Second Chance
The School Heartthrob Goes Bad
The System told me to teach Pei Yu, the disabled campus heartthrob, how to go bad. I agreed.
At the internet café, I snatched his Five-Year Gaokao, Three-Year Simulation out of his hands.
“Teach me how to play Minesweeper.”
Pei Yu gave a soft scoff. “What a joke.”
During a fight, I grabbed his prosthetic limb and used it as a weapon, swinging it in a full arc to smack Yellow Hair.
“Not gonna lie, this thing’s pretty handy.”
Pei Yu: “Heh.”
On a rainy, overcast day, Pei Yu’s stump started spasming. I ignored it and treated it like a massage gun, using it to help me snag concert tickets.
After I got them, I rewarded him by kissing his stump.
“A kiss, and it won’t hurt anymore.”
Later, Pei Yu pinned me against the headboard.
And coaxed me too. “Baby, hold on a little longer. A kiss, and it won’t hurt anymore.”
A Small Matter About Spring
On the day I died, Xiao Xu was about to make another woman his empress.
He came to the Cold Palace, hoping I would swallow my pride and yield to him. What greeted him was only my ice-cold corpse.
For reasons no one could explain, Xiao Xu broke down. He did one deranged thing after another, and every day he wept blood before my grave.
In the end, he got his wish and was reborn a thousand years later.
In the twenty-first century, Xiao Xu and I were classmates.
He was still dazzling. Still exceptional.
He was looking for me.
But he didn’t know that I had been reborn too, with all my memories intact.
The First Law
After Lin Min, a prodigy from Tsinghua University, dies in an accident, her soul takes over the body of Sun Shuyi, a bullied high school senior.
Faced with terrible grades, indifferent classmates, and a family in pieces, she relies on the elite abilities she once possessed to fight her way back to first place.
In this new body, she also begins, little by little, to repair Sun Shuyi’s life. As academic competitions, the college entrance exam, and the truth behind an old case draw ever closer, she must find her own rules for coming in first amid revenge, growth, and the chance to live all over again.
Miss Protagonist, Please Don’t Jump
I transmigrated into a tragic romance world trapped in an endless cycle and became the city spirit of the Liang Kingdom.
Again and again, the heroine, Bai Ruohuan, leapt from the city wall.
Again and again, the emperor, Liang Qingci, marched toward the ruin of his nation.
At first, I only wanted to sit back and watch the spectacle unfold, but I was forced onto the stage to change their fate.
Alongside that cold-hearted, impassive emperor, I fought to survive through countless cycles, until at last I glimpsed the truth hidden behind Heaven’s Love Calamity.
Ah Yan
On our wedding day, he left me alone at the venue and disappeared.
Four months pregnant, I called him again and again.
At first, he simply didn’t answer. Later, his phone was turned off completely.
Whispers began to rise around me.
“This is the first time I’ve ever seen a groom run away from his own wedding.”
“Shotgun marriages never involve decent people. No wonder he doesn’t want her.”
I stood in the wind, at a complete loss, trying over and over to reassure the guests as they left one after another.
All day long, I waited like a fool on that street corner. Even after everyone had gone, he still never appeared.
An auntie nearby muttered without thinking, “Jiang Shen looks like your father’s ex-wife’s son. Don’t tell me he came to get revenge on you.”
On the way back, those words kept echoing through my mind.
Lost and dazed, my car collided with a truck. My four-month-old child and I were buried beneath the wreckage.
The Survival Rules of a Villainess
My father was famous throughout the surrounding villages for being a good man.
One freezing winter during a famine, he gave the last of our rice to a mother and child passing by.
After they left, they told everyone they met that my family still had grain.
The starving refugees, driven mad by hunger, came to our door to steal it, only to find an empty rice jar.
Humiliated and enraged, they forced my three-year-old sister into their arms and carried her away.
“If there’s no rice, then your daughter will do!”
I ran after them. In the end, all I found in the ruined temple was my sister’s mangled remains.
When I returned home, my father wailed through his tears, “I was trying to save people! It’s not my fault… That was just her fate!”
He saved someone else. In the end, my sister died, and I died too, in the bitter winter when I was fifteen.
When I opened my eyes again, I saw my father handing the freshly cooked rice to that mother and child.
I picked up the flower hoe beside me and stepped up behind him.
After Divorcing the Aloof Flower
“My youngest uncle is Yin Boyu. You’ve heard of him, right?”
My blind date asked the question with a hint of contempt.
“I have.”
“He’s only a few years older than me, but he’s already the one in charge of the family company.”
“Impressive.”
“My uncle really is impressive. Handsome, loaded, the whole package. Too bad he’s so cold. He’s almost thirty, and there’s still not a single woman by his side.”
Is that so? I took a sip of my milk tea and didn’t tell him.
My divorce certificate with Yin Boyu was tucked away in my drawer.
My Husband Is Long Aotian
They told me it was only a game, and had me wipe out the male lead’s entire household.
But when the NPCs’ blood splashed onto me, it was so scalding, so searingly hot, that I finally realized this so-called full-dive game was connected to a real world.
A real village. Real people. And a real young male lead who blushed as he asked me what flowers I liked.
Behind me came the sound of frantic, uneven footsteps.
Covered in blood, I turned around-only to see the young man staring at me in a daze.
In his hands, he was still holding a bouquet of dew-damp white begonias.
Living to See the Sun
One month after I died.
My childhood friend, the top celebrity I had long since cut ties with, did something completely out of character.
He canceled every job and shut himself away to write music.
In the end, he bid farewell to the music industry with a song called I Miss Her.
Everyone said he must have gone insane to give up such a dazzling future.
When I opened my eyes again, I was back on New Year’s Eve, at the height of my fame.
The host prompted me as part of the program, asking me to call someone and wish them a Happy New Year.
Without the slightest hesitation, I dialed his number.
His voice trembled on the other end.
“Happy New Year to you too.”
This time, I want to live toward hope.
Dust and Clouds
My stepmother had been my mom’s best friend, and she had always doted on me.
She spoiled me so thoroughly that Dad became utterly disappointed in me and turned to grooming his stepdaughter instead.
After Dad died, my stepmother swallowed up the inheritance and threw me out of the house.
I died on the streets one snowy night.
When I opened my eyes again, my stepmother was secretly stuffing money into the hands of my soon-to-be second-year high school self.
“Don’t worry about your dad. I support you studying music and chasing your dreams.”