Cross-dressing
Lin Xiaowu
In my third year of disguising myself as a man and sneaking into the Prince’s Mansion to work as a guard, I got involved with the prince’s male favorite.
I had meant to cut things off with him and sever all ties for good.
But whenever he took my hand during our secret meetings, my resolve would crumble.
And just like that, spineless and useless as I was, I committed a capital offense.
Online Dating a Male College Student
To surprise my online boyfriend, I secretly traveled thousands of miles to his university.
When I arrived, I happened to see him coming back to campus from outside.
I was just about to go up and say hi when he walked right past me without so much as a glance.
?
A moment later, my phone buzzed.
“Holy crap, babe. I just saw someone who looked exactly like you.”
“But you’re the only one in my heart, so I didn’t even spare another woman a second look.”
I was so mad I laughed. Right then and there, I snapped a selfie in front of the school gate and sent it to him.
“Maybe try taking another look?”
Spring Heart Stirred
After winning the war, I entered the capital, and the Old Emperor asked what reward I wanted.
I pointed at the handsome man in purple robes and a golden belt standing in the hall. “I beg Your Majesty to grant me a marriage. I am carrying his child, and he promised he would marry me!”
The elderly eunuch beside the emperor hurriedly tried to stop me. “General, mind your words. This is the Second Prince.”
A faint, languid voice sounded behind me. “Whose child are you carrying?
“Isn’t your belly full of roast duck, roast chicken, candied hawthorn, red bean pastries, dried sweet potatoes…”
I turned to look, only to find that the handsome man who had just spoken looked exactly like the Second Prince.
I made a split-second decision and cupped my fists toward His Majesty. “If that one won’t marry me, this one will do!”
The elderly eunuch was beside himself with panic. “My dear ancestor, this is the Crown Prince!”
Swallows Flying in the Drizzle
Chapter 0
The Princess believed in living for pleasure.
During a palace banquet, I spared a single extra glance at the Crown Prince, and she had him delivered straight to my bed.
“So what if he’s the Crown Prince? As women, we must rise to the challenge!”
Afterward, the Crown Prince demanded that I take responsibility for him.
The Princess blocked me, refusing to allow it. She declared with righteous indignation, “If you give him an official status, how are you supposed to keep having fun in the future?”
Later, when enemy troops surrounded the imperial palace, I rushed to tell her to flee for her life. Instead, I found her in her tent, favoring dozens of male consorts.
“Princess, look at the time! It’s too late!”
She finally realized the gravity of the situation. “You’re right. Here, I’ll share half of them with you.”
And so, I was delayed as well.
Never in my wildest dreams did I imagine that the Hostage Prince from the enemy nation would be among those male consorts.
Just before he was about to be rescued, I ruined his virtue. He was so furious he ground his teeth in rage.
The Princess and I were captured together. Tied behind horses and dragged along the ground, we were sent to the Great Yan Palace.
To scratch out a living, I confessed my love to the Hostage Prince, claiming I only took his body because I loved him, and begged for his protection.
Unexpectedly, the Princess stepped forward and said, “You fool, you actually believe that? To her, you’re just one of-”
The Hostage Prince drew his sword on the spot, demanding an answer: “Exactly how many men have you had before me?”
“I’m truly done with you! Princess, you’re my living ancestor! Aren’t we unlucky enough already?”
I was so enraged that I coughed up blood and died.
The Princess, however, was so notoriously debauched in her speech and conduct that the enemy soldiers wanted to humiliate her, yet they feared she might actually enjoy it. Left with no other choice, they allowed her to live out her final years in peace.
Carrying my corpse on her back, the Princess declared that since she could no longer seek pleasure in the days to come, she would rather die. She threw herself onto a sword and ended her life immediately.
Reborn into a new life, I have returned to the day I entered the palace to save her.
The Female Profligate
I was Shangjing’s most notorious female wastrel.
To rein me in, my parents somehow had a sudden stroke of genius and betrothed me to the legitimate eldest son of a fallen noble family.
He was taciturn and dull, as stiff and old-fashioned as a lecturer from the National Academy.
So, in front of my pack of disreputable friends, I swore:
“I, Yao Yao, would rather die alone-would rather jump from here-than ever marry Xie Jinghong!”
Half a year later.
The same group of friends.
They imitated me:
“I, Yao Yao~ would rather die alone~ would rather jump from here~ than ever marry Xie Jinghong~”
I recalled the flush at the corners of that man’s eyes, his breaths scented faintly of plum blossoms, his body like white jade suffused with dawn light.
After swallowing softly a few times, I slapped the table and shot to my feet.
“I’ve discovered that all of you take things way too seriously. I’m done talking to you-my husband is calling me home for dinner.”
The Grand Tutor
“Miaoren, this beauty mark of yours is truly lovely.”
Xuan Changjun lifted my bridal veil. By the light of a small lamp, he reached out and gently brushed the tiny mark at the corner of my eye.
I smiled at him. “Husband, is this beauty mark the only lovely thing about me?”
He did not answer. Instead, he said, “Xuan’er has a beauty mark just like it. It makes her look especially lively.”
I nodded and told him, “Wait a moment.”
Turning around, I fetched paper, brush, and ink from the writing desk and spread them out before him. “Go on. Write it.”
