Slow Romance
Don’t Mess with the Action Faction
My brother went on a trip with a few friends.
Mom told me to video-call him and check in.
The call connected, and the screen filled with a man’s bare upper body, his pecs on full display.
He rubbed his hair with a towel and said casually, as if it were the most natural thing in the world,
“Your brother’s taking a shower in the room next door. His charging cable broke, so his phone’s charging over here with me.”
I stared at the image on the screen, unable to snap out of it for a long moment.
Then that fair, handsome face suddenly leaned closer to the camera, a wicked smile curving his lips.
“Am I that good-looking? Want to see for yourself in person sometime?”
Suisui, Safe and Sound
Ever since I was little, I had been slow and lacking in wit, while Elder Sister was extraordinarily gifted.
At a poetry gathering held at Marquis Manor, she was afraid I would embarrass myself, so in private, she composed a poem for me.
None of us expected that the true purpose of the gathering was to choose a wife for the Second Young Master of Marquis Manor. And the poem she wrote for me was the very one that caught the Second Young Master’s eye.
Later, I married into Marquis Manor.
After the wedding, Pei You discovered just how dull and ignorant I truly was.
Only then did he realize I was not the person who had written that poem that day.
Pei You resented me, blamed me, despised me.
He said his wife should not be someone like me, a woman with nothing but a pretty face and not a drop of learning inside her.
Whenever we were intimate, he would lean close to my ear and mock me, saying I had none of the dignified bearing of a proper main wife, only a body full of vixenish allure that was of some small use in bed.
I was terrified.
So when I returned to the day of that poetry gathering, I stopped Elder Sister before she could write a poem for me. My voice trembled as I said,
“Thank you, Elder Sister, but there is no need.”
I Chose Money Over My Top Scholar Husband
I was the quietest, shyest girl in the village.
And yet, every night, I went to the ruined temple to seduce the village’s only scholar.
The scholar never took the bait. Disheartened, I decided to steal all the money from home and run away.
He stopped me. “We agreed. When I make something of myself one day, you have to leave on your own.”
I nodded as fast as I could.
Later, he really did pass the imperial examinations with honors, and I finally gained the ability to support myself. So I asked him to sign the divorce papers.
His eyes were bloodshot. “You want to leave me?”
Lou Xiao
The first time criminal investigator Lou Xiao met Qiao Xia was at a wedding that had descended into total chaos. Years later, the two reunited on a blind date. From testing each other and misunderstanding each other to slowly drawing closer, one clumsy but sincere, the other clearheaded and independent, they learned, little by little, amid entanglements with people from the past, the pressure of work, and sudden danger, to put their love into words and to make room for each other in their future.
The Female Profligate
I was Shangjing’s most notorious female wastrel.
To rein me in, my parents somehow had a sudden stroke of genius and betrothed me to the legitimate eldest son of a fallen noble family.
He was taciturn and dull, as stiff and old-fashioned as a lecturer from the National Academy.
So, in front of my pack of disreputable friends, I swore:
“I, Yao Yao, would rather die alone-would rather jump from here-than ever marry Xie Jinghong!”
Half a year later.
The same group of friends.
They imitated me:
“I, Yao Yao~ would rather die alone~ would rather jump from here~ than ever marry Xie Jinghong~”
I recalled the flush at the corners of that man’s eyes, his breaths scented faintly of plum blossoms, his body like white jade suffused with dawn light.
After swallowing softly a few times, I slapped the table and shot to my feet.
“I’ve discovered that all of you take things way too seriously. I’m done talking to you-my husband is calling me home for dinner.”
Joyful Reunion
I am the unlucky princess who got thrown into the Cold Palace.
The people above gave me two choices: either become a eunuch’s palace wife, or marry a fool.
Without the slightest hesitation, I chose to marry the fool.
After all, he comes with an extra part. I’d be getting the better deal~
When the Moon is Full and the Flowers Bloom
Madam Shen was unable to bear children, so she wanted to buy a respectable concubine to carry on the family line for Eldest Master Shen.
A respectable concubine received two taels of silver every month, and even got to eat white rice with braised pork.
The moment I heard the news, I immediately told my mother to take me into the city to sign up.
My mother smacked me on the head and snapped, “I’ve given birth to three children, and you’re the stupidest of the lot!”
The Fifth Prince Doesn’t Want to Be a Substitute Anymore!
Chapter 0
I was the most beautiful woman in the capital, but because I was a little slow by nature, no one dared to marry me.
The Fifth Prince pined after my legitimate elder sister to no avail, then gave up on himself and married me as her stand-in.
He mocked himself, saying, “A fool and a cripple. I suppose we really are a perfect match.”
Very generously, I comforted him. “From now on, I’ll be my elder sister’s stand-in, and you’ll be the Crown Prince’s stand-in. We can still live our lives just fine.”
At the homecoming banquet, I watched the Crown Prince and my elder sister exchange tender looks.
The Fifth Prince’s expression was terrible, and my heart ached bitterly too.
Everyone else laughed at us, calling us a lovesick man and a resentful woman.
After we returned home, the Fifth Prince wrapped his robes tightly around himself and sneered, “Don’t even think about touching a single finger of mine tonight!”
I obediently lay down beside him and repented.
Sigh. It was my fault. I had stared at the Crown Prince for too long.
I was half-asleep when the Fifth Prince suddenly shoved me.
Furious, he snapped, “Shen Yufu! Are you really that honest?! I told you not to touch me, so you actually didn’t touch me?”
I said honestly, “All right, then you pretend to be the Crown Prince, and I’ll pretend to be my elder sister.”
The Fifth Prince bit my lip, forcing me to shut up.
I thought to myself, Didn’t we agree to be each other’s stand-ins? Why is he angry again?
The Fifth Prince’s heart is truly hard to figure out.
Drunk in Spring Smoke
On the day His Majesty traveled south to Jiangnan, the Empress Dowager took a liking to Miss Xu of the Xu Family in Yangcheng.
“Such a lovely, fresh-faced child ought to become a daughter-in-law of our imperial family.”
As she said this, the Empress Dowager’s gaze seemed to drift, intentionally or not, toward Fu Yanli at my side.
Fu Yanli was the current Fifth Prince, and also my husband.
Later, on the day Miss Xu was to be invested as consort, I stood at the palace gates, clinging to a sliver of hope. “Not even I may enter?”
The guards at the gate all knew me. One by one, they lowered their heads, not daring to meet my eyes. “The Empress Dowager said it wouldn’t matter if anyone else came, but Your Highness, as Crown Princess… you absolutely cannot enter the palace today.”
I nodded, returned to the manor, and picked up the bundle I had packed long ago.
The capital blazed with lights. All at once, I remembered Fu Yanli from that year, when everyone had turned their backs on him.
He had held me tightly, refusing to let go no matter what. “Jianxi, even if I die, I will never betray you.”
Atypical Crush
Back when I was at my most innocent, I wanted the person I had a crush on to remember me.
So I kept deliberately controlling my scores, making him come in second in our grade for three whole years.
He got desperate and asked me out, trying to throw me off my game.
I agreed with a smile-then turned around and dumped him before he could dump me.
The good news: he really did never forget me for the rest of his life.
The bad news?
Years later, when I applied for a job, he was the interviewer.
He tossed my résumé aside without a second thought.
“This one won’t do. Next.”