Second Chance
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.
Tong Yue
On the day my lady and I fled, I went east while she went west.
Dressed in her clothes and carrying her token, I drew the pursuers away for her.
At death’s door, I was rescued. My lady’s betrothed mistook me for her.
Badly wounded and stripped of my memories, I was cherished by him and carefully nursed. He even married me.
Five years later, he brought back a battered woman. It was my lady. Convinced that I had deceived him, Qi Yu hated me to the bone and sent me to my death with a cup of poison.
When I opened my eyes again, I was back on the day I lured the enemy away for her.
I returned her clothes and token, then smiled and told her: “Go east. And don’t look back.”
Guanyin Crossing the Mortal World
The emperor died too soon, and I became Empress Dowager at a young age.
To secure my son’s throne, I had no choice but to yield to the Prince Regent and become his illicit lover.
Later, when my son came of age, he finally reclaimed imperial power.
I sent the Prince Regent to the underworld with a cup of poisoned wine.
But I never imagined the Prince Regent had poisoned me as well.
As I coughed up blood in agony, he held me tightly in his arms and laughed madly in my ear: “If we die, we die together. Once we’re dead, we can be reborn together.”
Our blood mingled, and neither of us met a good end.
Before I died, through the haze, I thought: I had been such a pathetic Empress Dowager.
I had never lived a single good day.
If I truly could be reborn, I would stay far, far away from those two: the short-lived ghost and the madman.
But I did not get to be reborn into another life. Instead, I was reborn at the palace banquet where marriages were decreed.
The Crown Prince was about to hand the one and only Phoenix-patterned Jade Pendant to the woman he loved.
His gaze lingered on my face for an instant, as if he had made up his mind to give the pendant to me.
The next moment, I lowered my head and shifted slightly aside, letting him see Song Xiuying behind me clearly.
She was the one who had shared life and death with him in my previous life.
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.”
When He Forgot Me for the Third Time, He Personally Sentenced Me to Death
Crown Prince Bai Xiuzhu had been afflicted with the Southern Border Love-Forgetting Gu.
Every time he clawed his way back from the brink of death, he would forget the person he loved most. The first time, he forgot his mother.
The second time, he forgot the marriage vows we had exchanged before Heaven and Earth at the border.
The third time-after I had slit my wrists to feed him my blood and save his life-he sat high atop his throne in the Hall of Golden Chimes and personally marked my death warrant with a stroke of vermilion ink.
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.”
The Ex-Husband Keeps Courting Death
In my third year of living the high life in the Underworld, my ex-husband suddenly developed a passion for courting death.
To save him, I called in every favor I had, spent fortune after fortune, and kowtowed to King Yan until my head nearly fell off.
After a few months of this, I went from the richest soul in the Underworld to a homeless drifter.
Not only was I penniless, I also owed the Heaven and Earth Bank a massive loan.
King Yan had no idea what to do with me. After brooding over it for ages, he finally made a grand stroke of his brush:
“Permission granted for you to return to the mortal world for one day. Go collect money from the living to repay your debt.”
Fateful Encounter with Qingya
After being reborn, I met Song Shixing again.
He was slumped at the end of an alley, covered in wounds and barely clinging to life.
I knew that in three years, he would become the ruler who stood at the pinnacle of the world.
And I would be his empress. Power and riches would all be within my grasp.
But this time, I didn’t want to save him.
Song Shixing, in this life, I don’t want anything to do with you ever again.
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.
Princess’s Journey: The Beauty’s Colors Adorn Silk
After my rebirth, my mother held me in her arms, teasing me playfully.
“Jiaojiao, which one of them would you like as your husband?” I looked at my two young elder cousins.
In my past life, one of them killed me, and the other killed my body double. Both were ruthless, predatory men.
If I ever got involved with them again, would I even survive? I couldn’t help but burst into tears.
Clinging to my mother’s neck, I acted spoiled and pleaded, “Mother, I don’t want either of them.” “Then… you shall have both.”
My mother’s expression was one of absolute determination. Me: ??