Forced Marriage
Marrying the Sickly Eunuch
The world says that Cheng Xiu, the Director of the Eastern Depot, is sinister, cruel, treacherous, and ruthless.
The world is right.
I have always been competitive to a fault. When my elder sister from the legal wife fainted, I shoved the Regent Prince aside and carried her back to her chambers myself.
When my elder sister from a concubine fell into the water, I outstripped the Young Marquis to rescue her and bring her to shore.
When the Second Prince was about to win at pitch-pot, I fired two arrows simultaneously into the ears of the pot, snatching first place for myself.
At a palace banquet, Zhao Wangjian-who grew up with me-bet that I wouldn’t dare kick the Neighboring Country Prince in the backside. I laughed; there was nothing in this world I didn’t dare to do. I followed the prince into a small grove, but when I woke up, I was lying beneath Cheng Xiu.
He asked if I wanted to marry him.
Who would have thought? It turns out there actually is something in this world I don’t dare to do.
My Husband Guards His Love, I Forcefully Take Him
On our wedding night, my husband apologized to me.
He said that to defend his true love, I had to take my own life.
“Tell me-poison, a dagger, a noose, or the river? Which do you choose?”
I asked, “Can I choose to die of pleasure?”
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.
Never
I was abducted and sold.
But I didn’t cry, and I didn’t cause a scene.
I even married a handsome man.
He asked me, “Do you want to escape?”
I replied with a beaming smile, “How could I, Brother?
“In life, I am yours; in death, I am your ghost.
“I will be with you for all eternity.”
He finally smiled and leaned down to kiss me.
I closed my eyes.
That’s right, of course I’m going to be with you for all eternity.
My life was destroyed by you.
Naturally, I’m going to drag you down to hell with me.
On a Snowy Night, He Forgot Me Again
The day I was escorted onto the Sacrificial Altar, Emperor Pei Yuheng personally pressed his seal onto the list of my crimes.
The entire court decried me as a Nation-Wrecker Sorceress, yet only I knew that his life was something I had reclaimed from the King of Hell, one blade-stroke at a time.
However, every time I saved him, he would forget a little more of me.
By the end, he couldn’t even remember the lantern he once held when he promised to marry me.
Phoenix Pendant, Winter Heart
It was the fifth year of our engagement, and Meng Cijun still refused to marry me.
The first time he turned me down, he said the King was placing great importance on him, so how could he indulge in the trivialities of love?
That made sense, so I nodded and waited another two years.
The second time he turned me down, he said that since the King had yet to choose a Queen, how could a mere subject like him marry first?
That made me angry. I felt the King was being completely unreasonable-I had waited so long that I was practically an old maid, yet he still wouldn’t allow Meng Cijun to marry me?
Meng Cijun and I had a fight. In a fit of pique, I left home, only to rescue a palace official who was trying to end his life by the river.
One of the girls selected for the draft had run away, and Wang Shiguan was so distressed he was ready to jump into the water.
“If I enter the palace, will I be able to see the King?”
Wang Shiguan looked at my hair, which was not yet pinned up in the style of a married woman, and my youthful face. He nodded with delight.
“Of course! If you find favor, you’ll see the King every single night!”
“Alright then,” I said, nodding as I gathered my skirts and stepped into the carriage.
Once I saw that King, I intended to ask him exactly why he wouldn’t let Meng Cijun marry me.
“Miss, if you leave, how am I supposed to explain this to Master Meng?” Xiao Tao asked, panicked.
I thought about it for a moment, then pulled back the curtain and waved a hand.
“Just tell Meng Cijun that Ah Wu is still mad at him and won’t be coming home for dinner tonight!”
Princess, Please Take Responsibility
I drunkenly took advantage of the New Top Scholar. The next day, I waved a hand and offered him compensation.
To my surprise, he turned around and grabbed a rope, intent on hanging himself. I hurriedly promised him gold, shops, and a grand mansion.
He let go of the rope only to try and bash his head against the wall. I held him tight, refusing to let go. “A rank three position in two years, and entry into the Grand Secretariat in three!”
He silently drew a blade. I was completely out of options. “Could it be… you want This Princess to take responsibility?”
He sheathed the knife, lowered his eyes, and whispered, “…That would suffice.”
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!
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.
The Call of the Mountain Magpie
The Seventh Prince became an outcast.
For four years, I followed him as his servant, never leaving his side through thick and thin.
Later, he ascended to the highest position in the land.
Everyone thought my days of suffering were finally over and my rewards were at hand.
But then, the New Emperor took the Chancellor’s Only Daughter as his Empress.
Some sighed with pity; others watched for the drama to unfold.
Yet, not a single ripple of emotion stirred in my heart.
Because the one I love was never him to begin with.