
I Stole the Heroine's Affectionate Male Lead
About This Novel
[The lame and sinister male protagonist x the beautiful and scheming female protagonist] Everyone in the capital knows that Ruan Wanyu, the cousin of the Du Mansion, is a sick child. She has been bedridden for many years and does not know how long she can live. Who would have thought that one day, he would accidentally fall into the water and be rescued by Pei Chen of the Hou Mansion, and he would have no choice but to get engaged to her. After the news of the engagement came out, many people rejoiced in the misfortune. The lame man matched the sick young man, and they waited forever to see this sick and delicate flower being tortured by the lame man Pei Chen. However, Pei Chen already had his heart set on something and fell in love with Lin Shangshu's legitimate daughter Lin Qiurou. As expected, Ruan Wanyu eventually died in childbirth. ---- When Ruan Wanyu came over, it was the wedding day. She stayed in the yard to take good care of herself, put on a bright red wedding dress, and got into a sedan chair to marry Pei Chen. * On the day of the wedding, Pei Chen disdainfully lifted off the red hijab. He originally thought he would see a sickly pale face, but who would have thought that what he saw was the woman's loving eyes, hibiscus face, willow waist, and she shouted in a scholarly manner: "Husband--" * Three years later, Ruan Wanyu was tired of Pei Chen, but she became pregnant. She gave birth to a son in nine months. Pei Chen took her hand and shouted her name in a hoarse voice. "Wanyu, I was wrong, please don't leave, okay?"
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(43)Scraped 11d ago
After reading the introduction, I felt aggrieved and unhappy. The original heroine was killed by this man. The heroine passed through it and still had affection for this man. Who is this person:
The male protagonist is quite frustrated. I feel that he is pitiful and his family doesn't like the prince taking advantage of him. Furthermore, he also liked the green tea bitch of the original heroine before. They were just teasing him. The heroine now only regards him as a task. But it feels like the male protagonist actually cares about her a little. Although he didn't say that he only wanted her, ancient people could still understand it. It's just that in the book, he only married the original heroine because he liked her. But after all, he didn't protect the original heroine. Even after the original heroine died, he didn't marry anyone else. The whole person is a living tragedy.
Both the male and female protagonists are disgusting.
I don't understand why this heroine doesn't want to die, she makes me angry just looking at her
This is called a scheming heroine
Let's call them the hostess! It makes me mad to death!
I want to ask why the heroine emphasizes that the hero is hers
It looks good. If you post more, more people will see it. Come on. Compared with marrying a prince and facing more intrigues from women, marrying a powerful minister is better. At least you can go out and walk around. Once you enter the palace, you have no freedom. As for the original heroine, as long as she doesn't offend the female supervisor, will she become a queen in the future? As long as you train your husband well, it will be fine.
Nice. . It is suggested that the heroine can take advantage of modernity to do some business and use the prophet to help her husband.
I'm so confused that I haven't even read chapter 50 yet. The heroine's actions don't match the early character setting. She looked like she was about to die in the early stage, but later she turned into a vicious female supporting character. There is nothing wrong with defending one's rights after getting married. That kind of look and vicious mentality are not in line with the character setting at all.
The author has an old saying, for those of you who are newbies, after getting married, the male protagonist is not called the young master, but the master, the female protagonist is called madam, and the male protagonist's mother is also called madam. When he comes home, instead of being greeted by the male elders in the house, everyone calls the male protagonist Mr. Pei. Shouldn't he be called his cousin? It's so speechless.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(43)Scraped 11d ago
After reading the introduction, I felt aggrieved and unhappy. The original heroine was killed by this man. The heroine passed through it and still had affection for this man. Who is this person:
The male protagonist is quite frustrated. I feel that he is pitiful and his family doesn't like the prince taking advantage of him. Furthermore, he also liked the green tea bitch of the original heroine before. They were just teasing him. The heroine now only regards him as a task. But it feels like the male protagonist actually cares about her a little. Although he didn't say that he only wanted her, ancient people could still understand it. It's just that in the book, he only married the original heroine because he liked her. But after all, he didn't protect the original heroine. Even after the original heroine died, he didn't marry anyone else. The whole person is a living tragedy.
Both the male and female protagonists are disgusting.
I don't understand why this heroine doesn't want to die, she makes me angry just looking at her
This is called a scheming heroine
Let's call them the hostess! It makes me mad to death!
I want to ask why the heroine emphasizes that the hero is hers
It looks good. If you post more, more people will see it. Come on. Compared with marrying a prince and facing more intrigues from women, marrying a powerful minister is better. At least you can go out and walk around. Once you enter the palace, you have no freedom. As for the original heroine, as long as she doesn't offend the female supervisor, will she become a queen in the future? As long as you train your husband well, it will be fine.
Nice. . It is suggested that the heroine can take advantage of modernity to do some business and use the prophet to help her husband.
I'm so confused that I haven't even read chapter 50 yet. The heroine's actions don't match the early character setting. She looked like she was about to die in the early stage, but later she turned into a vicious female supporting character. There is nothing wrong with defending one's rights after getting married. That kind of look and vicious mentality are not in line with the character setting at all.
The author has an old saying, for those of you who are newbies, after getting married, the male protagonist is not called the young master, but the master, the female protagonist is called madam, and the male protagonist's mother is also called madam. When he comes home, instead of being greeted by the male elders in the house, everyone calls the male protagonist Mr. Pei. Shouldn't he be called his cousin? It's so speechless.













