Childhood Friends
Long Time No See
During school, Yu Sili was dazzling, the center of everyone’s admiration.
The only one he liked was me.
He spoiled me beyond measure, but when we broke up, I shattered all his pride, nearly costing him his life.
He hated me for five years.
Later, we met again.
Yu Sili had become a top star, with a beautiful fiancée.
Someone asked him, “In your school days, did you ever love someone so much it tore you apart?”
He smiled and said, “Never.”
Everyone in the Family Is a Top Star, But I’m a Nobody
The world is one giant slapdash production, and I somehow drift through it anyway.
My father is a financial tycoon, but I can barely handle addition and subtraction under ten. My mother is a gorgeous award-winning actress, while I look perfectly ordinary. My brother held his first solo art exhibition at four, while at five I was still toddling after him babbling nonsense.
Even our maid, Wang Ma, and our butler, Uncle Chen, turned out to be retired legends hiding in plain sight.
Thankfully, all of them adored me. I slowly made peace with being ordinary.
Then one day, a genius girl who had gone viral online showed up at our door and demanded that I give her back her place as the real daughter of the Su family.
Wonderful. The worry that had been hanging over me for years finally dropped dead.
Who Is Laughing at My Mom
As the oldest unmarried young adult in my family, I had been suffering under the pressure to get married for years.
Eventually, I simply gave up fighting it.
My mom said she was so worried she could not sleep.
So I drove two hundred kilometers overnight, got home at three in the morning, stood by her bed, and pried her eyelids open.
My mom said everyone in the family was laughing at her because I refused to get married.
The next second, I tagged everyone in the family group chat:
[My mom says everyone is laughing at her because I won’t get married. I came to ask, who exactly is laughing at her? @everyone]
My cousin was the first to start a message chain:
[Your little cousin is not laughing at her.]
Then came an orderly line of replies:
[Auntie is not laughing at her.]
[Uncle is not laughing at her.]
[Second Cousin is not laughing at her.]
[Dad is not laughing at her.]
[…]
The Secret Crush Chronicles of a Chuunibyou Boy
I was helping my mom sell grilled sausages by the roadside when a handsome guy in a cap scanned the QR code to pay. He gave his phone a little shake, signaling that the payment had gone through.
I smiled and nodded. Then my gaze suddenly sharpened, landing on the pale, prominent bone of his wrist.
There was a tiny black tattoo there.
I narrowed my eyes slightly and recognized it.
It was that bastard Chen Wen.
His friend came over, hooked an arm around his neck, and urged him on. “Come on, Chen Wen. Let’s go to the usual spot.”
But Chen Wen just had to do the opposite of what I wanted. He took two steps toward me, bent down, and met my eyes. A moment later, recognition dawned. He let out a laugh, his eyes curving like peach blossom petals.
“Is that… Boss Tang?”
“…”
The Abandoned Wife
“Madam, I’m planning to take a concubine.”
When Duan Qing said that, I was ironing the ceremonial robes he would wear to the palace tomorrow.
At his words, I nearly knocked over the iron brazier full of burning charcoal.
He sat there with one leg crossed over the other and went on as if it had nothing to do with me. “I’m bringing Miss Zhou into the household. A noblewoman from the former dynasty. You’ve met her.”
“Back when I followed the Emperor to fight for this empire, I lived with my head tied to my belt. Now that I’ve been made a duke, what’s wrong with taking the legitimate daughter of a marquis’s household as a concubine?”
“Old Han’s family are illiterate peasants, and even he married a girl from an earl’s household as his second wife!”
I looked at the utter entitlement on his face.
Then I took a deep breath. What was meant to come had come at last.
At thirty-eight, after spending half my life enduring hardship with him, it was time I enjoyed some peace and comfort.
And so, in the year I turned thirty-nine,
I decided to become a happy widow and savor the good life.
Only Spring Knows
Liang Yu had always thought the first time they met was at an amusement park. But in fact, it was not.
Those days were marked by endless rain, and even her memories carried a damp, overcast gloom.
That morning, her older sister developed a fever again. She lay in bed, sleeping through the entire day until night fell.
I Took the Wealthy Man My Roommate Didn’t Want
My husband is very rich, but I don’t love him.
In university, he once used every trick in the book to pursue my roommate Jiang Sizhu. He sent luxury gifts one after another, and even made a grand gesture by sending nine thousand roses downstairs from the girls’ dormitory. All the girls in our dorm benefited; we carried armloads of roses back to our rooms, as if we were moving a flower bed. Only Jiang Sizhu remained indifferent. She even warned Pei Lu not to come looking for her again.
“He’s very rich and not bad-looking. You really don’t want him?”
I had a face mask on and finally asked the question I could never understand.
With such a beautiful face, she spent every day hanging around that senior who worked odd jobs everywhere.
“No way, a stuffy old bore like him? If you’re so interested, go after him yourself,” Jiang Sizhu said with disdain.
I rested my chin on my hand, thought for a moment, then nodded.
“Fine.”
“I’ll go after him.”
Everyone Loves Lin Wanrou
Lin Wanrou was twenty-four this year, an old maiden who still had not married.
Madam Lin’s standards for a son-in-law had fallen from imperial kin to any promising young talent with ambition.
She refused to believe that, with the Grand General’s influence, she could not raise up one dragon among men as her son-in-law.
Lin Wanrou did not want to marry. She would rather stay at home for the rest of her life.
Buddha Won’t Save Me
At a family gathering, my younger sister, holding my boyfriend’s arm, beamed as she announced they were getting married.
With a room full of guests, I, dressed in monastic robes, faced their gazes with a calm expression.
Amitabha, I am a monastic.
The story of Lin Wei, the eldest daughter of the Lin Family, being forced into monastic life by her family, had long been known to all.
When a Fanfiction Writer Encounters the Real-Name System
I’m a fanfic writer with nearly a million followers on Big-Eyed Guy.
My OTP? A wildly popular young actress and a famous up-and-coming director.
Soon, self-media accounts across the entire internet would be required to register under their real names, and verified influencers with over a million followers would be the first batch to go public.
The moment I got wind of it, I deleted my account and ran.
Because I was that wildly popular young actress.
But netizens loved drama far too much to let it go. They started posting gossip threads across every major social media platform: Girl, who the hell are you?