Forced Marriage
Beauty’s Grave
Pei Qi traded cities for a beauty, a grand gesture that became a legendary romance. Unfortunately, I was not that beauty, nor was I Pei Qi; I didn’t even know him.
My husband was merely a soldier defending the city. Because he refused to surrender, he died in that war, though the city was ultimately held.
The following year, when Pei Qi traded cities for his beauty, I became that beauty’s Foot-washing Maid.
My Possessive Husband Lost His Memory
Shao Yuhan lost his memory in a car accident, forgetting the fact that he had once forced me into a relationship through sheer coercion.
As soon as his family found out, they wasted no time in helping him divorce me.
In less than half a day, I found myself standing in a different city, dazed, holding a divorce certificate in one hand and a massive check in the other.
After being subjected to Shao Yuhan’s obsessive, forced love for so long, I felt a strange sense of displacement the moment I finally gained my freedom.
I settled down in this new city and began a quiet, ordinary life.
One day, while out buying groceries, someone suddenly covered my mouth and nose.
When I opened my eyes again, I was in a dark yet familiar basement. A man’s cold, clear voice rang in my ears.
“Be my woman, and I can give you everything you want.”
… Very well. It was exactly the same as back then.
He Loved Me After I Was Gone
The Emperor’s beloved Noble Consort, his one true love, was dead.
His one true love?
It was almost laughable.
And yet, the rumor had spread throughout all of Dayan.
She Was My Radiant World
I was beaten and driven out of the Chancellor’s Mansion with clubs.
As I lay dying of illness in the pouring rain, a scholar picked me up and took me home.
He didn’t mind my filth, nor did he mind my stupidity.
He cared for me in silence, acting even more like a mute than I did.
Once my injuries had healed, I prepared to bid the scholar farewell.
He went out to buy supplies for my journey, but he did not return that night. When I finally found him, I discovered that someone had broken both his legs and left him on the street to die.
He saw me and looked dazed for a moment, his face tinged with regret.
“Zhizhi, why haven’t you left? You should have gone.”
I wanted to ask myself that too-why hadn’t I left? Perhaps it was the few scraps of conscience I had left that made me unable to walk away, unable to avoid the trouble.
I dragged him home and nursed him with care. Before long, he recovered.
Neither of us ever mentioned my departure again. Later, his name appeared on the golden roster.
He was named the Top Graduate during the palace examinations, and he was on the verge of achieving fame and fortune.
Yet, he knelt and pleaded with His Majesty to thoroughly reinvestigate the case of the deposed Crown Prince from years ago.
His Majesty was furious. He threw him into the Imperial Prison and ordered his exile to the frontier.
I had no money and couldn’t get into the Imperial Prison.
I could only wait at the city gates, hoping to run into him and ask what on earth had happened.
But I waited through several dawns and dusks, and he never came.
Later still, I entered the palace as a study companion for the Fifth Princess.
Only then did I learn that a scholar in the Imperial Prison that year had died to prove his resolve, smashing his head against the blood-stained walls of the cell. Naturally, there were no guards to escort a prisoner out through the city gates.
But the Song Duhe I knew was never a reckless man, and he certainly wasn’t one to choose death so easily.
Beyond the Palace Walls
That dog of an emperor ordered me to marry a young eunuch, and I didn’t even blink before agreeing.
Yet, on the night of the wedding, I was tied up and hauled into the emperor’s bedchamber before I even had the chance to remove my bridal veil.
Princess’s Journey: Life in Chang’an Is Not Easy
I spent eighteen years in a Buddhist temple.
Eighteen years later, I returned as Princess Chang’an. To compensate me for those lost years, the Empress Mother made a public promise: she would grant me any one thing I desired.
I looked around the room, my gaze landing on Wei Zhao, who shone brilliantly amidst the unremarkable crowd. Pointing at him, I declared, “I want him to be my Imperial Son-in-Law.”
Only later did I discover that Wei Zhao and my younger sister, Princess Kangle, were childhood sweethearts. They were a mere imperial decree away from being wed.
But what of it?
Even if I had known from the start, I still would have claimed Wei Zhao as mine!
The Last Moon
Everyone knows I am merely a stand-in for the Northern Liang Crown Prince’s true love.
To coax a smile from him, I would don his beloved’s favorite dancing silks and dance until my feet were raw with bloody blisters.
To shield him from harm, I would take an assassin’s blade without a second thought.
The Crown Prince once remarked, “In the bedchamber, she at least has some use.”
The people sneered at me: “How shameless, doing anything just to claw her way to the title of Crown Princess.”
I remained silent, as I always have.
Because-
The Crown Prince? He is a substitute, too.
I Never Loved the Prince
I accompanied His Highness through three thousand miles of exile, yet after he reclaimed his throne, he found me lowly and loathsome.
Later, when the time came to reward merit in the Golden Luan Hall, I asked only one thing of him.
His Highness assumed I would ask for a title or a place by his side.
Instead, I prostrated myself deeply and spoke softly yet firmly: “I ask that Your Highness grant your subject’s daughter a marriage to General Shen.”
His Highness’s eyes nearly split with rage as he finally understood-
Throughout those three thousand miles of exile, from beginning to end, it was never him that I loved.
Walking Beside You
For three nights in a row, my maid said the same thing in her sleep:
“It seems one of the chickens in the backyard is missing.”
I simply assumed she was exhausted from her daily chores and thought nothing of it.
That was until we encountered a landslide on our way to the Capital. My maid was killed in the disaster, but I was rescued by soldiers who arrived just in time.
Trembling and lost, I sought out the commanding officer, intending to reveal my true identity as the daughter of the Provincial Commander.
He glanced at the maid’s clothes I was wearing and suddenly asked:
“Are the hens still brooding lately?”
I Faked My Death to Escape My Husband
During the first year of our marriage, at my birthday banquet, a songstress appeared wearing a silk dress identical to mine.
My husband’s expression turned ice-cold. “Someone, strip that dress off her.”
He was clearly defending my honor, yet I felt not a single spark of warmth in my heart.
For I knew that he was also the man who had once spent a fortune on that very songstress and made a pact to elope with her.