Family Conflict
Late to Love
After sacrificing a kidney for the family that never loved her, Song Zhiwei wakes up at seventeen on the day Zhou Jiashu offers her a cruelly false confession.
Newly able to hear other people’s thoughts, she rejects the boy who betrayed her and refuses to become medicine for her ailing half sister again.
As Zhiwei fights to reclaim her future, she discovers that Cheng Chi–the notorious silver-haired school tyrant–is the one person whose fierce devotion has always been real.
His Deep Gaze
I took my younger sister’s place and married the fiancé who had suddenly gone blind.
After the wedding, we got along surprisingly well.
He believed the woman beside him was my sister, and that was why he treated me with such tenderness and devotion.
If nothing changed, our life should have passed quietly and smoothly.
Then one day, the man everyone believed would be blind forever…
Could see again.
Rule Bizarreness: Happy Death Anniversary to My Family
Jiang Li starts in hell, in a mental hospital, her money embezzled by her stepmother, and her boyfriend taken away by her stepsister. Now, she is unexpectedly caught up in a supernatural side quest, confronting the bizarre head-on…
A strange voice filled with malice says: “Please select the most important thing in your life.”
With sincere eyes, Jiang Li replies, “Family! Without them, there would be no me now!”
“Now officially entering the first side quest: Horror Anniversary. The mortality rate is extremely high, please prepare, chosen one.”
In the side quest, there are sounds of meat being chopped in the middle of the night, a toilet constantly flushing, and a long-haired woman hiding under the bed…
Is it a rhythm to kill? Hah, Jiang Li laughs instead of being scared. She doesn’t know if she will die, but they are definitely doomed. Facing the big screen, Jiang Li gently makes a “shh” gesture to her family. “My dear family, I wish you—Happy Death Anniversary.”
The Perfect Victim
I fell into a sewer while I was out buying groceries and was already unconscious by the time I was rescued.
But unexpectedly, while I was unconscious, a gas explosion occurred at home, killing my husband instantly.
Sobbing hysterically, I stumbled home as fast as I could.
The neighbors all remarked on how deeply my husband and I must have loved each other.
Only I knew I was merely anxious to see the fruits of my labor.
After all, I couldn’t put my mind at ease until I’d seen it with my own eyes…
Let Her Land
In the third year of my relationship with Tan Zongmin, I caught him meeting the woman his family had arranged for him to marry.
The moment he saw me, he froze.
Noticing his distraction, she followed his gaze and asked curiously, “What are you looking at?”
Tan Zongmin looked away and replied flatly, “Nothing.”
I breathed a sigh of relief and played along with our unspoken understanding, pretending not to know him.
That morning, I’d received an email confirming that my resignation had been approved.
I’d been wondering how to break up with Tan Zongmin gracefully.
Rise and Fall in the Inner Residence
Everyone envied me for being born into the splendor of the Prime Minister’s Mansion.
But in the Prime Minister’s Mansion, there were four daughters like me.
The beauty I took such pride in was hardly worth mentioning before my eldest sister’s effortless grace.
The schemes I had painstakingly built were no match for Fourth Sister, who could overturn the clouds and summon the rain with the slightest lift of her hand.
I watched in satisfaction as my eldest sister entered the palace as an imperial consort, only to be promised by my father, in the blink of an eye, to a boorish man who had nothing but an empty noble title.
Only then did I understand.
From the day my eldest sister entered the palace, my marriage had become nothing more than a stepping stone to support her.
The poisoned, honeyed words of the women in the inner residence, and the impatience and contempt in my husband’s eyes.
Every single day reminded me of my failure.
But I refused to admit defeat.
If blood ties could not be severed, then I would bow even lower.
As long as the bloodline of the Kong Clan remained, I could still stir this dead game back to life.
The Mistress of the House
After rescuing my young nephew from the water, I went to the east wing to change my clothes.
But my brother-in-law, Zhao Hong, chose that exact moment to shove the door open and barge in, forcing me into a marriage with him as his second wife.
On the night before the wedding, my legitimate mother personally brought me a bowl of Sterilization Decoction.
I pushed the bowl away and looked up at her. “If you dare force me to drink it, the first thing I’ll do is make sure the Zhao Family has no descendants. Do you believe me?”
My legitimate mother flew into a rage and immediately went to complain to Zhao Hong.
Zhao Hong sneered. “Scheming women like her aren’t fit to bear my children.”
My eight-year-old nephew shouted too,
“Bad woman! You’re not fit to be my mother!”
I looked at Zhao Hong. “Since I’m not fit to bear your children, then don’t come to my bed.”
“From now on, the child’s food, clothing, lodging, schooling, future prospects, and dignity in front of the nobles… none of it has anything to do with me.”
“If my lord thinks I’m so scheming, perhaps he should raise the child himself.”
Before I transmigrated here, I worked in HR at a major tech company.
Aside from competence, the job also required knowing how to spot workplace PUA when you saw it.
A Few Matters at the Princess Fengguo’s Mansion
My father rebelled, and I became the most honored legitimate princess.
No, wait-the Grand Tutor said it’s not rebellion.
How can it be rebellion when it’s the act of a founding emperor?
It was the descent of the Imperial Star, the gods and buddhas blessing the people, rescuing the masses from misery!
As the Grand Tutor taught, one should say:
The previous dynasty was tyrannical and unjust, the common people were in a living hell, suffering unbearably. My father the Emperor led a group of righteous men in uprising, successfully ended the chaotic times, and established the Great An Dynasty.
So I, an ordinary farmer’s wife in the previous dynasty, inexplicably became the one and only legitimate princess of the An Dynasty.
That’s right, I’m married, my husband is alive and well, I have both a son and a daughter, my life is happy and fulfilling, and for years I’ve topped the list of happiest young wives in the village.
Before becoming a princess, my biggest worry was that my son didn’t like meat and only ate vegetables, while my daughter didn’t like vegetables and only ate meat.
Now my biggest worry has become: being a legitimate princess and all that-I have no experience with it…
The Sound of That Year’s Waves
On the day the Su Clan was raided and seized, Father dressed me in a magnificent gown and threw me in front of the soldiers.
“She is Su Yueying, the Eldest Young Miss of the Su Clan.”
Everyone said Father was a loyal servant.
When I saw him again, Father had become the New Emperor’s most trusted Divine Martial Great General.
Su Yueying had become Empress, the New Emperor’s one and only for the rest of his life.
And I was a courtesan in a brothel, a woman anyone could have.
To buy back my freedom, Mother dragged her gravely ill body to beg Father for help.
The gatekeepers beat her to death with two strikes of their staves.
I begged Su Yueying to let Mother be buried.
But she said, “There are plenty of untouched entertainers in the pleasure houses. If you had held fast to your principles, I might still have helped you. But you chose to debase yourself. I will not help someone like that.”
That very night, someone hacked off my limbs and sank me into the river.
When I opened my eyes again, I had returned to the day the Su Clan was raided.
This time, let Su Yueying go to the brothel herself and hold fast to her precious principles.
My Brother Became a Live-in Son-in-Law
My older brother was eighteen when he was married off as a live-in son-in-law to my sister-in-law.
My sister-in-law said that if he gave her a child, she’d reward him by letting him continue his studies.
Later, the day my brother passed the imperial exam, Father still refused to give up and asked,
“Son, now can my grandson change his surname back to mine?”