PREVIEW

... runk, when they were relaxed enough not to consider etiquette and their honour too much, at the same time, he had not waited until all the nobles had enjoyed enough and gone into their rooms to go about their business. He was impressed.

Leopold looked forward to the plan. 'Was I thinking wrong the whole time?' he began to ask himself. Because if he considered things from the boy's point of view, the Holy Roman Empire really had very little to gain. Although he still felt it was very dang ...

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
Rebuilding the Immortal Cultivator ClanChapter 1236 - 1087: Straightforward
 16.5k
3.5/5(votes)
EasternFantasy

[Beast Taming Sect, Family Cultivation, Farming Genre]A student who had yet to step into society suddenly transmigrated and became a junior of the Li Clan Beast Taming family, henceforth embarking on the path of cultivation.The story began with the Li family being forced to leave their ancestral lands.This is a cultivation epic of a Foundation Establishment family rising step by step!!!

Lord of Mysteries 2: Circle of InevitabilityChapter 1180: Author’s Afterword
 126.4k
5.0/5(votes)
MysteryPsychologicalSupernaturalAction

Lord of the Mysteries, part two.

In 1368, at the end of July. Bloody scarlet will descend from heaven.

The Reversal of a Son-in-lawChapter 452 _1
 2.7k
4.8/5(votes)
RomanceFantasy

After suffering from serious injuries, Long Chen, the son-in-law of the Li family who had been despised by everyone, suddenly underwent a shocking change. He secretly acquired extraordinary skills in both medicine and martial arts. From then on, the wheel of his fortune is about to turn...

The Substitute Bride and the CrippleChapter 110End - Thank You For Being a Part of My Life (FINAL CHAPTER)
 3.7k
4.4/5(votes)
JoseiMatureRomance

Tang Qiu was a substitute bride–forced to take her half-sister’s place and marry the young master of the Jiang family, a deformed cripple with less than 6 months left to live.

“Who would have thought that even a sickly whelp like Jiang Shaocheng would find himself a bride?”

“I hear that he’s practically on his deathbed and he’s only marrying the Fengs’ daughter to improve his lifespan.”

Tang Qiu ignored the whispers around her and focused on her husband-to-be, who coughed violently in his wheelchair. At the altar, after they had said their vows, she lifted her veil and knelt in front of Jiang Shaocheng, pressing a hesitant kiss to his lips.

The marriage contract was signed. No matter his physical deformities, he was now her husband.

She wasn’t afraid of the scars that marked his face, nor was she repulsed by him being confined to a wheelchair. Every morning, she made him breakfast, attended to his needs, and thought of little else beyond her duties as a wife.

“Young Master Jiang is a cripple who can’t get it up,” her best friend argued. “When he dies, you’ll still be untouched. You should set your sights higher.”

“A sickly invalid like Jiang Shaocheng can’t give you happiness,” her ex-boyfriend insisted. “I’ll wait for you.”

But Young Master Jiang only scoffed. “I have plenty of time left to be with her.”

Later in their marriage, Jiang Shaocheng wanted to enjoy his little wife in all ways–the press of her lips against his, the brush of skin on skin; the way a husband and wife were supposed to. But Tang Qiu refused him, blushing. “No, we can’t. The doctor says you can’t exert yourself.”

Jiang Shaocheng’s desire was surging through him, a heat in his core that demanded to be satiated. He cursed, I should have gotten rid of that doctor and the wheelchair long ago.

But he yearned to make love to his little wife, and so he revealed his true identity. In the blink of an eye, the deformed cripple transformed into a powerful businessman–tall, dark, and handsome. He quieted Tang Qiu’s protests, his body positioned over hers, his arms caging her as she lay on the bed. His voice was low when he asked, “What about now?”