All Novel
The Earth Master Girl: Battle Against the Chuma Immortals
I was livestreaming fortune-telling when I connected with a male streamer.
When I asked if he had ever killed anyone, his expression shifted instantly. “Yeah,” he replied. “And you’re next.”
Ten minutes later, there was a knock at my door.
The bullet chat was exploding with people screaming for me to run. “He’s that famous serial killer streamer!”
I let out a soft chuckle. What they didn’t know was that I am the sole Earth Master successor.
Sleeping In Beats Household Scheming
After I transmigrated into a household-intrigue novel…
My mother-in-law demanded that I follow the rules and get up early to serve her tea.
I couldn’t get up. So that very night, I slipped her a sleeping pill.
Then I made sure she slept in with me until the sun was high in the sky.
I thought I was going to be severely punished.
But then floating comments appeared before my eyes: [Haha, this is the first time in decades that Madam Qin has slept this long. She’s feeling refreshed and in a great mood right now.]
[She never got enough sleep before. No wonder she had such a bad temper.]
[Modern technology really is amazing. It directly eased the insomnia and anxiety that Madam Qin spent a fortune trying and failing to cure for years.]
[The female lead really stumbled right into Madam Qin’s heart by accident.]
Me: ? Is this how it’s supposed to go?
Unfaithful
My five-year unrequited love has come to an end.
It ended because Shen Chen’s “white moonlight,” Su Yue, has returned.
Half a month ago, on the first day of autumn, I made some stewed pear soup to bring to Shen Chen.
Shen Chen smokes constantly and never listens when I tell him to stop, so I’ve made it a habit to prepare stewed pears with fritillary bulbs for him whenever the seasons change.
When I arrived, Shen Chen opened the door shirtless.
As the door swung wide, the air in the room smelled thick and suggestive. The scent of body wash clinging to him was the very one we had bought together.
I looked down and immediately spotted a pair of round-toed, mid-heel shoes. They were cute, yet they felt like an eyesore.
“Who is it?” a sweet, cloying female voice called out from the bedroom.
Shen Chen took the pear soup from my hands. His eyes were filled with guilt, but he prioritized his options in an instant.
“It’s just delivery.”
The Embroidered Tower’s Horror
In Jiangnan, the Shen Family possessed a secret technique passed down through generations: the ability to embroider a person’s final appearance before they died.
For thirty years, my father embroidered for the powerful and elite, never once making a mistake.
That was until he died in his embroidery room, and on the Death Portrait before him-depicting a face bleeding from every orifice-was me.
Bone Blade
The first time I killed someone, the blade was dull.
I was fourteen that year. It was winter, and the north wind whipped against my face with a stinging bite.
Three bandits had scaled the wall of my grandfather’s courtyard, intent on stealing the last half-sack of millet he had hidden in the cellar.
My grandfather was blind. Hearing the commotion, he called out my name: “Shen He, Shen He!” He was using my alias.
My real name is Shen Heyi, and I am a girl. But the bandits didn’t know that, and Grandfather pretended not to know either.
He just kept calling, his voice urgent and hoarse, sounding like an old crow being strangled by the neck.
I fished out that Bone-Cleaver from beneath the stove.
Its edge was curled and nicked, so dull it couldn’t even slice through sheepskin cleanly.
But a human neck is softer than sheepskin.
I didn’t think about that day again for a very long time-not until I met Xie Changgeng.
Soul-Whip 4: Seven Human Heads
When I first started driving freight trucks, I once asked Master out of curiosity: Why did truckers need to perform Chongsha, while bus drivers didn’t?
Master said it was because trucks carried cargo, not people, so what they feared most was running into trouble on the road.
Buses, on the other hand, were always picking people up and dropping them off, so their greatest taboo was disaster striking onboard.
That was why buses didn’t pay much attention to warding off the road itself.
What they cared about was ballasting the vehicle.
Most bus drivers I’d met used stones for it.
Some used stone statues.
Whenever the passenger count hit four or seven, the driver would bring out the Vehicle-Ballasting Stone, treating it as one extra passenger onboard to keep misfortune away.
But recently, I took on a strange job.
A bus driver came to me and asked me to ballast his bus as a living person.
He said that before me, three Vehicle-Ballasting Stones had already shattered on his bus.
The Perfect Wedding of the Witch and Vampire
I am a newly appointed NPC in a horror instance.
On the third night after successfully starting work as a Maid in the Ancient Castle,
I sneaked into the room of the instance Boss with a little tail trailing behind me.
The Vampire Boss, who had been waiting for a long time, had his shirt collar wide open, faintly revealing the metallic sheen of a chain underneath.
I raised my hand to cup his handsome face as he tried to lean in and kiss me, but I only rubbed noses with him affectionately:
“Darling, our secret has been discovered.”
“If you want a reward, you’ll have to deal with those rats first.”
The Secret of Five Letters
My husband jumped from a building and died in a pool of blood.
The police quickly cordoned off the scene.
A few days later, the autopsy report came back: the cause of death was a massive intracranial hemorrhage, and his body bore numerous signs of a struggle.
The police told me he had committed suicide and that there was no killer. I didn’t believe them.
Puppy, Please Disperse the Gloom
I was married to Chi Ni for three years.
It wasn’t until after his death that I discovered his morbid, obsessive longing for me through his diary.
“I’m so jealous of the Young Lady’s dog. I want her to put a collar on me, too.”
“I dreamed of the Young Lady. When I woke up… I was wet again. I am a sinner.”
Clutching that diary, I was reborn into a time ten years in the past.
These were Chi Ni’s most wretched, downtrodden days.
He looked at me with a cold, detached gaze, like a wild dog that couldn’t be tamed.
I curled my finger at him with a beaming smile. “Smile for me, or I’ll kiss you until your lips are raw.”
The cold indifference he had fought so hard to maintain instantly crumbled.