Revenge
Princess’s Journey: As If on the Other Shore
Chapter 0
My Empress Mother was a transmigrator. Before she returned to her original world, she told me:
I am the vicious villainess in a side story. I would supposedly be consumed by hatred born of love, commit all sorts of evil, and ultimately bring about my own destruction, my corpse abandoned in the wilderness.
“Until you have the power to protect yourself, remember: you must stay far away from Gu Qinglan.”
At first, I truly intended to stay away from Gu Qinglan.
But the plot still forced us to cross paths in the capital.
Left with no choice, I took on the role of the villain and began actively sabotaging him.
Yet, Gu Qinglan looked at me in confusion and said:
“Why is it that even though you’re so wicked, I still find myself falling for you?”
Tsk, tsk. Honestly? I have no words!
Demon Angel
The couple living across from me fought until midnight every single day, while their child wandered around scavenging for trash to eat.
Anyone who dared to give the boy food was met with a barrage of verbal abuse at their doorstep, or even targeted with malicious sexual rumors.
One day, as I was passing through the stairwell, I spotted the boy hiding in a corner, too afraid to look at me. “Hey kid, want something to eat?” I asked.
He claimed he wasn’t hungry, but his stomach was growling like thunder. “Big sister, just leave me alone,” he sobbed. “My mom isn’t a good person.”
I leaned down and looked him in the eye. “Well, neither am I.”
After They Sent Me to a Mental Hospital for Three Years, Only I Could Claim the Ten-Billion-Dollar Will
On the eve of my wedding, my biological father, stepmother, and fiancé conspired to commit me to a mental asylum.
My crime? Being so “insane” that I attacked someone with a knife.
Three years later, I was discharged with a ten-billion-dollar inheritance that requires only my signature to claim.
Everyone expects me to still be a lunatic, but this time, I’m going to make them pay.
While I am at my most lucid, I will reclaim the lives, the money, and the truth they owe me, one debt at a time.
After I Lit My Nemesis’s Life Lamp, the Immortal Sect Forced Us to Bond
I was ordered by my master to assassinate Han Zhaoye, the Young Master of the Demonic Sect. Instead, standing beside the broken blade buried in his chest, I lit a Life Lamp to sustain his ebbing life. From that moment on, if he was injured, I spat blood; if he sought death, I was the one driven mad. Now, the entire Immortal Sect says he and I should become Dao Companions. But what they don’t know is that fourteen years ago, in the great fire of Floating White City, our lives had already been bound together by another’s hand.
The Night I Collected My Husband’s Corpse, I Saw My Own Face in the Coffin
The night I went to collect Prince Jing’s corpse, I saw my own jade bracelet and sleeping robe inside the coffin. My husband, returned from the dead, choked me and said, “Lanyin, die once in my place.”
When I opened my eyes again, I had returned to three months ago. This time, I will be the one collecting their corpses first.
Spring Without Rain
My father had many illegitimate daughters.
Some were brilliantly talented, some were gifted in song and dance, and others possessed breathtaking beauty.
He scoured the world for beauties, siring one little belle after another.
Among them all, his favorite was Xidai.
Consequently, she was the one I hated most.
“She is the most beautiful and has a timid nature. She’ll be the safest choice to accompany you when you marry into the Wang Family,”
Father said, “I am not being partial; I am doing this for your own good.”
But I thought to myself: his actions did not match his words.
Belated Love
I’ve read so many novels about the “crematorium” trope-where the husband has to crawl back and beg for forgiveness-but I never expected to find myself starring in one.
Except there’s no chasing, only the crematorium.
Because I’m actually dead.
I’ve become a ghost, watching the man who betrayed me. Seven days after my death, he finally seems crushed by a delayed sense of grief. In the home I can never return to, he howls in agony, acting as if life is no longer worth living.
You want to know how I feel?
I just stand there blankly, carefully admiring every inch of pain etched onto his face.
I listen intently to his desperate wails, triggered by my departure.
Beyond the desolation and heartache in my soul, a massive wave of schadenfreude suddenly wells up within me.
A joyful, blissful sense of schadenfreude.
It’s a sensation so sharp it borders on thrill. I cover my mouth and begin to laugh.
Huai Nan
When the chandelier came crashing down, Pei Yi pushed me toward death to protect another woman.
As I lay there, blood streaming from my head, I was so happy I could have bashed my skull against a wall.
The woman who had hijacked my body had finally failed her mission and been wiped out.
Having reclaimed control of my own body, I didn’t spare Pei Yi a single glance.
Yet, with bloodshot eyes, he blocked my path. “Is it… is it really you? Have you come back?”
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!
An Arrow to Congratulate the Newlyweds
At Yuchi Wei’s wedding, I once fired an arrow that pierced through the bride’s red veil, killing her on the spot.
I did it because that woman was a spy.
In the aftermath, Yuchi Wei was moved to tears of gratitude. He promoted me to be his personal lieutenant.
Because of that proximity, he eventually discovered my secret-that I was a woman disguised as a man.
Five years later, on our wedding night, he walked into the room carrying a funerary urn he had cherished for years.
“I want you to experience the same thing I did back then,” he said. “To taste the bitterest pain at the moment of your greatest joy.”
Only then did I realize he had deeply loved that spy all along, and his heart had never changed.
He gouged out my eyes and crippled my hands so that I could never fire an arrow again.
Amidst a world of bloody light, I set the house ablaze, dragging him down to death with me.
When I opened my eyes again, I had returned to the day of Yuchi Wei’s wedding.
“General, do you think the woman who just stepped out of the bridal sedan could be that spy?” my subordinate whispered.
I stopped him, my expression indifferent.
“We are only here today to offer our congratulations. We will not discuss official business.”