Ancient China
The Scholar’s Wife
The year I turned eighteen, my mother took five taels of silver and married me off to Ji Songzhu, a man infamous far and wide for bringing death to his wives.
Before me, both of his previous wives had died of sudden illness three days before the wedding.
The Stench of Copper
My father was the richest man in Great Zhou, and I was his only daughter.
To protect me, he arranged for me to marry into Marquis Manor with an enormous dowry.
On the day of my engagement, I had a dream.
I dreamed that Marquis Manor looked down on me for being born to a merchant family, while the Young Marquis doted wholeheartedly on his talented cousin.
After my father died, my dowry was swallowed up completely.
To make his cousin his legitimate wife, the Young Marquis bribed the midwife to murder me while I was in childbirth.
When I woke from the dream, the Young Marquis walked into my family’s jewelry shop with his cousin in tow.
“Since you’re going to marry into Marquis Manor, you ought to shed that stink of money. Marquis Manor can’t afford that kind of embarrassment.
“Give this shop to my cousin. Consider it a greeting gift from you, her future sister-in-law.”
I looked at his smug, superior face and let out a cold laugh.
Then I turned and ordered the steward to throw him out.
“What kind of down-and-out household starts eyeing a wife’s dowry before she’s even married in?
“Your highborn Marquis Manor has worse manners than a farming family!”
The Substitute Empress
On the day I was deposed and consigned to the Cold Palace, Yan Yuheng came personally to see me off.
Before the palace gates were locked, he asked whether I hated him.
I touched the old gold hairpin hidden in my sleeve and smiled. For three years as Empress, I learned to speak like her, to carry myself like her, and to love him the way she once had.
But even as I was dying, he never understood: I was never like Shen Zhaotang. I had only acted too well.
The Thorn Hairpin
The first thing Lu Xiangzhi did after becoming the top scorer in the imperial examination was divorce his wife.
“The Shen family woman is virtuous enough, but far too dull.”
He married a woman from a brothel, while I remarried a spoiled heir.
Lu Xiangzhi believed I had only married that ignorant, good-for-nothing dandy out of spite.
He thought a Shen family woman valued wifely virtue above all else, while that dandy was too unruly to be managed.
It would not be long, he assumed, before the man grew tired of a dull woman like me.
He waited half a year, yet never heard that I had been cast aside.
When Lu Xiangzhi finally could not resist coming to see me, I was holding a discipline ruler and tapping my dandy husband’s head with it, rather helplessly saying, “The teacher explained it three times. You still don’t understand?”
My dandy husband wrapped an arm around my waist and grinned like a shameless rogue.
“I don’t. I want a kiss.”
The Underworld Calls Me Little Master
In ancient, remote places, many eerie and terrifying things are bound to happen.
And these things happen right around Hua Jiunan.
In fact, Hua Jiunan is a part of these events himself.
For instance, he is a Corpse-Born Child!
The Vanished Heiress
Seven days before the grand wedding, the legitimate daughter of the Marquis Manor, who had gone to offer incense and pray for blessings, vanished at Xiangguo Temple.
The matriarch made a prompt decision.
Taking over a hundred manor servants who had signed death contracts, she surrounded Xiangguo Temple, sealing it off into an impenetrable fortress to suppress the news.
The Old Marquis entered the palace overnight to submit a memorial, claiming that my legitimate sister had made a great vow to pray for the Imperial Family and plead for rain to alleviate the suffering of the common people before her wedding.
On the day of the grand wedding, she would be married off directly from Xiangguo Temple.
A room full of maids and older servant women, along with me, a concubine-born daughter, knelt huddled together, everyone trembling like leaves.
Because we knew that if my legitimate sister wasn’t found in one piece within seven days… We would all die.
Tired of Spring Light
After our entire household was seized, My Lady became pregnant with our enemy’s child.
“What does a mere blood feud over a murdered father amount to?”
Faced with my disbelieving question, she gently stroked her swollen belly.
Her face was full of happiness.
Tomorrow, I Will Come Bearing My Qin
I was the founding Imperial Tutor of a dynasty.
I came here burdened with a mission from the System: to save a collapsing, chaotic realm.
In the end, all I earned was the hatred of countless people.
The young chief minister I had known since our youth became a stranger to me, standing against me at every turn.
The Guardian General I had personally promoted despised me for monopolizing power and ruling the court as a dictator.
And the Young Emperor, the boy I had raised with my own hands… He hated me most of all for tearing him away from the one he loved.
So they laid a trap for me and forced me to drink poisoned wine, driving me to take my own life.
Then, after my death… They summoned a shaman to call forth my memories.
They wanted to expose every evil deed I had ever committed to the world.
But later, after each of them had seen my memories… Every last one of them went mad.
Tong Yue
On the day my lady and I fled, I went east while she went west.
Dressed in her clothes and carrying her token, I drew the pursuers away for her.
At death’s door, I was rescued. My lady’s betrothed mistook me for her.
Badly wounded and stripped of my memories, I was cherished by him and carefully nursed. He even married me.
Five years later, he brought back a battered woman. It was my lady. Convinced that I had deceived him, Qi Yu hated me to the bone and sent me to my death with a cup of poison.
When I opened my eyes again, I was back on the day I lured the enemy away for her.
I returned her clothes and token, then smiled and told her: “Go east. And don’t look back.”
Walking Beside You
For three nights in a row, my maid said the same thing in her sleep:
“It seems one of the chickens in the backyard is missing.”
I simply assumed she was exhausted from her daily chores and thought nothing of it.
That was until we encountered a landslide on our way to the Capital. My maid was killed in the disaster, but I was rescued by soldiers who arrived just in time.
Trembling and lost, I sought out the commanding officer, intending to reveal my true identity as the daughter of the Provincial Commander.
He glanced at the maid’s clothes I was wearing and suddenly asked:
“Are the hens still brooding lately?”