Child Abuse
Farewell from the Future
The boy I loved died in the prime of his life.
So, I traveled back twenty years, giving everything I had to bring him even a single glimmer of hope.
Gu Zhixian, you probably won’t believe me, but I’m your future wife…
Gu Zhixian, the future you is a wonderful, kind-hearted person.
Gu Zhixian, we’re going to have a precious child in the future. They’ll have your eyes and my eyebrows.
So, please don’t give up on yourself, okay?
The boy I loved believed me.
As the clock prepares to strike midnight, it’s time for me to go.
I’m sorry. I lied to you. I am not your wife.
And in our future, we will never meet again.
Demon Angel
The couple living across from me fought until midnight every single day, while their child wandered around scavenging for trash to eat.
Anyone who dared to give the boy food was met with a barrage of verbal abuse at their doorstep, or even targeted with malicious sexual rumors.
One day, as I was passing through the stairwell, I spotted the boy hiding in a corner, too afraid to look at me. “Hey kid, want something to eat?” I asked.
He claimed he wasn’t hungry, but his stomach was growling like thunder. “Big sister, just leave me alone,” he sobbed. “My mom isn’t a good person.”
I leaned down and looked him in the eye. “Well, neither am I.”
The Vanished Sister
The summer I turned ten, my younger sister went missing.
She vanished on her way to deliver lunch to our parents.
There were no security cameras, and no one had seen her.
Because I was the one who was supposed to have gone, my mother never spoke another word to me again.
Fifteen years later, I became a police officer. I retraced the path my sister took that day, over and over again.
The past began to resurface in my mind, piece by piece.
Slowly, I pieced together a heartbreaking truth.
The Bone Demon in the Village
I am a Bone Demon, trapped for countless years within that cold, desolate graveyard.
No one can see me, and no one can hear me. I have spent centuries in solitary silence.
Until one midsummer, when the sun was shining just right.
A young girl came to sweep the graves, but she mistakenly offered her tributes to me.
I took a bite of a crisp peach and said, “Truly sweet.”
She froze for a moment, then covered her mouth and stifled a giggle.
“Next year, I’ll come again.”
True to her word, she returned year after year, bringing me crisp peaches every time.
Later, she died, and her remains were carelessly tossed into the graveyard.
Her five-year-old daughter, clutching the hand of a younger brother who had only just learned to walk, came to the graveyard day and night to wail for their mother.
I couldn’t stand the noise.
I possessed her body, crawled out from the straw mat, and clumsily gathered those two little brats into my arms.
“Keep crying, and Mother will eat you.”
A Thread of Fate: Reclaiming My Brother
I was in the middle of feeding the pigs in my village when I suddenly saw a Danmaku.
[Is this bystander the villain’s younger sister?]
[She still thinks she’s an orphan. She has no idea that the villainous Chancellor is actually the brother she got separated from back then.]
[It’s a pity the villain lost to the male lead. He’s about to hang himself.]
[The villain only became an official to find his sister in the first place. If they could just meet once, maybe he wouldn’t have to die.]
What?!
I immediately sold my pigs to scrape together some travel money and rushed to the Capital overnight.
I knocked on the gates of the Prime Minister’s Mansion.
A pale man draped in a heavy cloak stood at the entrance, his gaze deep and haunting.
I lunged forward and threw my arms around his legs, wailing, “Brother! Wang Ergou from the village is trying to force me to marry him!”
A Wooden Hairpin
When I was thirteen, I traded myself for a bowl of chicken soup. From that moment on, I knew I was born for this life. I used it to trade for one head after another.
The Little Girl at the Frontier
My Elder Sister and I have been bitter rivals since we were children.
At three, we fought over our mother’s attention; at five, we fought over the little boy across the street.
When we were six, people from the Marquis Manor came to claim her, saying my Elder Sister was their long-lost legitimate daughter who had been taken away as an infant.
I was so furious I didn’t sleep a wink that night. Later, my father-who had been away fighting at war for fifteen years-returned with a promotion and a fortune to take me away as well.
Once I arrived at the General’s Manor, the first thing I did was rush over to the Marquis Manor.
I stood there shouting for Gu Ruan to come out and face her doom, when suddenly, a small head poked out from the entrance.
She had my Elder Sister’s face. She toddled toward me, swaying unsteadily on her feet. “Mother is dead. Auntie, hold me~”
Floating Boat Crossing
I bought a eunuch off the street. On his very first day in the manor, he started throwing his weight around.
When the others refused to follow his orders, he turned right around and complained to me.
Everyone waited for him to be put in his place, but instead, I said, “From now on, whatever Pei Yunchuan wants, you give it to him.”
He was about to gloat over his newfound power, but he hadn’t even let out a laugh before I continued with my announcement.
“He is the man I am going to marry.” He froze, his voice shrill as he shrieked, “You deranged lunatic, what kind of nonsense are you spouting?”
The Crying Red Bean Cake
Four years ago, a young girl vanished under mysterious circumstances after school.
At the time, I had just lost my job and was running a snack stall outside the kindergarten gates. Word was that her parents had been waiting right outside the whole time, yet they never saw her come out.
In the aftermath, the family’s grief-stricken protests and a massive compensation settlement forced the kindergarten to shut down.
Four years later, I’ve changed careers and come across the case files from that day.
Certain things I experienced while running that stall have started to crystallize in my mind. And those details are enough to completely overturn the entire case.
Hate You, Save You
Zhou Ci and I were also a pair of resentful lovers, exchanging harsh words and blows, finally threatening, “Whoever doesn’t get divorced is a dog.”
On the way to the divorce, we cursed each other with the most venomous words we could muster.
But when the oil tanker crashed towards us, he jerked the steering wheel, using his side to take the impact.
He let me live 0.01 seconds longer.
When I opened my eyes again, I was back in the summer at the end of my second year of high school.
Zhou Ciye was holding a bouquet of flowers, asking if I would accept it.
The next second, his listless face lifted, full of gloom.
The moment our eyes met, I knew he had come back too.