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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 8: The Phone Call


The constant temperature system in the Dongyu Office Building hummed dutifully, sending out a gentle breeze. Yet the moment Song Linyu heard those words, he suddenly felt as if he’d plunged into an ice cave.

He stood on the top floor of Shenlan’s tallest building, staring blankly through the floor-to-ceiling windows at the streams of people and cars flowing through the city below. He couldn’t hear a sound, but a cacophony of noise buzzed in his ears like relentless tinnitus, impossible to shake off.

Fu Yanzong had made a request he couldn’t refuse. He had no choice but to comply.

“Can we… not talk about this? Please.”

Song Linyu forced the words out in a hoarse whisper, his plea muddled and full of concessions, as if it had taken every ounce of his strength.

They hadn’t exchanged many words during the call, but the long silences between had already stretched far beyond the fifteen minutes he’d promised during the meeting.

His secretary, Ella, stood silently at a respectful distance, arms full of files. She didn’t interrupt her boss or even glance his way.

Though she couldn’t hear the content of Song Linyu’s private conversation, she’d never seen him—the man who calculated everything to perfection—wear such an expression. He looked like a rigid shell nailed to a cross, too drained for any extraneous movement, standing motionless with heavy, labored breaths.

He must have received some utterly heartbreaking news.

Fu Yanzong listened to Song Linyu’s words and let out a soft sigh. In a calm, even tone, he asked, “So that was a lie too, wasn’t it?”

“No!” Song Linyu shot back quickly. Then his whole body tensed up like a clenched fist, a persistent ache radiating from his fingertips all the way to the tip of his heart.

Song Linyu regretted it now. He realized he shouldn’t have spoken to Fu Yanzong at all today. Until he resolved his problems and the threats hanging over him, any action was futile.

But what could he do? If he couldn’t even see the man…

In that moment, Song Linyu felt a despair like that of a cornered stray animal. For the first time, he hated the bright lights of the Dongyu Office Building, which exposed his disheveled state with nowhere to hide.

After what felt like an eternity, Fu Yanzong finally heard Song Linyu say, “I understand.”

Then, for the first time, Song Linyu hung up on him.

Fu Yanzong said nothing until the heat seeping through his glass—intense enough to burn his fingertips—made him slowly release his white-knuckled grip on the rim.

A film of steam clung stubbornly to his pale fingertips, much like the dampness at the corners of Song Linyu’s eyes the night before.

Fu Yanzong glanced at it, then murmured to himself in a tone laced with something inscrutable:

“He wouldn’t cry, would he?”

…The way he’d said it suggested maybe a little, but was it really that devastating?

Or was it like before—acting so skillfully that even he couldn’t tell it was an act.

“What…?” Xiao Sun thought he was speaking to him and leaned in. “Boss, what did you just say?”

Fu Yanzong looked away, giving him a light, sidelong glance. “I said you’re done for the day. Get out. You’re in my way.”

Xiao Sun, inexplicably scolded: …!!

He tried reasoning with Fu Yanzong. “Boss, I’m your life assistant, remember? The kind who’s on duty twenty-four-seven. I got your old work schedule from Brother Cheng back home. Don’t worry, I can match that level—no slacking halfway.”

It sounded good, but right after he finished, he noticed Fu Yanzong eyeing him with an oddly peculiar look.

For some reason, it made him uneasy.

Xiao Sun swallowed and backpedaled. “There might be some rough spots at first… but I’ll learn from the pros. I swear.”

Fu Yanzong took a sip of hot water noncommittally, then set down his phone and picked up the script on the table, idly flipping to the first page.

As Xiao Sun finished his second plea, Fu Yanzong flicked the edge of the page with his fingertip, producing a crisp snap. He propped his chin on his hand and asked with a half-smile, “Want to guess why my last assistant quit?”

…This question felt dangerous.

Xiao Sun shifted uncomfortably. “Was it because you micromanaged too much and it got annoying? I’ll… I’ll talk less from now on?”

Fu Yanzong pondered for a moment, as if seriously recalling, before shaking his head.

“Not annoying.”

His voice had gone unexpectedly soft.

Xiao Sun blinked, struck by how, in this sudden quiet, Fu Yanzong seemed more real than his usual smiles or scowls.

Fu Yanzong’s soft black hair fell across his forehead as beige sunlight crept slowly up from his ankles, his lean figure straight out of a painting.

Xiao Sun instinctively lowered his voice. “So why did you hate him? Why fire him?”

The moment the words left his mouth, Fu Yanzong reverted to his previous demeanor. Instead of answering, he teasingly strung Xiao Sun along. “Keep guessing?”

Damn guy, dangling the gossip!

The eager listener fumed inwardly.

But the topic died there. Fu Yanzong leaned back on the sofa, immersed in his script, lost in his own world.

Xiao Sun hesitated, then moved to tidy up the room for him.

Come to think of it, Fu Yanzong must own plenty of properties in Shenlan—standalone villas, river-view penthouses. There’d even been scandals about him bringing hot young actresses to private resort estates.

Yet here he was, staying in this apartment. It was spacious enough, but it felt like slumming it.

Xiao Sun opened the window for some air and noticed clusters of white magnolias blooming vibrantly outside. As he turned back, Fu Yanzong on the sofa was perfectly framed by the flowers and window.

