Family
Soul-Whip 15: Cellar-Buried Wine
The owner of an antique shop came to me with a job: help him transport a batch of aged wine.
The wine had been hidden away in a deserted village for sixty years, sealed in massive jars, each one half as tall as a man.
On the day the cellar was opened, the fragrance carried for miles. Even the workers moving the jars felt light-headed from it.
But the young man selling the wine looked deathly pale. The moment he took the owner’s money, he refused to stay even one minute longer and hurried off.
That night, one of the workers secretly opened a jar.
When he was found the next day, his head was stuffed inside the wine jar. By the time they dragged him out, he was already dead.
Gazing at the Dragon
Everyone said I was blessed by fate.
Born behind vermilion gates, I rested my head on jade and wrapped myself in brocade.
At three, I began my education, studying essays on how to govern the realm.
At five, I held an abacus, calculating the empire’s grain and coin.
At twelve, I debated the scholars in the clan school and, though I was a girl, took first place above them all.
At fifteen, during my coming-of-age banquet, warlords from three regions offered mountains and rivers as my betrothal gifts.
And yet, I chose the hardest road of all.
The day I eloped with a lowly soldier who guarded the city gate, the entire city laughed at me for debasing myself.
After one night of passion, I was stricken from the Yin Clan’s rolls, my spotless reputation ruined.
No one knew that the soldier was the last surviving bloodline of the imperial house.
They were fighting for the realm.
What I was fighting for was the right to take history’s iron brush in hand and rewrite the world with a name that could not be questioned.
My Husband by Marriage
I had plans to go sing karaoke with my best friend that night, but my five-year-old daughter just would not go to sleep.
Left with no choice, I took her with me. Once we were in the private karaoke room, I ordered a couple of model guys to look after her.
Halfway through my song, the door to the room was shoved open.
My husband-my marriage-of-convenience husband-came in looking like he was here to catch me cheating.
“Su Xu, look at you getting bold. You actually dared to bring our daughter along while you ordered random men-”
Before he could finish, he finally saw what was happening inside.
His five-year-old daughter was currently sitting there with an arm around each of the two model guys. “…”
Fortune’s Fate
I am the pampered little fake heiress who was driven out to the countryside.
To go from the young lady of Marquis Manor to a carpenter’s eldest daughter-there is simply no living like this!
In order to return to the noble circles of Capital City, I set my sights on the scholar next door.
Standing on a ladder, I waved my handkerchief coquettishly over the wall.
“Hey~ I heard you’re my fiancé?”
The man chopping firewood with his upper body bare slowly turned to look at me.
In an indifferent voice, he said, “I am Lin Jiaoyue’s fiancé.”
The Widow Remarries
I was the famous beauty for miles around.
Oval face, shapely figure, hardworking. Suitors came asking for my hand from one end of the village to the other.
After weighing my options again and again, I chose Shen Jingzhi.
He was the only scholar in the several villages near us, with clean, handsome features, a gentle way of speaking, and a scholarly air no one else had.
My parents said he had a bright future ahead of him.
If I married him, maybe I’d even end up a government official’s wife someday.
They were only half right. Shen Jingzhi did indeed earn an excellent ranking later on.
But he was also unexpectedly taken back by the General’s Mansion and, in the blink of an eye, turned into a young master from a powerful family.
He didn’t want anything to do with his past anymore.
Neither I nor my mother-in-law was wanted anymore.
The Second Male Lead Refuses Deep Affection
I transmigrated into the mistress of the Marquis’s Mansion, and my stepson was the devoted second male lead.
When he grew up, he would try to take the female lead by force and spend fortunes on her without blinking.
As for the male lead, he would sow discord, frame him, and set him up at every turn.
In the end, the male and female leads would join forces to defeat him.
He would flee into monastic life and never marry.
And the Marquis’s Mansion, implicated because of him, would be raided, stripped of its title, and tragically exiled.
After transmigrating, I looked at the tiny little thing in front of me, pretending to be obedient.
