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Recently, due to a bug when splitting chapters, it was only possible to upload using whole numbers, which is why recent releases ended up with a higher chapter number than the actual chapter number. The chapters already uploaded and their respective novels can no longer be fixed unless we edit and re-upload them chapter by chapter(Chapters content are okay, just the number in the list is incorrect), but that would take a lot of time. Therefore, those uploaded in that way will remain as they are. The bug has been fixed(lasted 1 day), as seen with the recently uploaded novels, which can be split into parts and everything works as usual. From now on, all new content will be uploaded in correct order as before the bug happens. If time permits in the future, we may attempt to reorganize the previously affected chapters.

Chapter 11 Part 2


Zhu Ran said, “Boss Song is generous.”

They took a cab to the restaurant. No one greeted them at the door, and they waited nearly a minute before a white server approached and asked in English if they had a reservation.

“No,” Song Xingchen said.

The guy seemed not to understand until they switched to English. Then he asked if they were dining and handed over an English menu.

Zhu Ran and Song Xingchen stood dumbly at the entrance poring over it until they placed an order, at which point the server led them inside.

They must have arrived too early; the place was mostly empty, with all the window seats free.

The server seated them in the middle. Song Xingchen asked about a window spot and learned it required a reservation, so he dropped it.

As they waited for food, Song Xingchen gushed about how adorable his dog Xiao Bao had been while Zhu Ran was away.

After showing off the pup, Song Xingchen said regretfully, “When I said I was coming to find you, Xiao Bao clung to my leg howling. Funniest part? I tricked it saying I’d bring it along, and the dummy believed it, haha. If Mom hadn’t held it back, it would have jumped in the car… Holy shit!” Song Xingchen froze, shocked, and flipped his phone screen toward Zhu Ran.

The vibrating screen showed “Zhu Ran’s Mom.”

The phone kept buzzing. Song Xingchen hesitated and whispered, “Pig, why’s your mom calling my phone?”

Zhu Ran took a deep breath. “I turned off my SIM. I’ll take it outside.”

Zhu Ran stepped out of the restaurant. An elevator opened across the way, spilling out a white couple. He turned to the other end, hit accept.

“Xingchen, your mom said you’re in Hong Kong Island hanging out with Zhu Ran—is that true? Have you seen Zhu Ran? How is he now…”

“Mom, it’s me.”

“Dye Dye?” She paused, then asked, “Why do you have Xingchen’s phone?”

Zhu Ran said, “You just said it—he came to hang out with me.”

“Your Aunt Zhuoying said you’re staying in a hotel? You…” She seemed hesitant to broach it, silent for seconds before asking carefully, “You two aren’t doing anything sneaky, are you?”

“Mom, what are you thinking?” Zhu Ran was speechless.

“Oh,” Wang Ruyun explained dryly, “Mom’s just worried. You’re out there alone; I can’t relax.”

“I’m fine.” Zhu Ran heard Song Xingchen’s voice and turned to head back. “Got something—gotta hang up.”

“Or maybe Mom should come over…”

Beep.

Zhu Ran ended the call.

He’d thought Song Xingchen’s voice from outside was a hallucination, but inside, he saw Song Xingchen by the window arguing with the server.

“What’s going on?” Zhu Ran stood beside Song Xingchen.

“This place discriminates!” Song Xingchen fumed. “When we came in, he said window seats need reservations, right? Then these white people walk in—no reservation—and this server seats them right there. I asked to switch after hearing, but he stonewalled, no negotiation. Said it three times!”

“How’s that fair? I’ll ask.” Zhu Ran wasn’t one for conflict, but he wasn’t a pushover either. He went to the bar to talk, but got the same answer.

“Then we won’t eat here,” Zhu Ran told Song Xingchen. “I recorded a video. We’ll call the government hotline later and complain about discriminating against customers.”

Song Xingchen: “And trash them online!”

Zhu Ran: “Yeah, bad reviews on Google and IG.”

They stood to leave, feeling stares like needles in their backs.

“Zhu Ran?” A voice in Mandarin suddenly rang out. Chen Jiaming emerged from a side private room, puzzled. “What happened?”

He hadn’t expected Chen Jiaming here—which probably meant Huo Boyan…

But whether Huo Boyan was there or not had nothing to do with him. Zhu Ran shook his head and greeted Chen Jiaming.

Chen Jiaming had noticed the commotion outside but didn’t pry directly. He just chatted: “Here for dinner?”

“Planned to, but we’re switching spots now,” Zhu Ran smiled. “This restaurant seems to prefer white customers only.”

