Aristocracy
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?”
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.”
Gazing at the Dragon
Everyone said I was blessed by fate.
Born behind vermilion gates, I rested my head on jade and wrapped myself in brocade.
At three, I began my education, studying essays on how to govern the realm.
At five, I held an abacus, calculating the empire’s grain and coin.
At twelve, I debated the scholars in the clan school and, though I was a girl, took first place above them all.
At fifteen, during my coming-of-age banquet, warlords from three regions offered mountains and rivers as my betrothal gifts.
And yet, I chose the hardest road of all.
The day I eloped with a lowly soldier who guarded the city gate, the entire city laughed at me for debasing myself.
After one night of passion, I was stricken from the Yin Clan’s rolls, my spotless reputation ruined.
No one knew that the soldier was the last surviving bloodline of the imperial house.
They were fighting for the realm.
What I was fighting for was the right to take history’s iron brush in hand and rewrite the world with a name that could not be questioned.
Fragrant Grass Year After Year
On the day of my hairpin ceremony, my brother-in-law, tipsy from wine, barged into my room.
That same night, my mouth was gagged and I was taken to the Marquis’s Mansion.
My legitimate elder sister told me she could not bear children and needed to borrow my womb.
A year later, I gave birth to a son.
My legitimate elder sister brought me to the Bamboo Garden, where four old maids covered my mouth and buried me in a pit they had dug long before.
Before I died, I kept wondering what the point had been of someone like me coming into this world.
But I never imagined that I would be dug up again.
The person who found me was small and thin, yet he staggered along with me on his back for ten miles.
He covered me with the only clothing he had and gave me a chance to live.
An old man took me in. From that day on, I changed my name and became someone else.
Five years later, my wonton shop opened in Capital City, and I happened to run into my legitimate elder sister and her family being sold off.
She begged me to save her son.
But I pointed to the young man kneeling off to the side and said, “I’ll only save him.”
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.
Hibiscus
I disguised myself as a man and spent twelve years in the barracks as a no-good soldier-only to suddenly learn that I was the Prefect’s true daughter.
The impostor daughter clutched my sleeve, sobbing as she shook it.
“Sister, I know I stole the place that should have been yours. I only beg you not to take away the love Father, Mother, and our brothers have for me.”
What she didn’t know was that I had no interest in stealing her love.
All I wanted was to get my brothers-in-arms some military pay.
The Girl He Saved, The Woman He Lost
Shen Shiji once saved my life, pulling me from a pile of corpses.
In the years before I was recognized by the palace and returned to my royal roots, he taught me to read and practice martial arts, treating me with the utmost tenderness.
That was until I killed the woman he had loved for years.
To avenge her, Shen Shiji became my Prince Consort.
He spent years plotting to turn everyone against me, stripping me of my allies and family. After subjecting me to every imaginable torment, he threw me back into that same pile of corpses.
Shen Shiji told me his greatest regret was saving me all those years ago.
And so, having been reborn, I scrambled out of that pile of corpses on my own, wasting no time.
Later, I heard that it rained heavily that day.
The usually aloof Young Marquis Shen ignored the filth and the mud, kneeling in the pile of corpses and digging until his hands were bloody and raw.
All just to find a Little Beggar.
Daddy, I Chose You!
Seven years ago, Song Yunnian was framed by her scheming sister, her reputation ruined, and she gave birth to a child of unknown paternity.
Seven years later, she returns with a vengeance, bringing her adorable child and multiple secret identities to crush her enemies and sweep away anyone who stands in her way.
Unexpectedly, she finds herself stuck with two “clingy pieces of candy”-one big and one small-and she can’t shake them off.
The little one says, “Mommy, it’s buy one get one free!”
The big one traps her in his arms and grits his teeth. “Hacking my account?”
Song Yunnian: “Master Fu, let me explain.”
The man pulls out two more children. “Stealing my kids?”
Song Yunnian grits her teeth. The scumbag who caused her to be disgraced back then was him?
Fu Yanchen pulls her into his embrace. “Steal one, pay back ten. Have another baby to compensate me!”
A Snowflake
“Fine, I’ll be the one to marry him.”
The moment the words left my mouth, a sudden sense of relief washed over me.
It was no big deal. In fact, I suppose you could even call this a blessing, couldn’t you?
I Faked My Death to Escape My Husband
During the first year of our marriage, at my birthday banquet, a songstress appeared wearing a silk dress identical to mine.
My husband’s expression turned ice-cold. “Someone, strip that dress off her.”
He was clearly defending my honor, yet I felt not a single spark of warmth in my heart.
For I knew that he was also the man who had once spent a fortune on that very songstress and made a pact to elope with her.