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Alternative
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Yun Ruo is a transmigrated “strategy player.” After five long years, she finally succeeds in conquering the book’s male lead, Meng Tingmo, and even marries him.
Looking at Meng Tingmo’s handsome and devoted face, she falls for him for real. When the system offers to send her back to her original world, she refuses and chooses to stay, content to be a virtuous wife by his side.
Their married life is happy—Meng Tingmo dotes on her, and soon they are expecting a child.
But one month before she gives birth, everything changes.
Meng Tingmo’s gaze becomes cold and cutting, laced with hidden hatred. Her friends and even her younger brother start avoiding her like the plague. Yun Ruo has no idea what went wrong. Begging Meng Tingmo for an answer, all she gets is:
“I hate you. Just seeing you makes me sick.”
Heartbroken, Yun Ruo is taken back to her original world by the system on the night she gives birth.
Meng Tingmo once loved Yun Ruo so deeply he would have died for her.
But that love shattered when he discovered she was a transmigrated strategy player.
It turned out he never truly loved her at all—everything was her manipulation. If he had feelings for her, it must have been because she “controlled” him.
He hated being manipulated, and thus hated Yun Ruo. He wanted a divorce.
Later, Yun Ruo signed the divorce papers and disappeared the very night she gave birth. Meng Tingmo finally got what he wanted.
But one day passed. Then two. Then one year. Then two years.
And he still couldn’t forget Yun Ruo.
He clearly didn’t love her anymore.
So why did his heart ache and tear open every time he thought of her?
When Yun Ruo enters Meng Tingmo’s world again, she expects their reunion to end in a fierce quarrel.
Instead, Meng Tingmo’s eyes turn red as he asks why she took so long to come back.
Yun Ruo thinks for a moment, then pushes his hands away:
“I’m someone with a very low bottom line, so I tend to let people hurt me again and again. But when the pain piles up to the point of true disappointment, I’ll never look back.”
“Then why did you return?”
“I’ve received a new strategy mission.”