time.
After Being Pushed into a Deep Well, I Understood
After my husband’s favored concubine shoved me into a deep well, I miscarried. As crimson blood spread through the water, I heard a strange melody rise from the depths.
“Third Set of National Middle School Students’ Radio Gymnastics, Dancing Youth, begins now.”
Bumper Harvest
I was the concubine Madam forced on the General.
She was testing whether his heart had strayed.
He remained perfectly unmoved and ordered me to copy scriptures all night to prove his devotion.
And me? My hand ached. So did my heart.
Soul-Whip 7: Mountain Road Tragedy
“If you pass the scene of a car accident, don’t stare.”
“If someone tries to hitch a ride at midnight, don’t stop unless you have to.”
“And don’t think driving a big rig makes you so intimidating that trouble won’t come looking for you.”
Those were the warnings my Master gave me.
For more than ten years, I kept them close to heart.
But tonight, I made an exception.
At midnight, I came across a family of four trying to flag me down.
The moment the husband saw my headlights, he dropped to his knees at the roadside and kept kowtowing.
Their black sedan was sitting crookedly off to the side, as if it had broken down.
All four of them looked badly shaken. I let them climb into my truck.
Pale with fear, the husband told me that a strange red sports car had been chasing them along the mountain road just moments ago.
I told him not to worry. I was driving a heavy truck; no car would dare mess with me.
Just then, the radio began reporting a traffic accident. On the very stretch of mountain road we were driving along, a red sports car and a black sedan had been involved in a serious crash.
The driver of the red sports car had died at the scene.
Earth Master Girl: Ghost Marriage on Mount Tai
I was climbing Mount Tai at night when I saw people holding a traditional Chinese wedding on the mountain.
The passersby started clamoring for wedding candy, but I spoke up to stop them.
A procession of ghosts carried the bridal sedan, with suona horns clearing the way.
The Ghost King was taking a bride; the living were to keep their distance.
They all cursed me for spouting nonsense.
But what they didn’t know was that I was the only Earth Master successor.
That Awesome Girl!
The villain was rich, but depressed.
I was poor, and worse, I was the heroine of an angst novel.
My parents were destined to die, leaving me and my grandmother to depend on each other.
Then, when Grandma fell seriously ill, I would have no choice but to grovel at the male lead’s feet.
He would torment me physically and emotionally, lock me up, make me miscarry, and in the end, I would die in despair.
Only then would he be filled with regret.
I figured all of it came down to being broke, so I decided to throw my lot in with the villain.
I found the villain quietly slitting his wrists and, fighting off the dizziness from low blood sugar, tried to talk him down.
“I’m not here to stop you. I just wanted to discuss whether you could maybe die a little later.”
“You don’t want your assets to go to your dad’s illegitimate son, do you? Are you really okay with them inheriting your money, buying yachts and private jets, and traveling the world?”
“All you have to do is hold on for a few more years. Then you’ll found your own company, become the new darling of the tech industry, and multiply your wealth more than tenfold.”
“I’ll help you take a shortcut. When the time comes, give me a cut, and I’ll help you get rid of Xie Xun.”
The villain’s eyes lit up, but he still looked disdainful.
“You?”
“Be grateful. Besides me, who else is on your side? Your dad? Your mom?”
That stabbed the villain right where it hurt.
Because he was an orphan with both parents still alive.
What to Do If My Husband Loses His Memory on Our Divorce Day?
The man who had been sleeping in a separate room from me for the past six months was standing there with a pillow in his arms when I blocked him at the top of the stairs.
“The two of us together aren’t even fifty yet. We’re at the age when we should be all over each other. Is sleeping in separate rooms normal?”
He frowned at me, staring so hard that cold sweat prickled down my spine.
At last, he nodded. “Mm. It isn’t very normal.” Emboldened, I snatched the pillow out of his arms and grumbled, “You never used to be like this.”
“What did I use to be like?”
“You used to hold me every night when we slept, and before bed you’d call me your little baby.”
“…Did I?”
“You did!”
Look at me. Do these look like the eyes of a liar?
The Second Male Lead Refuses Deep Affection
I transmigrated into the mistress of the Marquis’s Mansion, and my stepson was the devoted second male lead.
When he grew up, he would try to take the female lead by force and spend fortunes on her without blinking.
As for the male lead, he would sow discord, frame him, and set him up at every turn.
In the end, the male and female leads would join forces to defeat him.
He would flee into monastic life and never marry.
And the Marquis’s Mansion, implicated because of him, would be raided, stripped of its title, and tragically exiled.
After transmigrating, I looked at the tiny little thing in front of me, pretending to be obedient.
He wanted to grow gloomy and brooding? Absolutely not.
He was going to become sunny if it killed me. He wanted to squander money?
Absolutely not. I had to raise him into a stingy, family-minded model of virtue.
I was definitely going to protect the vast fortune of the Marquis’s Mansion.
Later, everyone said I threw money around like dirt and lived in arrogant, extravagant luxury.
My stepson refuted them.
“Nonsense. My mother is the most frugal, capable, virtuous, and dignified woman there is. She sponsored so many scholars with money she saved up herself. Could you do that?”
Someone said my methods were ruthless and that I acted like a man.
My stepson’s face turned cold.
“My mother is gentle, virtuous, and the very soul of benevolence. She clearly could have just robbed you outright, yet she still gave you a chance to compete fairly. You’re the one who was useless. Utter trash.”
Even his father couldn’t stand it anymore.
“Son, open your eyes and take a good look. Your mother is not the kind of person who lets herself be wronged.”
My stepson flew into a rage.
“Father, don’t force me to turn against you. You can say whatever you want about me, but you absolutely cannot say that about my mother.”
Endless Green in the Deep Courtyard
I waited bitterly for Qu Huang for three years, only to receive a letter of divorce.
When the message arrived, I was still wiping down his bedridden mother.
It was March, and the late spring cold had returned, yet I was drenched in sweat from exhaustion.
My hands shook so badly I could barely take the thin silk letter the attendant handed me.
“Where is my husband?”
“The young master has already arrived in the front hall.”
I sighed, set down the damp towel in my hand, and smoothed back the stray hair at my temples.
“Very well. I’ll go with you.”