He looked up at me. “Write what?”
I straightened the tinkling jeweled flower in my hair and said unhurriedly, “A divorce letter.”
Xuan Changjun chuckled softly. “Miaoren, there are seven grounds upon which a man may divorce his wife. You have committed none of them, so how could I write such a letter?”
“Oh?” I lazily propped my chin on one hand while scraping the lid of my teacup with the other. “And what are these seven grounds?”
“A wife may be cast out for seven reasons: disobedience to her parents-in-law, childlessness, adultery, jealousy, serious illness, excessive talkativeness, or theft.”
I nodded, rose to my feet, and stood across from him.
“Go fuck yourself!”
I kicked him over. He toppled backward onto the bed and sank into the red silk wedding quilt embroidered with mandarin ducks.
“Y-you… Miaoren! You, you…” Struggling upright, he clutched his chest and stared at me in shock.
Taking up the brush, I neatly drafted the divorce letter for him:
There is now a wicked woman in this household. She is unfilial to her parents-in-law, disobedient to her husband, and disrespectful to her elder brother- and sister-in-law. She is therefore cast out.
“All you need to do is press your thumbprint onto it,” I said. “Otherwise, I’ll turn the entire Xuan Family upside down. Today I kicked you over. Tomorrow, I’ll dare to beat your father, curse your mother, ruin your family’s reputation, and squander your fortune. Changjun, you should simply accept your fate.”
“Miaoren, why are you doing this?” Xuan Changjun had been a scholar before entering officialdom, so he did not panic when trouble arose. Once he had caught his breath, he said, “I only married you because you liked me.”
“Oh, Changjun, that may be the most absurd joke under heaven!” I clapped my hands, sat down in the armchair, and lowered my head to peel a grape. “Do you know who I am? I am the Grand Tutor, an official of the first rank. Even His Majesty must courteously address me as his teacher. And what are you? A newly crowned Literary Champion. What official rank can you even expect to receive? I lowered myself to marry beneath my station, yet you somehow have the nerve to claim I married you because I liked you?”
Xuan Changjun’s face alternated between red and white. After a long silence, he finally managed to say, “Since we are both scholars, you should not use your official rank to lord it over others.”
“You’re a scholar, my ass. You’re clearly a lecherous creep pretending to be some charming libertine. What a joke!” I sneered, then continued, “I’ll tell you the truth. I chose you reluctantly because I thought you were devoted and faithful, which would spare me plenty of jealous squabbles in the future. If I’d known that a beast like you was lusting after his own younger sister, I would have refused even if the emperor himself arranged the marriage. I’d have gone and beaten the emperor too!”
“You… Miaoren!”
“What? Did I say anything wrong? I’d long heard that your younger sister Changxuan looked seventy percent like me-even the beauty mark at the corner of her eye was identical to mine. I didn’t believe it at first, but after seeing her in person, I realized she truly does resemble me.”
“How could you say Xuan’er resembles you? You’re clearly the one who resembles Xuan’er!” His face flushed red with agitation.
“Say whatever you like. The divorce letter is right here. Hurry up and press your thumbprint onto it. I’ll return to my residence at once, and from this day forward, we’ll each go our separate ways.” I gave the flimsy sheet of paper a shake. “Hurry. You’re a grown man, so why are you being so indecisive?”
Even as I was leaving, he still called me Miaoren.
I told him, “Lord Xuan, I happen to love throwing my rank around. You’d better address me as Grand Tutor Yu.”
The Pride of Heaven
After disguising myself as a man and joining the army in my husband’s place, I failed to endure the loneliness and kept a lover on the side.
When the war ended and I returned home, I discovered that my husband had taken a concubine too.
Well, now I didn’t feel guilty anymore. We were even!
But then I saw that beautiful concubine.
I was utterly stunned.
Can someone please tell me why my lover had become my husband’s concubine?
Today the Assassin Wants to Die Too
If you read a lot of historical romance novels, then I’m sure you’re familiar with this scene: An assassin draws his blade and lunges at the male lead.
At the critical moment, the female lead rushes forward and takes the stab for him.
She collapses into his arms, and he cries her name in panic…
When I transmigrated, this exact scene was unfolding.
You think I was the female lead? Nope.
And of course, I wasn’t the male lead either. I was the assassin.
Trapped in the Lonely City
My parents had always favored me most.
But on the eve of the imperial capital’s fall, they fled with the entire family-and somehow forgot to wake me from my sleep.
When I woke up, the courtyard was deserted.
Yet the moment I turned my head, I realized I wasn’t the only one who had been left behind.
The illegitimate son my father had with his mistress was still here too.
He stared at me without blinking, the look on his face hovering somewhere between a smile and a sneer.
“Second Sister, how did you end up reduced to the same state as me?”
Father and Mother will definitely come back for me.
The words were about to burst from my mouth, but I paused.
Then I cleared my throat and put on a calm, unbothered expression.
“I was the one who refused to leave.”
True Love in the Imperial Palace
My Imperial Elder Brother is into men, and my Imperial Elder Sister is into women.
Imperial Father has pinned all his hopes for the empire on me.
I’m trembling-should I tell him that the one I love is a eunuch?
Imperial Father: “Impressive.”