All Novel
Next Spring
In my fifth year by the side of that charming, reckless young playboy, someone snapped a photo of me that made it look like I was pregnant.
For a while, rumors flew through our circle. Everyone thought I was going to use the baby to force my way up and marry into a wealthy family.
When his long-estranged first love heard the news, she came charging back from overseas.
I thought a bloody storm was about to break loose.
But by the time Lu Heran returned from his business trip, all he heard was that I had gotten rid of the baby and slipped back to my hometown.
Sigh. Good girls like us can fool around all we want on ordinary days.
But if we really got pregnant with a child and no proper status, our parents would beat us to death.
Canary and Dog
My fiancé was keeping a little canary.
I told him to bring her over so I could take a look.
Perfect timing-I could take my little puppy out for a walk too.
On the day we met, I showed up with a handsome guy. He showed up carrying a birdcage.
I was completely dumbfounded. “Wait, Your Highness, the canary you’re keeping is an actual bird?!”
He looked even more confused than I was. “Wait, princess, you take your dog for a walk without bringing the dog?”
Fishing for Hearts
Under the short video I posted, a girl tagged her boyfriend to come watch.
“Everyone move, my husband likes this kind of thing. Let him see it first!”
I tapped into her profile picture and froze.
She was the girl who had bullied me in high school.
I would know that face even if it were reduced to ashes.
I didn’t sleep all night. I went through every video she’d ever posted, then tapped on the boyfriend she’d tagged.
I sent him a private message.
“Are you there?”
Life Goes On
By the time I transmigrated into this world, the story was already nearing its end.
The realm had been united, and the New Emperor had ascended the throne.
The woman who had shared his hardships and stayed by his side through everything had been granted a cup of poisoned wine.
And I was the Empress he was about to marry: the legitimate daughter of the Wang Clan, born of an illustrious house.
I looked at the woman who had just drunk the poisoned wine. “Do you know why I came?”
She let out a cold laugh, sweat beading across her brow. “Afraid I won’t die?”
“No.” I took a pill from my sleeve and pushed it into her mouth. “Afraid you will.”
May the Crown Princess Live Forever
For three years after I entered the Eastern Palace as a concubine, I had never even seen the Crown Prince.
I took it in stride. After all, I was face-blind.
If I mistook someone else for the Crown Prince and committed a capital offense, I would rather have no favor at all.
But after so long without his favor, even my food, clothing, and daily expenses became a problem.
To live a little better, I simply found three lovers to support me.
Zhang San worked in the Imperial Kitchen and could always bring me plenty of delicious food.
Li Si guarded the Garment Bureau and often sent me beautiful clothes.
As for Wang Wu, he was a skilled craftsman in the workshops. Every time we met, he gave me some clever new toy.
Lately, though, all three of them seemed short on money.
So I began thinking that I should try to please the Crown Prince and ask for some rewards to help support them.
I Took the Wealthy Man My Roommate Didn’t Want
My husband is very rich, but I don’t love him.
In university, he once used every trick in the book to pursue my roommate Jiang Sizhu. He sent luxury gifts one after another, and even made a grand gesture by sending nine thousand roses downstairs from the girls’ dormitory. All the girls in our dorm benefited; we carried armloads of roses back to our rooms, as if we were moving a flower bed. Only Jiang Sizhu remained indifferent. She even warned Pei Lu not to come looking for her again.
“He’s very rich and not bad-looking. You really don’t want him?”
I had a face mask on and finally asked the question I could never understand.
With such a beautiful face, she spent every day hanging around that senior who worked odd jobs everywhere.
“No way, a stuffy old bore like him? If you’re so interested, go after him yourself,” Jiang Sizhu said with disdain.
I rested my chin on my hand, thought for a moment, then nodded.
“Fine.”
“I’ll go after him.”
Everyone Loves Lin Wanrou
Lin Wanrou was twenty-four this year, an old maiden who still had not married.
Madam Lin’s standards for a son-in-law had fallen from imperial kin to any promising young talent with ambition.
She refused to believe that, with the Grand General’s influence, she could not raise up one dragon among men as her son-in-law.
Lin Wanrou did not want to marry. She would rather stay at home for the rest of her life.
When Transmigrators Are Everywhere
I had transmigrated into an unfavored consort in the imperial harem.
Before I could even process that, a line of blood-red text appeared in midair:
[Your identity as a transmigrator has been exposed. Run!]
What?
My life came first, so I immediately made a break for it.
But along the way, as I fled, I discovered something.
The palace matrons, eunuchs, guards, and even the consorts from every palace began joining in one after another.
Every single one of them claimed to be a transmigrator.
Had I stumbled into a whole nest of transmigrators or what?
After we crossed the final palace gate, the emperor, leading the Imperial Guard, had us surrounded on all sides.
The young ruler looked at me at the head of the group and let out a cold laugh. “Su Cairen, are you planning to rebel?”
I glanced back.
Good heavens. The runaway party behind me had nearly grown into an army!
My Husband Is the Living Rulebook of the Ministry of Rites
The night I married Pei Guanli, I cried so hard I soaked half my bridal veil.
Not because I didn’t want to marry him, but because everyone in the capital knew that Pei Guanli was more upright and proper than the ancestral tablets in a shrine.
He oversaw ceremonial protocols at the Ministry of Rites and revised the dynasty’s statutes and rites.
If a family used the wrong ritual vessels at a wedding, he could remember it for three years.
If someone wailed one time too many at a funeral, he could submit a memorial impeaching them straight to the emperor.
As the daughter of a merchant family from Jiangnan, this was exactly the sort of man I feared most.
Before my mother sent me into the bridal sedan, she clutched my hands and cried even harder than I did.
“Ah Ning, once you reach the Pei Family, speak less, smile less, and eat less.”
I asked, “Why eat less?”
Choking back sobs, my mother said, “Noble young ladies in the capital eat as delicately as if they’re painting flowers. You eat three bowls in one sitting. You’ll give yourself away too easily.”
I paused, suddenly feeling that before this marriage had even reached the bridal chamber, I had already lost on appetite alone.
Skin Changer
My younger sister gave birth to a son in the Eastern Palace.
I brought a fortune in family wealth and cartloads of rare medicinal pills with me to the palace to visit her.
The moment she saw me, she nestled into my arms and began to cry, tears falling one after another.
Her movements were intimate, her voice soft and spoiled. There was not the slightest trace of distance or unfamiliarity between us.
And yet my entire body went rigid, a chill crawling up my spine and sinking into my heart.
Because the face before me, identical to my sister’s in every way,
was not the dead woman’s skin I had sewn onto her with my own hands.