Aristocracy
Old Mountain Spring
My fiancé had been secretly sponsoring a young girl behind my back.
As my car passed by her school, I saw the girl clutching the faded sleeve of a teenage boy, timidly calling him Brother Xu.
The boy had delicate, handsome features and stood tall and elegant, like a white birch tree.
“Bring him over,” I said. “Miss?” I lifted my chin, my tone indifferent. “It’s nothing. I just want to do some sponsoring of my own.”
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 Princess Only Wants a Divorce
During the year our love was at its peak, the young general whose name shook the borderlands used all his military merit to petition my Imperial Father for my hand in marriage.
But three years later, a woman arrived at our door clutching a child, weeping and begging me to take them in.
My husband claimed he had simply had too much to drink and made a terrible mistake.
My mother-in-law said that since I had already ruined my husband’s career prospects, I could not go so far as to sever his bloodline as well.
My closest kin advised me to be magnanimous, telling me that this was simply how every mistress of a household in the capital lived.
Only my sister, with whom I had never seen eye to eye, patted my back and told me: “In the past, you let your Imperial Brother make your decisions for you.” “Later, you let your husband make your decisions for you.” “Now, it is time you learned to grow up on your own.” “After all, you have a little girl of your own now.”
I looked down at the tiny daughter in my arms, who was still sucking on her fingers.
I understood that if I were weak, my daughter would never know how to be strong.
If I were easily bullied, my daughter would never know how to be independent. This time, it was my turn to act.
This Life for You
I stayed by his side from his impoverished youth until he held the world in his palm.
Yet, I was forced to watch as he elevated my half-sister to the status of equal wife and executed my entire family.
I met a miserable end. Given a second chance at life, I watch as his back bows in defeat, his body trembling with regret.
I burn our marriage contract. I wish him a meteoric rise and a boundless future.
A boundless future, without me.
Moth to the Flame
Three months after marrying into the Marquis Manor, I became pregnant.
A maid brought me a bowl of medicinal soup, claiming it was a gift from the Empress Dowager to help stabilize my pregnancy.
I took the bowl but didn’t dare to drink it.
In my previous life, not long after I drank it, I fell into a coma.
When I finally woke, I was trapped in a sea of flames, and both mother and child perished.
At that moment, the maid urged me, “Please drink it quickly, Madam. Refusing a gift from the Empress Dowager is a punishable offense.”
Princess’s Journey: The Beauty’s Colors Adorn Silk
After my rebirth, my mother held me in her arms, teasing me playfully.
“Jiaojiao, which one of them would you like as your husband?” I looked at my two young elder cousins.
In my past life, one of them killed me, and the other killed my body double. Both were ruthless, predatory men.
If I ever got involved with them again, would I even survive? I couldn’t help but burst into tears.
Clinging to my mother’s neck, I acted spoiled and pleaded, “Mother, I don’t want either of them.” “Then… you shall have both.”
My mother’s expression was one of absolute determination. Me: ??
Fragrant Intrigue
I am the dowry maid for the legitimate daughter of the Shen Manor.
Last night, I woke up in the Heir’s bed.
Now, the servants of the entire manor are pointing and whispering at me: “A lowly wench like this deserves to be beaten to death with clubs!”
Shen Yujiao sat regally at the head of the hall. “In that case, let’s just promote her to a Concubine.”
She watched with a smile as I knelt and kowtowed to thank her for her mercy.
Yet, I caught the scent of Hehuan Powder in the air.
That was the very incense I had blended with my own hands for her husband’s use.
Princess’s Journey: Graceful and Peaceful
While I was offering prayers to Buddha on the mountain, a young gentleman suddenly intruded upon my solitude.
He apologized, his face flushing a deep crimson.
Yet, I heard his inner thoughts: [I have heard the Princess is kind and benevolent; I wonder if she will blame me.]
[I only ended up in the wrong place because I was trying to escape my eldest brother’s schemes.]
[How should I apologize to make the Princess happy?]
He did not know that I had experienced a dream.
In that dream, I followed the guidance of his inner voice to investigate his claims, only to walk step by step toward a dead end.
In the end, my Imperial Father grew to loathe me, my eldest brother was deposed, and I was drowned in a pond.
Only after my death did I learn that this young gentleman could choose who heard his heart’s voice.
It was by relying on this trick alone that he rose from being an Outer Chamber Son to the legitimate second son of a Marquis’s manor.
Now. I looked at the fair-skinned, red-lipped young gentleman before me, who appeared shy and timid.
I gave him a gentle smile. “Someone, come. For trespassing in the Forbidden Courtyard, give him thirty strokes of the cane.”
Beauty’s Plight
The Crown Prince’s White Moonlight, the woman he’d pined after for ten years, had finally returned.
She lifted her chin and looked down her nose at me. “You. Go back to where you came from.”
I lifted my skirts and stepped into the carriage, then turned back to smile at her. “Sorry,” I said lightly, “but this seat? You’re never getting it back.”
Princess’s Journey: Life in Chang’an Is Not Easy
I spent eighteen years in a Buddhist temple.
Eighteen years later, I returned as Princess Chang’an. To compensate me for those lost years, the Empress Mother made a public promise: she would grant me any one thing I desired.
I looked around the room, my gaze landing on Wei Zhao, who shone brilliantly amidst the unremarkable crowd. Pointing at him, I declared, “I want him to be my Imperial Son-in-Law.”
Only later did I discover that Wei Zhao and my younger sister, Princess Kangle, were childhood sweethearts. They were a mere imperial decree away from being wed.
But what of it?
Even if I had known from the start, I still would have claimed Wei Zhao as mine!