He wanted to grow gloomy and brooding? Absolutely not.
He was going to become sunny if it killed me. He wanted to squander money?
Absolutely not. I had to raise him into a stingy, family-minded model of virtue.
I was definitely going to protect the vast fortune of the Marquis’s Mansion.
Later, everyone said I threw money around like dirt and lived in arrogant, extravagant luxury.
My stepson refuted them.
“Nonsense. My mother is the most frugal, capable, virtuous, and dignified woman there is. She sponsored so many scholars with money she saved up herself. Could you do that?”
Someone said my methods were ruthless and that I acted like a man.
My stepson’s face turned cold.
“My mother is gentle, virtuous, and the very soul of benevolence. She clearly could have just robbed you outright, yet she still gave you a chance to compete fairly. You’re the one who was useless. Utter trash.”
Even his father couldn’t stand it anymore.
“Son, open your eyes and take a good look. Your mother is not the kind of person who lets herself be wronged.”
My stepson flew into a rage.
“Father, don’t force me to turn against you. You can say whatever you want about me, but you absolutely cannot say that about my mother.”
After Returning to My Wealthy Family, I Found My Siblings Were Little Demons
The year I turned seventeen, my wealthy birth parents brought me home.
They hemmed and hawed before saying, “You also have a twin brother and a younger sister, but they…”
Judging by their attitude, I understood at once.
My brother and sister probably weren’t going to welcome me.
But in the next second, the door was pushed open, and a flamboyant figure strode in.
His hair was dyed a bright red, and he said with cheerful swagger, “So this is my little sis, huh? I dyed my hair red just to celebrate you coming home. Festive enough for you?”
Behind him followed a little girl with side-swept bangs, holding pomelo leaves, a peachwood sword, and yellow talismans.
“Sis, I got these from a master specially for you. They’ve even been consecrated. They’ll drive away all your bad luck!”
“…”
Every family has its own difficult story. Mine had two volumes.
The Sprouting Chronicles
Zhao Qingzhu and I were betrothed through an exchange marriage.
The agreement was that his older sister would marry my older brother, and I would marry him.
He was a scholar, which meant his education was a money pit.
My family had to tighten our belts to provide for him, and the entire village laughed at us for being fools.
But five years later, he passed the imperial examinations with top honors and became the most sought-after bachelor around.
Suddenly, everyone was saying I was no longer worthy of him.
My Aunt Is Very Fierce
I transmigrated into a tragic romance novel as the female lead’s sister.
In the original plot, I spent my time abusing her daughter while simultaneously trying to seduce her husband.
Ultimately, I groomed her daughter to become the next generation’s tragic heroine, while I met a miserable end myself-tossed into the ocean to feed the fish.
Now, looking at the innocent Little Bean Bun standing before me, I said: “If you love suffering, you’ll have a never-ending supply of it. So, do you want to swallow that bitter pill, or are you going to speak up for yourself?”
“Go up there and give him a piece of your mind. If you win the argument, I’ll buy you a burger; if you lose, I’ll buy you a drink.”
“What? You’re afraid to win? Do you really love being a perpetual runner-up that much? You don’t have to be number one, but you can’t settle for second best, and you certainly can’t be a pushover.”
“Your mother brought you into this world to enjoy life, not to suffer. Go compete, go grab what’s yours, and be brave! Go get ’em, baby!”
Don’t Look Out the Window!
Back when I drove heavy-duty trucks, I was often the one to lead the way down new, untested routes. In the industry, we call this “Chong Sha.”
Only after I had successfully passed through would other drivers dare to follow.
Afterward, I’d receive a fair share of red envelopes as a token of gratitude.
People always ask me, “Didn’t you ever see anything strange while you were doing a Chong Sha?” I thought about it for a moment. “Nothing much.
Just people constantly trying to flag down the truck in the middle of the night, scammers frequently collapsing in the center of the road to stage accidents, and the occasional cluster of identical villages appearing one after another along the highway…”