Betrayal
After Pairing with My Husband’s Bluetooth
I found a Bluetooth remote control in my husband’s bag.
I didn’t make a scene. I didn’t even confront him.
I just secretly paired it with my phone.
The next day,
at my younger brother-in-law’s wedding,
my husband’s scream rang out from beneath the bride’s skirt.
Embracing the Bridegroom
After five years of marrying into my family, my penniless scholar husband passed the imperial exam-and suddenly decided I, his butcher wife, reeked of grease and blood.
For half a month, he hemmed and hawed and refused to do his husbandly duties.
So I used the silver I’d earned selling pork to buy him two ink sticks and a ream of fine paper, then scraped together the last of my coins for a tiny bar of scented soap.
When I made it home through the rain, the big yellow dog under the eaves had one of the meat dumplings I’d wrapped dangling from its mouth.
From inside the house came a coy, wheedling voice.
“Father, the magistrate’s daughter smells so nice. Not like Mother.”
“And these pastries taste better than meat dumplings too.”
I took all the bits and pieces I’d hidden against my chest and threw them out-along with the father and son.
When Zheng Huaishu signed the divorce papers, he held our son in his arms and glared at me with resentment.
All the neighbors in the village laughed at me for letting a future official go.
The very next day, the matchmaker introduced me to a fair, slender stutterer.
A little girl trailed behind him.
Father and daughter gave me timid looks.
I asked irritably, “How often can you do your husbandly duties?”
“And how much meat will you eat in a day?”
The stutterer’s face turned bright red. The matchmaker yanked his clothes down over half his shoulder, and he said in a slow, gentle voice, “As long as my child gets a mouthful of rice… as her father, I’ll do anything…”
The Fate-Bound Marriage Contract
On the eve of my wedding, my future mother-in-law forced me to press my bloodied handprint onto the paper. She told me the Shen Family wasn’t marrying me for love, but because my fate could save her son.
What she didn’t know was that the way to break that Marriage Contract had been left to me by my grandmother herself.
A Small Matter About Spring
On the day I died, Xiao Xu was about to make another woman his empress.
He came to the Cold Palace, hoping I would swallow my pride and yield to him. What greeted him was only my ice-cold corpse.
For reasons no one could explain, Xiao Xu broke down. He did one deranged thing after another, and every day he wept blood before my grave.
In the end, he got his wish and was reborn a thousand years later.
In the twenty-first century, Xiao Xu and I were classmates.
He was still dazzling. Still exceptional.
He was looking for me.
But he didn’t know that I had been reborn too, with all my memories intact.
The Female Protagonist Plans to Kill the Male Protagonist Again
My husband is someone who transmigrated into a novel.
What a coincidence. So am I.
He said, “I’m the protagonist of a male-oriented webnovel, so what I’ve gathered isn’t a harem, but various factions.”
I said, “I’m the protagonist of a female-oriented webnovel, so all those various factions of yours love me but can never have me.”
He said I was joking.
I burst out laughing. “You caught me. I was joking. The truth is, they’ve already had me.”
Peach Blossom Hairpin
I worked as a maid at Marquis Manor for ten years. Then, simply because the young lady lost a Peach Blossom Hairpin, I was driven out of the household.
In the blink of an eye, many years passed. I had nearly let go of all the grudges and grievances between me and Marquis Manor.
But to my surprise, one night, the young lady of Marquis Manor knelt before me in utter disarray, begging me to take her in.
Her husband’s family had cast her out. In all the vast world, she had nowhere left to go.
And now, I was the only person she could turn to.
The Consort Doesn’t Want to Fall in Love
The Noble Consort was the most clearheaded woman I had ever met.
Even though His Majesty showered her with endless, singular favor, she always guarded her heart and refused to give it away.
I thought that if things went on like this, she would eventually be moved by His Majesty and meet him with sincerity in return.
Unfortunately, I never got to see that day.
Because His Majesty found someone else to cherish. He came to the Noble Consort for advice, asking her to help him win over the young woman he adored.
He said, “I have never liked a girl this much before. What do you think of me marrying her and making her Empress?”
Husband with Terminal Cancer
My husband was sick and dying.
But before he died, he insisted on divorcing me.
He transferred every asset under his name, including the company, to me and left himself without a penny.
The night we signed the divorce agreement, he held me and cried like his heart was being ripped out.
He said this was the last thing he could do for me. He didn’t want me, after his death, to become the widow everyone pitied-the woman whose husband had died.
It was his one and only wish before he passed. As the wife who loved him so deeply, how could I possibly refuse?
The night before we were supposed to pick up the divorce certificate, he suddenly fell into a coma and was rushed to the hospital.
The doctor issued a critical condition notice.
And I signed the consent form to forgo treatment without hesitation.
They couldn’t save my husband. He died on that rain-lashed night.
I turned away, wiped the tears from my eyes, and tore the divorce agreement to shreds with a smile.
That same night, I called the funeral home. Before dawn broke, I had him sent into the cremator and burned down to a handful of ash.
Yinyin
After my sister passed away, Jiang Huaizhou treated me like her substitute.
He married me, yet he despised me.
Outside our marriage, he kept one lover after another.
He even mocked me, saying, “Even with Weiwei dead, you will never compare to her.”
He belittled me until I was worth less than nothing.
But then I remembered that there had once been someone who said to me:
“Yinyin, no one else matters. You matter most.”
After the Dissolution Notice Was Issued
The woman my husband had always pined for was parachuted in as my intern.
She sobbed and accused me of bullying her, and for the first time, my husband raised a hand against me.
The next day, I returned to the company with the group’s dissolution notice in hand.
Only then did they realize that his position as deputy general manager-and the entire office building-were both mine to control.