Female Protagonist
The CEO I Catfished
After being bullied by the prettiest girl in class for three years.
I did something vile: I used her photos to start an online relationship with a rich second-generation heir.
He was gentle and polite, generous with money. His only flaw was that his desires were a little too intense.
Before long, relying on sweet talk, I got four years’ worth of college tuition out of him.
On the day I decided to break up with him, I asked as if it had only just occurred to me:
“Baby, if I suddenly disappeared, what would you do?”
He gave a soft laugh, his tone dangerous. “Babe, don’t make jokes like that. I don’t like it.”
I didn’t cave to pressure. I deleted him on my end.
Later, by sheer coincidence, the prettiest girl in class and I ended up interning at the same tech company.
On our first day, we happened to run into the big boss from headquarters coming down for an inspection.
I stood at the very back of the crowd, but when I looked up, I saw a face that was unbearably familiar.
Before I could even react,
I saw the man’s gaze land on the prettiest girl in class.
His eyes lit up in an instant.
West Third Institute
While everyone else was fighting for the Emperor’s favor, I built an intelligence station in the cold palace.
Until the day he died, the Emperor never knew that the woman stirring up the hidden currents of his harem was someone whose name he could not even remember.
I died in Yongxiang Alley during my third winter there.
Not truly died-only the kind of death where your name is crossed out in vermilion ink on the registry.
They said Noble Lady Li, who had once worked in the imperial garden and was later favored by His Majesty for her beauty, had gone mad.
Because on the late Empress’s memorial day, I let my hair hang loose, went barefoot, and sang a rousing rendition of “Liangzhou Ci.”
In truth, I was not mad. I had simply calculated that the Chief Eunuch of the Directorate of Ceremonial would pass through the imperial garden that day.
Madness was the best pass in the cold palace, and the best armor.
On the day I moved into the West Third Institute, only one lame old eunuch came to lead the way.
The weeds in the courtyard rose past my knees, and the moss on the well curb was as thick as a velvet blanket.
My roommate, Attendant Li, had been thrown in here three years ago after offending the Imperial Consort.
When she saw me arrive, she did not even lift her eyelids. She only kept rubbing a length of hemp rope in her hands, its edges worn fuzzy.
I set my only bundle down on the crumbling earthen kang.
Inside were two sets of worn palace clothes, a bald writing brush, and half a ream of yellow paper.
The paper pasted over the window lattice had a hole in it the size of a fist. The north wind poured in with a howl, carrying the faint sound of pipes and flutes from far away.
I stared at that hole, but in my heart, a sliver of light slipped through.
In a madwoman’s world, there were the fewest rules.
Here, perhaps, I could live.
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.
I Am the Horror Game NPC (The Ghost Bride Arc)
I am the strongest NPC in a horror game, they call me the Ghost Bride.
I wear a Red Wedding Dress, swaying my crimson nails, wandering freely through the vast ancient mansion, unbound by the rules.
I enjoy watching the terror on the players’ faces and the screams they let out.
Until one day, a middle-aged woman saw my face clearly, neither terrified nor screaming.
She shed tears: “My dear, I am your mother.”
The Author and the Reader Got Together
I had no idea my boss was a famous fanfic author, one with excellent prose, thrilling plots, and a perfectly balanced diet of content.
And I was one of his top-paying readers.
His new story was a complete departure from his usual style: an utterly squeaky-clean original novel.
I happily topped up my account to buy the chapters, but the more I read, the more I realized the dense, romance-impaired heroine was a lot like me.
The only difference was that the male lead was a shy, innocent, introverted herbivore-type boss whose little inner commentary was ridiculously cute.
He was nothing like my real-life boss, who barely spoke, had a severe case of germophobia, and was an absolute menace.
Later…
The author posted in the comments: “≧◇≦ Thank you all for your support. I-I-I’ve decided to be brave and confess!!! >_<”
Magnanimously, I sent the author a huge gift. “Go for it! Be brave, author! Fear no hardship!”
The very next second, my cold-faced, frowning boss walked out of his office and stopped in front of me, his face bright red.
Me: “?”
Twining Lotus
Everyone in the capital said that a first-rank maid from the Prime Minister’s Residence was worth more than the daughter of a fifth-rank official.
As the personal maid to the prime minister’s daughter, I had followed the Fourth Young Lady since childhood, learning to read and write at her side.
I understood literature and ink, knew music, and was versed in arithmetic.
When I was nineteen, the merchant Wen Family of Qingzhou, eager to attach themselves to power, came specifically to ask for my hand-a mere maidservant’s-in marriage.
The Fourth Young Lady showed me grace, acknowledged me as her sworn younger sister, and married me off in splendor.
I had thought the inner courtyard of a merchant household would be simple. I never imagined its waters would run as deep as those of the Prime Minister’s Residence.
The Second Branch eyed the account books with envy, while the concubines banded together to put me in my place.
On the day I served tea to my elders, Concubine Zhou “accidentally” knocked over the teacup, and scalding water splashed across the hem of my newly tailored Su embroidery skirt.
I lightly brushed my fingers over the ruined twining lotus pattern on the fabric, then suddenly smiled.
Since some people insisted on throwing themselves onto the edge of a blade-
Then I would show them exactly what the methods of the Prime Minister’s Residence looked like.
Next Spring
In my fifth year by the side of that charming, reckless young playboy, someone snapped a photo of me that made it look like I was pregnant.
For a while, rumors flew through our circle. Everyone thought I was going to use the baby to force my way up and marry into a wealthy family.
When his long-estranged first love heard the news, she came charging back from overseas.
I thought a bloody storm was about to break loose.
But by the time Lu Heran returned from his business trip, all he heard was that I had gotten rid of the baby and slipped back to my hometown.
Sigh. Good girls like us can fool around all we want on ordinary days.
But if we really got pregnant with a child and no proper status, our parents would beat us to death.
Fishing for Hearts
Under the short video I posted, a girl tagged her boyfriend to come watch.
“Everyone move, my husband likes this kind of thing. Let him see it first!”
I tapped into her profile picture and froze.
She was the girl who had bullied me in high school.
I would know that face even if it were reduced to ashes.
I didn’t sleep all night. I went through every video she’d ever posted, then tapped on the boyfriend she’d tagged.
I sent him a private message.
“Are you there?”
Life Goes On
By the time I transmigrated into this world, the story was already nearing its end.
The realm had been united, and the New Emperor had ascended the throne.
The woman who had shared his hardships and stayed by his side through everything had been granted a cup of poisoned wine.
And I was the Empress he was about to marry: the legitimate daughter of the Wang Clan, born of an illustrious house.
I looked at the woman who had just drunk the poisoned wine. “Do you know why I came?”
She let out a cold laugh, sweat beading across her brow. “Afraid I won’t die?”
“No.” I took a pill from my sleeve and pushed it into her mouth. “Afraid you will.”
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.”