Found Family
The Billionaire’s Temporary Wife
Ever since Huo Yu married me,
his son has been making a fuss nonstop.
“Bad Woman won’t let me eat!”
“She won’t let the butler tell me bedtime stories!”
“Daddy, she bullies me every day, wuwuwu…”
Huo Yu was used to his son’s unreasonable tantrums and didn’t pay much attention.
Until one day, he suddenly realized it had been half a month since he last received a complaint call.
Huo Yu found it rather odd.
After finishing work that evening, he took the initiative to call his son to coax him to sleep.
Unexpectedly, his usually clingy son seemed uninterested.
“Daddy, go to bed early. There’s a ton of stuff to do at kindergarten tomorrow.”
Huo Yu:?
Wrong Love
On the day the divorce was finalized, I booked a high-speed rail ticket back to my hometown. A phone, an ID card, and a bank card with a meager balance were all I had left.
When the butler called to say the young master was crying for his mother, I finally understood that the son I had borne and his father loved the same woman.
Before the train left, I made one last promise: I would never disturb him again.
My Little Dog
Of the five children in my family, four are queer-and they have paired off with each other.
Convinced that I am the last hope of both bloodlines, my father rejoices when he learns that I have a boyfriend.
Then my boyfriend messages me, “The new collar is here, Mommy-put it on me.”
I quietly locked my phone.
Apparently, he is even less fit to bring home.
The Grave We Share
On the third day after being diagnosed with Stomach Cancer, I chose a grave for myself.
They say the feng shui is especially good.
It’s supposed to bless me so that in my next life, I won’t be the real daughter everyone despises.
No one will steal my parents, my brother, or everything else from me.
No longer… unloved.
I burned my photos and clothes, erased every trace of my existence.
Then I slit my wrists, lay down in the bathtub, and waited peacefully for death.
But then the Cemetery Center suddenly called me:
“Miss Lu, we’re terribly sorry.”
“Two Agents accidentally sold the same plot.”
“This grave was also sold to another gentleman.”
“Would you… mind moving your grave?”
Mother, I’m Just a Pig Butcher
I found an unconscious noblewoman by the river.
One bowl of lard rice a day, and she slowly nursed back to health.
Then one day, a great contingent of Tiger Guards came sweeping in full force to my butcher shop and knelt before the noblewoman: "We humbly request that our mistress return to the marquis's residence!"
The man leading them noticed me standing off to the side, trembling: "And who are you?"
I blurted out in a panic: "This commoner is the third butcher shop south of the city, pig slaugh-"
Before I could finish, the noblewoman clapped her hand over my mouth.
"This is my only daughter, the one I had fostered with my maiden family."
Sisters’ Journey
When my mother died, she entrusted me to the Yu family in the capital.
Only after I arrived at their gates did I discover that the “madam” she had named was merely one of the master’s concubines.
Yuwan Loves Chengyan
When I was four, a fortune-teller said I was fated to bring misfortune upon my parents. So they sent me away to a rural estate. For ten years, they never came to see me, nor did they care whether I lived or died.
At fourteen, they brought me home-so they could marry me off.
My legitimate elder sister laughed. “A fool marrying a sickly wretch. A match made in heaven.”
My parents said, “If this engagement weren’t impossible to break, and if your sister weren’t about to marry into a noble family, you wouldn’t even be worthy of carrying his shoes.”
“A married daughter is water poured out. Once you’re gone, don’t come back for anything.”
Only he held my hand and taught me to write my own name.
And then he taught me to write: “A woman, too, must respect and cherish herself, strive without ceasing, and press ever forward.”
She Is a Star
Chapter 0
After my father beat me to death in a drunken rage, I was reborn as my grandmother’s best friend-an obstetrician-gynecologist.
Grandma asked anxiously, “Xiao Fang, is the baby healthy?”
I said, “It’s brain-damaged. I recommend aborting it.”
Holding a Sword, Cutting Through Wind and Snow
My mother was born into nobility, yet she threatened to die if she couldn’t marry my scoundrel of a father.
When I was three, my father broke the law and was thrown into prison.
My mother, holding my infant sister in her arms, climbed into the carriage back to the capital without so much as a glance behind her.
She left me alone in the howling wind and snow.
Eighteen years later, when we met again, my sister had already become the emperor’s favored consort.
Her contemptuous gaze was like a snowflake, landing coldly on my hands. “With all those calluses, can you even call those a woman’s hands?”
Embracing the Bridegroom
After five years of marrying into my family, my penniless scholar husband passed the imperial exam-and suddenly decided I, his butcher wife, reeked of grease and blood.
For half a month, he hemmed and hawed and refused to do his husbandly duties.
So I used the silver I’d earned selling pork to buy him two ink sticks and a ream of fine paper, then scraped together the last of my coins for a tiny bar of scented soap.
When I made it home through the rain, the big yellow dog under the eaves had one of the meat dumplings I’d wrapped dangling from its mouth.
From inside the house came a coy, wheedling voice.
“Father, the magistrate’s daughter smells so nice. Not like Mother.”
“And these pastries taste better than meat dumplings too.”
I took all the bits and pieces I’d hidden against my chest and threw them out-along with the father and son.
When Zheng Huaishu signed the divorce papers, he held our son in his arms and glared at me with resentment.
All the neighbors in the village laughed at me for letting a future official go.
The very next day, the matchmaker introduced me to a fair, slender stutterer.
A little girl trailed behind him.
Father and daughter gave me timid looks.
I asked irritably, “How often can you do your husbandly duties?”
“And how much meat will you eat in a day?”
The stutterer’s face turned bright red. The matchmaker yanked his clothes down over half his shoulder, and he said in a slow, gentle voice, “As long as my child gets a mouthful of rice… as her father, I’ll do anything…”