Nobles
After Becoming a Concubine, I Drove My Whole Family Crazy
I was fighting someone in the street when Young Madam took a liking to me on the spot.
She gave me fifty taels of silver and asked if I was willing to become her husband’s concubine.
They say a debt of recognition should be repaid with one’s body. Fair enough.
But was this really the way to repay it?
Still, I was desperately short on silver, so I gritted my teeth and agreed.
Only after entering the manor did I learn that my husband was introverted, my mother-in-law was tyrannical, and my sister-in-law was insufferably arrogant.
Young Madam hadn’t bought me back to serve anyone at all.
She had brought me into this family to be King Yan.
Ai Ai
I risked my life to save the Commandery Prince and my half sister from drowning.
But because my clothes were soaked through,
they slapped me with the filthy accusation of “deliberate seduction and forcing a marriage to climb the social ladder.”
From the woman who had saved their lives, I became a scheming tramp reviled by all of the capital.
On the day of our wedding, Murong Ling did not even lift my veil. His eyes were filled with disgust.
“You used such despicable means to force me to marry you. I, the Commandery Prince, will never let you have an easy life.”
Yun’e, whom I had dragged ashore with my own hands, twisted her handkerchief, her face full of grievance.
“What a deep schemer you are, Sister. When you saved me, you were swift and decisive, yet under the water, you lingered so intimately with the Commandery Prince for so long…”
I had poured my heart out to save two lives, only to end up condemned from both sides.
I endured every torment the Commandery Prince’s Manor could throw at me.
When I opened my eyes again and saw the two of them bobbing in the river,
I neatly changed direction.
Then I strolled into town and bought a skewer of candied hawthorns.
I took a bite-
So sweet.
An Inch of Longing
Marquis Dingbei, Lu Chenzhou, had three wishes in life. First, a smooth career in court. Second, a prosperous household. Third, to marry the woman he loved. The first two were within easy reach. Only the third remained beyond him-unattainable, forbidden, inescapable. They said another man’s wife was not to be taken. But what if that woman was the wife he had divorced in his previous life?
Cai Cai
Chapter 0 I went to the capital in search of my fiancé.
Before formally presenting myself at his door, I first made some inquiries about his character.
That was when I learned he had a childhood sweetheart who had grown up with him, as well as another young lady he had admired for many years.
The romantic entanglements among the three of them had become the talk of the city.
I knew then that this marriage could not go through.
So I exchanged the marriage contract for a promise from the Madam of the Marquis Manor: I would withdraw from the engagement of my own accord, but as a lone orphan, life in the capital would not be easy for me.
I hoped the Marquis Manor would raise me for a few years as they would one of their own daughters.
Once I turned sixteen, I would leave on my own.
The Madam of the Marquis Manor agreed.
From then on, I lived and ate at the Marquis Manor.
Like the young ladies of the household, I studied, practiced calligraphy, and learned the ways of the world.
But the Heir of the Marquis Manor, Xie Rujue, did not believe me.
When I studied, he said that no matter how many books I read, he would never like a wooden-headed girl like me.
When I learned riding and archery, he laughed and said that if I had that much time, I would be better off learning to dance, so I could please my future husband.
When I learned accounting, he joked to others that he would never let the Marquis Manor’s fortune fall into my hands.
Later, when someone came to propose marriage, he drove the man out, saying that in life or death, I belonged to the Xie Family.
But in the end, I still walked out through the gates of the Marquis Manor, while he could only watch with an ashen face, unable to stop me.
Because this time, what I had received was an imperial decree.
Endless Green in the Deep Courtyard
I waited bitterly for Qu Huang for three years, only to receive a letter of divorce.
When the message arrived, I was still wiping down his bedridden mother.
It was March, and the late spring cold had returned, yet I was drenched in sweat from exhaustion.
My hands shook so badly I could barely take the thin silk letter the attendant handed me.
“Where is my husband?”
“The young master has already arrived in the front hall.”
I sighed, set down the damp towel in my hand, and smoothed back the stray hair at my temples.
“Very well. I’ll go with you.”