The apartment’s light and shadow played in a jumble, but every beam fell just right—warm, not blinding, not too dim to strain the eyes. From this angle, Fu Yanzong sat bathed in lamplight, nestled amid floral shadows.

Xiao Sun froze. Then Fu Yanzong looked up, as if sensing him.

But in that instant, Xiao Sun could tell Fu Yanzong’s gaze wasn’t really fixed on him, standing there.

A moment later, Fu Yanzong said calmly, “Handle work stuff properly and go home. Sometimes I don’t like troubling others.”

“But…”

“My last assistant quit because he ‘helped’ his way into my bed. You sure you want to follow in his footsteps?”

Fu Yanzong turned a page in his script nonchalantly, oblivious to the bombshell he’d just dropped.

Xiao Sun’s hairs stood on end, cold sweat breaking out. He bolted to the door, raising his hand in a solemn vow to the heavens. “Boss, I’m super chill! Sure, my onboarding form said I really, really like you—but that’s just your acting! Zero funny business with the real you!”

Fu Yanzong chuckled. “Relax, you’re very safe.”

Xiao Sun: Damn it, I know my limits!

He bowed properly, waved enthusiastically. “Alright, Brother Fu, I’m off! See you tomorrow morning! Bye!”

Fu Yanzong waved him off, and soon the room fell silent again.

…The quiet was so profound that as Fu Yanzong read his script, his mind drifted unbidden to what he’d said before Sun Jiayang left.

These past few days marked the highest frequency Song Linyu had occupied his thoughts in three years.

Whether irritation, hassle, or something else.

It easily conjured memories he’d all but forgotten.

Memories of Song Linyu as his assistant for a long stretch of time. Of how he’d wrap his arms around Fu Yanzong’s waist and murmur that he’d be good.

And…

The realization that all those words and actions had been premeditated from the start.


The Film Emperor Doesn’t Want a Shura Field

The Film Emperor Doesn’t Want a Shura Field

影帝他不想修罗场
Status: Ongoing Native Language: Chinese
Fu Yanzong had entered the entertainment world at sixteen, making his debut by claiming the Silver Bear for Best Actor on the red carpet at the Berlin Film Festival. At twenty-one, he won the Palme d'Or in Cannes. By twenty-five, he earned an Academy Awards nomination. His life appeared to be one charmed run of success, gifted with exceptional looks, talent, and sheer luck. Even his mercurial, flamboyantly prickly temperament drew legions of fervent admirers. But one day, a so-called Self-Rescue System informed him that he was merely one of the cannon-fodder suitors in a trashy entertainment industry novel about arranged marriages, belated romance, shattered mirrors mended, and a protagonist who captivated everyone. All those accolades and stacked buffs existed solely to fuel his cutthroat contest for the prize alongside the other cannon fodder. The business empire titan, the prodigy idol, the powerhouse newcomer, the ruthlessly efficient ace manager... they would all inevitably fall for the story's true lead, the "purest handful of snow in showbiz." Fu Yanzong eyed the "handful of snow's" utterly unerotic childlike build and found he simply couldn't conjure "red-eyed feelings that strayed beyond the script." No thanks—he drew the line at that plotline. Flipping ahead in the script, he discovered his fiercest rival was none other than Song Linyu, the legendary business empire overlord, domineering CEO, and psycho stalker. The same Song Linyu who had once masqueraded as a lovestruck kept assistant, stringing him along in a years-long fake sugar-daddy charade as his ex-boyfriend. Fu Yanzong: ...... / System: Host, please read the original novel text next. While keeping the core plot intact, make minor adjustments to the direction to alter your fate. "In the novel, Song Linyu seized Su Tang's wrist on set, pinning him hard against the wall. Eyes bloodshot, he rasped, 'Just how many men have you seduced?'" In reality, Song Linyu wore a menacing scowl as he clamped down on the heartthrob's wrist, slamming him into the wall. His voice came out low and icy: "I've warned you not to mess around." Su Tang's eyes brimmed with red, his fingertips clutching at Song Linyu's clothes in a picture of fragile vulnerability. "'At this point, Fu Yanzong finally arrived. Gazing at Su Tang—nose tip flushed red from crying, delicate as a flower in bloom—he yanked the man away in fury, seized Song Linyu's tie, and snarled a warning: "Don't touch my man!"'" Fu Yanzong strolled unhurriedly through the crowd, his gaze settling on the pair locked in confrontation. The subpar actor rehearsing his lines hadn't even finished his dialogue. Fu Yanzong let out a mocking chuckle, grabbed Song Linyu's tie at random, and yanked him stumbling two steps closer. His long-fingered hand slipped familiarly into Song Linyu's hair, his tone lazy and offhand: "Don't touch my man." Then he glanced at the heartthrob frozen in place and, with utmost professionalism, gripped Song Linyu tighter to deliver that final, rather idiotic line. "Just how many men have you seduced?" System: ......? Something felt profoundly off. The anticipated Shura field failed to materialize. Song Linyu's Adam's apple bobbed sharply beneath his pale skin. The man who had seemed so menacing and aloof moments ago now tilted his head with exquisite care to evade Fu Yanzong's breath. In a tiny, halting whisper, he explained. "...Only you." The heartthrob: What the hell???

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