Aristocracy
Rebel? Me? I’m Only Four!
A Little Spirit Mushroom has been reborn as a human-weak, pitiful, and recently orphaned with no home to call her own.
To get a bite to eat, a place to stay, and to settle her karmic debts, the Little Spirit Mushroom diligently (not really) became the personal maid of a powerful patron.
When her master worked, she slept. When her master had pastries, she stole them. When her master drank tea, she tasted it first. When her master was targeted by assassins, she was the first to run.
The Little Spirit Mushroom successfully annoyed her master and was punished with reflection against a wall.
But later, her master couldn’t bear to punish her anymore.
Finally, through her efforts, her patron helped her complete her revenge.
Her mission accomplished, the Little Mushroom prepared to retire, secretly asking her master to grant her a small territory where she could live out her days in peace.
However, once the Little Mushroom grew up, her master dragged her off to become the Empress.
The Little Mushroom sighed; being an Empress was even harder than being a mushroom.
Scattered Clouds
I am the most pathetic Marchioness in all of the capital.
Marquis Jing’an married me for one reason only: I was honest, kind, and easy to manipulate.
Before our wedding, he told me quite bluntly, without a shred of hesitation:
“As long as you treat my beloved Concubine Bai well once you enter my home, and as long as you don’t get jealous or pick fights with her, I will grant you the dignity and status you deserve.”
For the sake of my family, I had no choice but to marry him.
From then on, whenever Concubine Bai sat, I stood.
When Concubine Bai ate meat, I drank the broth.
Whenever rewards arrived from the palace, Concubine Bai got first pick; I only received whatever she didn’t want.
I thought Marquis Jing’an was satisfied with my performance over the years, yet when I prepared to leave, he blocked the doorway, his hands trembling.
“You are my wife! You aren’t going anywhere!”
Me: “?”
I’m literally making room for your sweetheart!
She Always Wants to Run Away
I was the most envied courtesan in all the capital.
Simply because I bore a seventy-percent resemblance to the Crown Princess, someone threw down a fortune and bought me on the very night I was first listed.
Hugging that heavy pile of silver, I sat in a small sedan chair, both thrilled and anxious.
I secretly made up my mind: even if my patron turned out to be some nasty sixty-year-old geezer, I would still gaze at him with tender affection and kiss him anyway.
As long as I could get my contract of sale and take hold of my own freedom, I could do anything!
But when I saw the prisoner in the cell, soaked with urine and raving like a madman…
I turned around and wanted to leave.
Sorry. I had still overestimated myself!
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.
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.
Skeleton Mystery
At the Dong Manor’s night banquet, the beautiful Singing Girl transformed into a Pink Skeleton.
The next day, I entered the manor to interrogate, but everyone gave the same answer: they saw nothing.
What was even more outrageous-
The coroner’s examination revealed that the skeleton was a man!
Soaring Crane
When I married Pei Miao, everyone praised our union as a match made in heaven. Our honeymoon bliss lasted less than three months before I discovered he had a soulmate. Pei Miao cherished and adored her, even setting up a private residence for her outside our home. When I confronted him, he coldly rebuked me: jealousy was unbecoming of a virtuous wife. So I learned to be magnanimous, until I too stepped beyond the boundaries of marriage and forced him to taste the same pain he had given me.
Spring Warmth
My father was a treacherous official.
The man who raided my home was my fiancé.
When he slipped the iron chain around my neck, his touch was even more tender than the year he placed a flower wreath upon my head.
On the day my father was beheaded in public, I was calmly picking lice off my mother. I remarked, “If I had a fire, I could stir-fry these lice and pair them with a pot of wine.”
Unexpectedly, my words drew a laugh from the young general in the neighboring cell, despite the hooks driven through his collarbones. Was it that funny?
Spring Without Rain
My father had many illegitimate daughters.
Some were brilliantly talented, some were gifted in song and dance, and others possessed breathtaking beauty.
He scoured the world for beauties, siring one little belle after another.
Among them all, his favorite was Xidai.
Consequently, she was the one I hated most.
“She is the most beautiful and has a timid nature. She’ll be the safest choice to accompany you when you marry into the Wang Family,”
Father said, “I am not being partial; I am doing this for your own good.”
But I thought to myself: his actions did not match his words.
Sudden Spring
My mother, a concubine, wanted me to marry honorably: “A woman must be a proper wife.”
I made vague noises of agreement, but inwardly I didn’t take it to heart.
Being a proper wife to a peddler or servant meant poverty and beatings from the man.
Being a proper wife in a wealthy household meant constant scheming and exhausting yourself managing the family.
So as soon as my mother passed on, I went to Yujing Tower and registered as a prostitute.
Sixty taels of silver a night, absolutely no haggling.