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The Spoiled and Malicious Young Miss Awakens

Miss Chi Yu of the Chi family has been plagued with misfortune since birth. She has endured car accidents, kidney failure, and experts predicted she wouldn’t live past eighteen. Fortunately, those around her dote on her excessively, indulging her bad temper and pampering her into a spoiled princess. However, one day she accidentally opens a book and discovers that she is actually an adopted child of the Chi family, meant to serve as a scapegoat for the true heiress, the real Miss Chi born on the same day, month, and year as her. They elevated her to the clouds, subjected her to public scorn and hatred, all to later declare that the “innocent” girl was the true heiress once she was gone. Desperate to change her fate, Chi Yu finds herself thwarted by a mysterious force—destined to die on her eighteenth birthday. In her despair, Chi Yu turns dark. If she’s doomed to die a wretched death, then no one else will have a peaceful life! She becomes increasingly ruthless and arrogant, forcing her deceitful assistant to apologize on his knees and disrupting her uncle’s multi-million-dollar deal. They are furious, enraged, and helpless. If they want the kitchen maid’s daughter to survive, they cannot touch her. Everyone hates her, except for the newly hired bodyguard who brainlessly defends her to the end. “Miss, you’re spot on, brilliant, and absolutely infuriating!” Chi Yu: Although he seems a bit foolish, he’s quite endearing, isn’t he? As her eighteenth birthday approaches and she resigns herself to her grim fate, a prominent family from the capital arrives, claiming their lost daughter…

KatherineJe · Urban
Not enough ratings
277 Chs

Choosing Whose Meal to Eat Is Quite the Dilemma

Military training content is rather monotonous.

Standing in military posture, marching in unison, goose-stepping—repeating the same actions back and forth.

From 8:00 AM to 10:30 AM, the drills went on uninterrupted.

Though mid-September weather is less suffocating than the scorching heat of July and August, standing under the blazing sun for two hours was still too grueling for first-year college students whose overall health was still recovering from the intensity of high school exams.

The architecture and electronics departments, with more male students, coped better.

In contrast, several girls from the foreign languages department fainted and had to be carried to the medical room by their classmates.

Chi Yu attributed her endurance to morning exercises; apart from the discomfort of sweat-drenched clothes clinging to her body, she didn't feel much unease.