“What happened?” Chen Jiaming looked up at the server, face darkening.

Zhu Ran was surprised—this was the first time he’d seen Chen Jiaming look so stern.

At first, Zhu Ran didn’t get why he’d changed, until he saw the arrogant server’s face pale.

Zhu Ran was shocked; even Huo Boyan’s assistant commanded such respect out here.

Questioned by Chen Jiaming, the server switched to broken Cantonese apologies and invited Zhu Ran and Song Xingchen to a window seat, offering to comp the meal.

Zhu Ran glanced at Song Xingchen: “Still wanna eat?”

Song Xingchen huffed: “Nope!”

“Me neither,” Zhu Ran said. “Let’s go…”

Chen Jiaming hesitated, unsure of the line. Then the private room door opened again. Huo Boyan stood in the shadows, suit jacket over his shoulders, oversized bowtie, crisp shirt and vest.

Huo Boyan had an unlit cigarette in his mouth. His gaze skimmed Zhu Ran and landed on Chen Jiaming behind him.

Zhu Ran felt awkward, a hard-to-name grievance bubbling up. He’d shrugged off all those stares earlier, but with Huo Boyan here, he regressed to feeling like a bullied kid.

Chen Jiaming explained the situation. Zhu Ran stayed quiet, fingertips digging unconsciously into his palm.

He told himself it wasn’t his fault, nothing to be embarrassed about—the one who should be was someone else.

Huo Boyan listened, then looked at the head chef with a smile. “So the boss picks and chooses guests now? By your standards, I don’t qualify either.”

“No way! Mr. Huo is an honored guest—we can’t welcome you enough!” The chef’s Cantonese was poor, his words a jumble mixed with English. He claimed they treated all customers equally, especially valued their friendship with Mr. Huo, and begged him and his friends for a chance to prove it.

“No need,” Huo Boyan sniffed the cigarette lightly, tone calm. “If the boss scorns serving locals, perhaps take the business elsewhere off Hong Kong Island.”


After Breaking Up, the Gentle Daddy Went Crazy

After Breaking Up, the Gentle Daddy Went Crazy

分手后温柔Daddy发疯了
Status: Completed Native Language: Chinese

During his junior year summer vacation, Zhu Ran accepted his little aunt's invitation to vacation on Hong Kong Island, where he unexpectedly developed a summer romance with Huo Boyan.

Everyone said Mr. Huo held a position of great power, was gentlemanly and refined, and enjoyed an excellent reputation among Hong Kong Island's upper crust. Only Zhu Ran knew that privately, when Huo Boyan watched him swim, his gaze grew thick and terrifying.

Zhu Ran was young back then, playful and indulgent, obsessed with good looks, brimming with infinite possibilities. He also wanted a passionate, all-consuming summer fling.

The thirty-something Huo Boyan was mature and alluring, with top-tier features and impeccable poise—Zhu Ran's perfect choice.

Zhu Ran and Huo Boyan spent the entire summer entangled, indulging in unprecedented debauchery and wild abandon. He gradually glimpsed the forceful dominance lurking beneath the man's gentlemanly exterior.

Huo Boyan was endlessly inventive and robustly built. Zhu Ran, still young, downed countless bowls of nourishing "tonic soup." Fortunately, summer break finally ended. Zhu Ran left a breakup letter and departed the island, convinced it had been an amicable split.

·

But in September, as he started an internship at his new company, Huo Boyan transformed—he parachuted straight into a seat on the group's board of directors.

Faced with the man's piercing gaze, Zhu Ran: "……"

*It should have been an amicable split... right...?*

*Fat chance!*

A few days later, Zhu Ran regretted everything and vented to a friend: "If I'd known he was going to be my boss, I definitely would've broken up properly before leaving."

That night, the man gripped Zhu Ran's waist with a long-dormant fury. "You know damn well we didn't break up properly?"

Zhu Ran, lost in a haze, babbled incoherently: "……Then can I break up properly *now*?"

Huo Boyan laughed in anger.

·

A few more days passed. A friend asked Zhu Ran why he still hadn't broken up.

Zhu Ran clutched his red, swollen rear while enduring vibrations from a certain spot. He shook his head frantically. "No more breaking up. I love him so much—this lifetime, never."

From the surveillance feed, the man nodded in satisfaction.

**Rebellious Little Puppy × Ruthless Daddy**

The *shou* wreaks havoc with his beauty, arrogant and reckless in his provocations. The *gong* is steady and cunning, driven to gentle madness.

**Content Tags:** Urban, Elite Families, Sole Devotion, Fated Pair, Personal Growth

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