Child Abuse
Wrong Love
On the day the divorce was finalized, I booked a high-speed rail ticket back to my hometown. A phone, an ID card, and a bank card with a meager balance were all I had left.
When the butler called to say the young master was crying for his mother, I finally understood that the son I had borne and his father loved the same woman.
Before the train left, I made one last promise: I would never disturb him again.
Married Off to a Hunter
Before my father, Zhao Yong’an, left to join the army, he said that if he died out there, my mother was allowed to remarry the village hunter.
But though the hunter had a crippled leg, he was the fiercest man around. They said he could kill a tiger with a single punch, and that he had even beaten his previous wife to death.
If my mother married him, it would be no different from sending her to her death.
Three years later, sure enough, news came that Father had died.
Grandmother and the clan elders took twenty taels of silver from the hunter and forced my mother to be sold off to him.
Call from Time and Space
In the dead of night, I received a phone call. The caller ID showed it was my husband. With a voice of utmost gravity, he told me that I would die at two o’clock in the morning.
But right now, he was clearly lying right beside me, fast asleep.
Provoking Trouble
I am Cui Yin, the eldest daughter of the Vice Minister of Rites.
I was raised in my maternal grandparents’ home since I was a child.
When I was seventeen, they brought me back to the capital, each of them appearing kind and benevolent.
But in private, my grandmother was indifferent, my father despised me, and my Stepmother Su hid a dagger behind her smile.
My older brother, born of the same mother, warned me, “Cui Yin, you must know your place and behave yourself. Otherwise, I will not show you any mercy.”
My innocent and romantic younger sister said with a beaming smile, “Sister, you grew up in a rural manor, and the clothes you’re wearing are quite out of fashion. I’ve gathered a few pieces I no longer wear to give to you.”
They even planned to marry me off as a successor wife to a profligate from the Commandery Duke Manor, a man who had beaten his first wife to death. …
Before entering the capital, I had originally intended to hang myself.
It was my maid, Huaihua, who desperately clung to my legs.
“Miss! Miss, don’t die! People from the Cui Family of the Capital have arrived. Let’s go to the capital and find some fun!”
I am ill; I suffer from hysteria and have no interest in life.
When I lose my mind, I only find pleasure through killing.
Well then, I hope they can bring me some joy.
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.”
Picking Mulberries
In the third month after our wedding, Shao Zhi took me back to Luoyang to pay respects to his clansmen. Along the way, he carefully explained the web of interests within his clan.
When he mentioned his eldest brother, his face filled with pride.
“My eldest brother is a very good man. He taught me riding and archery himself! ”
Now he serves in Luoyang as the Central Army Commander.
He is the one we are going to meet today.
” I hated Luoyang. There, someone had once forced me to drink a ladle of water from the Luo River and swear an oath: from then on, we would each marry another and never disturb each other again. Clutching the konghou in my arms, I only lowered my head and tried to refuse. ”
Ah Zhi, I was once a music courtesan.
I fear I might sully your honored brother’s eyes and ears.
It would be better if I did not meet him…
” Shao Zhi gathered me into his arms with pity and held my hand, telling me not to worry. ”
He won’t mind. I’ll secretly tell you a bit of gossip about my brother.
Before he married my sister-in-law, he once turned the whole world upside down over a music courtesan who played the konghou.
Later, afraid my sister-in-law would grow jealous, he forced that courtesan to drink from the Luo River and swear that they would each marry another and never disturb each other again.
“Besides, you are my wife now, and you play a fine twenty-three-string konghou. For my sake, my brother is sure to like you.”
The Truth of the Tooth Fairy
In 2016, I was working as a security guard in a residential complex.
A homeowner’s ten-year-old daughter vanished from her bedroom under bizarre circumstances.
On the rumpled bedsheets, all that remained was a pair of bloodstained underwear.
The police and all of us searched for her with everything we had, but we found no leads at all.
Then I remembered a fairy tale the girl had once told us about when she was playing in the complex.
It was called the “Tooth Fairy.” Years later, I got married and had a child of my own.
