Sweet-cow
Song Yunchu transmigrated into a melodramatic, angsty novel as the villainous, treacherous chancellor destined for a horrific death. Every single day, she was busy calculating how to survive until the final chapter.
According to the original plot, she would be stripped of her official post and thrown into prison by the very emperor she had personally raised to power, only to be pierced through the heart by a barrage of arrows from the male lead she once adored during her exile.
After weighing her options, Song Yunchu resolved to steer completely clear of the male and female leads-that absolute pair of lunatics-and dedicate her loyalty to the Emperor, the original story's ultimate antagonist, to prevent him from warping into a psychopathic tyrant.
When the Emperor fell gravely ill, a minister suggested that His Majesty marry the female lead, who possessed the auspicious "Phoenix Fate," to ward off his illness with wedding bliss.
Song Yunchu swiftly vetoed the proposal, her mind bursting with frantic complaints.
Are you out of your mind? Marrying that lunatic would be an absolute disaster! In the original novel, every single supporting male lead who so much as brushed shoulders with the female lead met a wretched end. The dog emperor has finally started acting somewhat normal; I absolutely cannot let him fall for her.
When the Emperor completely ignored his breathtaking, exquisitely charming consorts, Song Yunchu couldn't help but mutter inwardly.
Consort Li is an absolute knockout. If I were a man, I definitely wouldn't be able to handle it. The dog emperor has been completely celibate; could he actually be stamina-deficient? The original novel didn't seem to mention that.
The Emperor, who had overheard every single word of her inner monologue: "...!"
He was absolutely not stamina-deficient!
And wait... wasn't she supposed to be a man?