He Is My Moon, I Am His Shadow
On the day of the grand wedding, every guest in the hall witnessed Ah Ying take a sword strike intended for Gu Yanzhi.
No one knew that the blades, arrows, and poisons she had endured for him throughout her life were already enough to have killed her many times over.
All she had ever waited for was to die in his arms and hear him call her name just once.
His Beloved
At my elder sister’s engagement banquet, the man who was meant to become my brother-in-law suddenly turned to propose to me instead.
“Wrong. I wish to marry the Second Miss.”
Everyone was thrown off by this turn of events, not knowing how to react, but once they recovered they forced a smile and congratulated me.
Only my elder sister came to find me late at night. “In a past life, he and I spent over fifty years together. It was only after I married him that I learned there was another woman he loved.”
“For those fifty years, we fought constantly because of that woman, until we grew to despise each other. If you don’t want to marry him, sister can help you reject this match.”
But I declined her kindness and still intended to marry him.
I have no romantic feelings for him. Whether he loved one woman or several was something my elder sister cared about; I did not.
I Am the Female Lead of a Vindictive Ancient Story
My fiancé returned from the front, and with him he brought a woman.
She wore a long crimson robe, a curved saber fastened at her waist. She rode in through the city gates on horseback, bold and dazzling, like the wild azaleas that set the mountains ablaze in spring.
“So this is the kind of girl Ning Zhen likes.” She folded her arms and looked me over, one brow lifting. There was no telling from her tone whether she was pleased or displeased.
Ning Zhen only glanced at her helplessly. “A childhood promise can hardly be taken seriously.”
What a fine thing to say-a childhood promise could hardly be taken seriously.
I had waited three years for him, only to be given those words.
Jiaruo
The day I married into the Gu marquis’s household, my father-in-law died and my mother-in-law fell ill.
The wedding feast became a funeral banquet, and I was forced to take charge in the midst of the crisis, assuming control of the household and carrying the funeral through with composure.
My husband thanked me for preserving the Gu family’s dignity, yet never set foot in my room again.
In time, he filled the household with concubines and fathered a brood of sons and daughters by them.
I raised them conscientiously and planned for their futures.
Then I overheard my husband speaking to them behind my back.
“I have never met anyone as coldhearted as your mother. Your grandfather died, and she did not shed a single tear. You may call her Mother, but never learn from her. She is unworthy of the name.”
By then, a physician had already told me I did not have long to live.
Not one of those children came to visit me or bring me medicine; they simply left me to die.
With my last strength, I set fire to the Gu residence and burned that cold, loveless place to the ground.
When I opened my eyes again, I had been reborn.
The Gu family came to propose marriage, and as I looked at the refined, handsome man before me, we spoke the same words at the same time.
“I refuse.”
It turned out I was not the only one who had returned.
Moonlight in the Forest Stream
For five years, I brought meals to the scholar next door.
When he passed the imperial examinations as Tanhua, he did not come back to marry me.
Others laughed at me for being foolish. Though it hurt, I still waved it off and pretended to be carefree.
Then, one year, Mother was beaten half to death by the principal wife. Clinging to what little old affection remained, I cast aside my dignity and went to beg him.
I begged him to find a way to invite Doctor Dong, the most renowned physician in Shangjing City, to come take a look at her, and to help me obtain some good medicine for my mother.
The scholar advised me with a troubled expression, “It isn’t that I won’t help you. It’s just… how could I possibly interfere in your father’s inner household? I know Mother has been wronged, but as a concubine, how could she never suffer a beating?”
Years later, the scholar was implicated by others and demoted, and came to beg at my door.
By then, I was already Lady Jun, a First-rank Imperial Mandate Lady, not someone ordinary people could meet at will.
People of the time had a saying: Better to offend Lord Zichen than to offend Lady Jun.
I idly picked at the gold foil on my nail guard and said slowly,
“It isn’t that I won’t help you. It’s just… I am only a woman of the inner quarters. How could I possibly have any say in affairs of court? Besides, as an official and a subject, how could one never suffer a grievance?”