Child Protagonist
Little One
My sister was beautiful and brilliant, always effortlessly winning people over.
Compared to her, my plain self was like a timid little mouse.
My parents used to say, “How can you even compare yourself to your sister?”
My childhood friend said, “Jiajia and you don’t look like sisters.”
I asked him, “Then what do we look like instead?”
Sniffling, he replied:
“Like a princess and her maid.”
That was until I met Cen Yi.
My parents were clinging to my sister, introducing her to his family and boasting about how exceptional their daughter was.
I stood off to the side, stealing glances at the cookies on the table.
But he bypassed everyone else and pulled me into a tight embrace.
“Mine,”
he said.
Ah Man
I was born a beggar.
Maybe some wealthy young lady had made a mistake, or maybe some brothel woman had simply had rotten luck.
Either way, I came into this world. I grew up begging for bowls of slop.
At my most wretched, I even fought mangy dogs for food.
Later, to stay alive, I sweet-talked a human trafficker into selling me into the palace.
On the day I entered the palace, I saw the red sun rising at the edge of the sky.
It looked just like the duck egg yolk that had once gone rolling and wobbling to my feet in the Drunken Fragrance Pavilion.
I smacked my lips and savored the memory for a moment, then turned and stepped onto that long, long palace road.
From a beggar hated by all, I became a palace maid within the towering imperial palace.
That year, I was nine.
The Price of a Princess
There is a palace rule in the Great Sheng Dynasty: regardless of rank or status, whoever gives birth to a child must raise that child.
Mother was the most insignificant Cairen in the harem.
Ever since I was born, I lived with her in the neglected Chengze Hall.
When I was eight, the Imperial Physician diagnosed Mother with a severe illness and said she did not have long to live.
That day, Mother jumped into the Taiye Pond and saved the drowning Third Prince.
She saved the Third Prince’s life, but lost her own in the waters of Taiye Pond.
Rumors spread throughout the palace. Everyone said, “The Third Prince stepped on Cui Cairen’s head, pushing her underwater so he could climb ashore.”
They fanned the flames, but I knew in my heart that Mother did it on purpose.
She used her own life to ensure that, after her death, I could be taken in by the Third Prince’s birth mother, Consort Qi.
Mother was so foolish.
She thought she had paved a path for me.
She forgot.
A child without a mother leads a bitter life.
The Princess’s Journey: A Thousand Dreams of Zheng
After my Imperial Mother Consort died, I was given three foster mothers in succession.
Of those three foster mothers, some were deposed, and the others were ordered to die.
In the end, I landed in Beauty Lin’s care.
For three years, she and I lived together in peace, without incident.
Until she offended the wrong person and was thrown into the Office of Punishment.
My heart gave a jolt. Oh no. It looked like I was going to have to change foster mothers again.
Worse still, this time, she was the only one I wanted.
Guo Guo
I was born only five minutes before my little sister.
Yet she was prettier than me, fairer than me, smarter than me.
The only thing I had ever beaten her at was being healthy.
I could roll around in the mud throwing a tantrum and still not get sick.
My sister, though, was allergic to pollen in spring, mosquito bites in summer, and cold air in autumn and winter.
When I was nine, all I did was pet a stray cat.
My sister said she felt so awful she could not breathe.
That day, Mom beat me half to death.
With red-rimmed eyes, she asked me, “Were you trying to kill your sister?”
“If she dies, you’ll be the only child in this family!”
So later, Mom sent me to live in a nursing home.
She said it very seriously: “This way, your sister will be the only child in the family.”
Sending the Future Tyrant to School
In my last life, Xie Wujiu stormed the capital, and blood ran like rivers before the palace gates. In this life, before he could fall into darkness, I forced him into a private school and made him recite The Analects every day.
Only later did I understand: asking a starving person to speak of benevolence and righteousness can itself be cruel.
The Mighty Toddler Transmigrates, Running Wild on the Road to Exile
In her previous life, Jin Bao was a little zombie king. After transmigrating, she became weak and helpless, beaten by an aunt and uncle who weren’t even related to her by blood.
