Murders
The Portrait That Locks Souls
I paint faces for the dead and open The Door for the living.
After the Prime Minister’s Daughter met a sudden, violent end, I painted the last thing she ever saw.
Three months later, that very face smiled at me from a crowded street.
Later, when the Grand Princess lay within her coffin, she reached out and gripped my brush. “Don’t paint me,” she whispered. “Paint yourself.”
Demon Angel 3: Hunting the Beast
A serial killer targeting young women had appeared in our small town.
He even had a following of brainless sycophants who helped spread his message: “Women are better off staying in their place.”
As I was about to head out, my neighbor cautioned me, “Are you wearing a skirt? It’s not safe lately.”
I smiled. “You’re right. He isn’t safe.”
It is a little-known fact that criminals are even more vulnerable than women or children.
After all, whether they end up dead or maimed, they can never step into the light.
Why couldn’t he just stay in his place?
He just had to go and catch the eye of a lunatic like me.
The Eleventh Step at Dawn
At one o’clock in the morning, I counted the Eleventh Step on the western staircase of my office building.
Resting on that single step was a white sneaker, its laces tied into the same blue dead knot my missing best friend always used.
Five years ago, a woman had died in this building.
Now, the security guard who holds the elevator for me every day looked up and flashed a smile.
“Miss Tang, you shouldn’t go around counting stairs.”
The Sixth in the Morgue
At three in the morning, the funeral home’s Morgue was only supposed to have five registered bodies, yet I found a sixth, unregistered, nameless female corpse in locker number six.
A slip of paper was pressed against her chest with nothing but my name written on it.
Even more terrifying was the moment my hand brushed her wrist; I saw the last seven seconds of her life and heard her raspy, blood-choked voice whisper: “Shen Nian, don’t trust your father.”
That was the night I realized that sometimes, the dead don’t come to say goodbye-they come to reopen a case.
A Wooden Hairpin
When I was thirteen, I traded myself for a bowl of chicken soup. From that moment on, I knew I was born for this life. I used it to trade for one head after another.
A Call Across Time
On the night of February 2, 2011, my daughter was lured to a park under the guise of a part-time job.
There, she was raped and her body was discarded. At least three people were involved in the assault, but the killers were never found.
On New Year’s Eve, 2026, I prepared a table full of poisoned food and looked at my daughter’s photograph. “It’s been fifteen years, and I still haven’t found the people who destroyed you.
I don’t want to spend another New Year without you. I’m coming down to join you now.”
As the poison began to take effect, I set down my chopsticks and leaned over the table, retching. Just then, my phone rang.
When I answered, a familiar voice came from the other end: “Dad, I’m at the park. Wait for me, I’ll be home soon.”
Moth to the Flame
Three months after marrying into the Marquis Manor, I became pregnant.
A maid brought me a bowl of medicinal soup, claiming it was a gift from the Empress Dowager to help stabilize my pregnancy.
I took the bowl but didn’t dare to drink it.
In my previous life, not long after I drank it, I fell into a coma.
When I finally woke, I was trapped in a sea of flames, and both mother and child perished.
At that moment, the maid urged me, “Please drink it quickly, Madam. Refusing a gift from the Empress Dowager is a punishable offense.”
The Earth Master Girl: Fengdu Ghost City
My cousin is dead.
His hands were tied to a ceiling beam, and he was wearing a red dress over a swimsuit-a swimsuit that was still dripping wet.
The police report claimed it was a suicide.
But I know he didn’t kill himself. And I know who’s next.
It’s me. There is no escape.
Reborn at the Moment of the College Entrance Exam Massacre
On the night before the college entrance exam, I was raped.
Two murderers broke into our home and brutalized me right in front of my grandmother.
Then, they strangled her to death right before my eyes.
I barely escaped with my life, but I went from being a star student destined for Tsinghua and Peking Universities to a useless cripple, paralyzed from the neck down and unable even to use the bathroom on my own.
Fortunately, I have been reborn.
I have returned to the very moment the killers knocked on the door.
Provoking Trouble
I am Cui Yin, the eldest daughter of the Vice Minister of Rites.
I was raised in my maternal grandparents’ home since I was a child.
When I was seventeen, they brought me back to the capital, each of them appearing kind and benevolent.
But in private, my grandmother was indifferent, my father despised me, and my Stepmother Su hid a dagger behind her smile.
My older brother, born of the same mother, warned me, “Cui Yin, you must know your place and behave yourself. Otherwise, I will not show you any mercy.”
My innocent and romantic younger sister said with a beaming smile, “Sister, you grew up in a rural manor, and the clothes you’re wearing are quite out of fashion. I’ve gathered a few pieces I no longer wear to give to you.”
They even planned to marry me off as a successor wife to a profligate from the Commandery Duke Manor, a man who had beaten his first wife to death. …
Before entering the capital, I had originally intended to hang myself.
It was my maid, Huaihua, who desperately clung to my legs.
“Miss! Miss, don’t die! People from the Cui Family of the Capital have arrived. Let’s go to the capital and find some fun!”
I am ill; I suffer from hysteria and have no interest in life.
When I lose my mind, I only find pleasure through killing.
Well then, I hope they can bring me some joy.