When my kid reached the age of losing baby teeth, my wife told her a bedtime story.
And once again, I heard the words “Tooth Fairy.” Startled, I asked, “Is that how the story goes?”
“Yeah.”
That night, after lying awake until dawn, I contacted the officer who had been in charge of the case back then.
“We were wrong all those years ago.”
That Awesome Girl!
The villain was rich, but depressed.
I was poor, and worse, I was the heroine of an angst novel.
My parents were destined to die, leaving me and my grandmother to depend on each other.
Then, when Grandma fell seriously ill, I would have no choice but to grovel at the male lead’s feet.
He would torment me physically and emotionally, lock me up, make me miscarry, and in the end, I would die in despair.
Only then would he be filled with regret.
I figured all of it came down to being broke, so I decided to throw my lot in with the villain.
I found the villain quietly slitting his wrists and, fighting off the dizziness from low blood sugar, tried to talk him down.
“I’m not here to stop you. I just wanted to discuss whether you could maybe die a little later.”
“You don’t want your assets to go to your dad’s illegitimate son, do you? Are you really okay with them inheriting your money, buying yachts and private jets, and traveling the world?”
“All you have to do is hold on for a few more years. Then you’ll found your own company, become the new darling of the tech industry, and multiply your wealth more than tenfold.”
“I’ll help you take a shortcut. When the time comes, give me a cut, and I’ll help you get rid of Xie Xun.”
The villain’s eyes lit up, but he still looked disdainful.
“You?”
“Be grateful. Besides me, who else is on your side? Your dad? Your mom?”
That stabbed the villain right where it hurt.
Because he was an orphan with both parents still alive.
The Second Male Lead Refuses Deep Affection
I transmigrated into the mistress of the Marquis’s Mansion, and my stepson was the devoted second male lead.
When he grew up, he would try to take the female lead by force and spend fortunes on her without blinking.
As for the male lead, he would sow discord, frame him, and set him up at every turn.
In the end, the male and female leads would join forces to defeat him.
He would flee into monastic life and never marry.
And the Marquis’s Mansion, implicated because of him, would be raided, stripped of its title, and tragically exiled.
After transmigrating, I looked at the tiny little thing in front of me, pretending to be obedient.
He wanted to grow gloomy and brooding? Absolutely not.
He was going to become sunny if it killed me. He wanted to squander money?
Absolutely not. I had to raise him into a stingy, family-minded model of virtue.
I was definitely going to protect the vast fortune of the Marquis’s Mansion.
Later, everyone said I threw money around like dirt and lived in arrogant, extravagant luxury.
My stepson refuted them.
“Nonsense. My mother is the most frugal, capable, virtuous, and dignified woman there is. She sponsored so many scholars with money she saved up herself. Could you do that?”
Someone said my methods were ruthless and that I acted like a man.
My stepson’s face turned cold.
“My mother is gentle, virtuous, and the very soul of benevolence. She clearly could have just robbed you outright, yet she still gave you a chance to compete fairly. You’re the one who was useless. Utter trash.”
Even his father couldn’t stand it anymore.
“Son, open your eyes and take a good look. Your mother is not the kind of person who lets herself be wronged.”
My stepson flew into a rage.
“Father, don’t force me to turn against you. You can say whatever you want about me, but you absolutely cannot say that about my mother.”
A Splendor Reclaimed
My husband brought home a child.
I raised him as my own, teaching him poetry, books, and proper etiquette.
I molded him into a noble young gentleman skilled in both letters and arms.
Years later, when he had risen to the highest ranks of court, he locked me away in a dark dungeon.
With both hands, he crushed my jaw. “My birth mother was Shuang’er, the woman you murdered.”
“A venomous woman like you thinks she deserves to be my mother?”
My husband stood by and watched, his palms pressed together in prayer.
“Shuang’er, may your spirit finally rest in peace.”
After being tortured to death, I was reborn.
Faced with the child my husband had brought home, I still smiled and said, “Of course. From now on, he will be my own son.”