By a twist of fate, she was bought by the Marchioness of Loyalty and Bravery. One moment, she had just become the legitimate daughter of the Marquis’s Mansion; the next, the entire household was destroyed, its property confiscated and the whole family sentenced to exile.
Jin Bao awakened a random Heavenly Eye, granting her glimpses of the past and future.
On the road to exile, while others gnawed on tree bark and dug up grass roots to survive, the people of the Marquis’s Mansion picked up gold, unearthed ginseng, and ate fluffy white steamed buns with roasted meat.
The path of exile was fraught with danger: assassinations, ambushes, plagues, swamps…
Guided by Jin Bao’s Heavenly Eye, they quietly defused every crisis, then turned around and sent their enemies a delightful surprise package.
Everyone believed the bitterly cold Northern Frontier was nothing but barren wasteland.
But Jin Bao led her family to build a city there, reclaim the land, open trade routes, and train soldiers.
When chaos engulfed the realm and the people were plunged into misery, the world finally realized that the great city of the Northern Frontier, once dismissed as a savage, desolate land, had become the only sanctuary under heaven.
I Saved My Parents’ Love with Bullet Comments
I’m the daughter of the heroine in an angsty novel.
When I was four, I finally understood those strange bullet comments:
[The heroine is still desperately staying up late, working to make money and support her daughter. She has no idea she already has cancer. If this drags on, her child is going to lose her mother!]
[If either the male lead or the female lead had just spoken up, there wouldn’t have been a “running away while pregnant” plot at all.]
[Their daughter is the real pitiful one. Her mother dies when she’s only six. The male lead never even learns the heroine died after giving birth to his daughter, and he spends the rest of his life alone.]
[And the most miserable one is our Xiao Bao. She obviously has a rich dad, yet she still gets sent to the orphanage…]
Mom was going to die?
I stared at my gentle, beautiful mother in shock. No way!
They may not speak up, but I do!
On a warm afternoon, outside an office building, I spotted a man in a sharp suit and threw my arms around his leg.
“Dad, send money! I need to save Mom!”
Not a Nan
I am a bastard born of a concubine, yet I carry a face that could topple a kingdom.
When I was nine, a local thug tried to snatch me to make me his bride.
Mother risked her life to save me.
The next day, she took me through the streets and alleys of the capital for three hours, until every passerby had memorized my face.
Then she carried me to the gates of the Marquis of Pingyang Manor, knelt, and cried out:
“I, Lady Liu, a humble concubine, bore this girl for the Marquis on the ninth day of the twelfth month nine years ago in Apricot Blossom Alley, west of the suburbs. The neighbors can all attest to it.
“I know my lowly station and dare not ask for a title. I can only trade my death for the Marquis to acknowledge this child and raise her within the household!”
With that, she slammed her head against the stone lion at the gate and breathed her last.
My mother exchanged her life for my place in the Marquis’s household.
And she let the entire capital know that I am a bastard born of a kept woman.
Born as a Yin Official
In the unluckiest year of my life, a wandering Daoist priest came to town.
He gave my father an idea: have me worship a Household Guardian Immortal to suppress my bad luck, and maybe I would live past the age of ten.
My father was a rough man who had made his fortune in troubled times by the barrel of a gun.
He called his adjutant over and did the math for him. “One Household Guardian Immortal keeps her alive to ten, two keep her alive to twenty, and twenty keep her alive to two hundred. Right?”
The adjutant counted on his fingers. “Marshal, your math is absolutely correct.”
My father hardened his heart and rounded up all the pigs, cattle, and sheep from miles around as offerings.
“My damn girl is going to live ten thousand years!”
That year, my father rode into the old mountain forest on a pig with me and took eleven Household Guardian Immortal into our household.
He flew into a rage. “Damn it, that’s still one short of the twelve zodiac animals!”
Later, who knew where he bought a Daoist boy from, but that made the twelfth.