
Barrage Strategy Guide
The night Lauren ended things with me, the comments swarming my vision went wild.
[Mess with her now, regret it forever! Karma’s coming for the male lead!]
[Our Lauren’s all tough shell with a soft center—she’s obviously crazy about you!]
[Shh, classic plot. How’s the guy supposed to grow without a major screw-up? Just wait till he’s begging on his knees to win her back.]
I watched the glass shards slice across the back of my hand, blood dripping onto the carpet.
“Anthony, are you quite finished?” Lauren’s voice was cold. “Is all this really necessary over some… misunderstanding?”
I looked at her, then at the smug man behind her—her junior, Ralph.
A misunderstanding?
I’d heard it myself: her laughing with a friend about how I was a free servant you could summon at will, treated worse than a dog.
And only moments ago, to defend Ralph, she’d hurled this very glass at me.
In that instant, my heart simply stopped.
Softly, I said, “Lauren. We’re done.”
…
Lauren and I had been together for five years.
Five years. One thousand, eight hundred and twenty-five days.
I’d transformed from a rebellious rich kid into a nameless shadow by her side.
For her, I cut ties with my family, turned down offers from prestigious universities abroad, squeezed into a Beijing rental smaller than forty square meters, and took over every part of her life.
Groceries, cooking, laundry, cleaning—handling all her trivialities, even fending off her nagging editors.
And she was Lauren: the rising literary star, the genius writer.
“Anthony, where’s my coffee? Hand-ground, three parts sugar, seven parts milk, under eighty degrees—how many times do I have to tell you!” At six in the morning, Lauren’s irritated voice carried from the bedroom.
I immediately set down the breakfast I was preparing and went to wait on Her Highness.
[Mornings turn Lauren into a cute, grumpy kitten.]
[The male lead is so devoted! This is love—giving up everything to cook for your soulmate.]
Right on cue, the streaming comments scrolled past my vision, trying to sugarcoat this suffocating daily grind.
Three years ago, these bizarre comments had suddenly appeared before my eyes. Only I could see them.
They analyzed my relationship with Lauren endlessly, and their core message never changed: Lauren loved me deeply, and everything she did was an expression of that love.
At first, I believed it.
When she impatiently shoved away the hot water I offered, the comments would say, [Lauren’s just under a lot of writing pressure—she does care inside.] When she acted oblivious to everything I did, they claimed, [Real love is shown through actions, not words. She just isn’t good at expressing it.]
Guided by their “interpretations,” I forgave her again and again, inventing excuses for her coldness each time.
I thought I was the one person in the world who truly understood her.
Until I became a spineless yes-man, orbiting her and nothing else.
“Anthony, what’s wrong with this sweet and sour pork today?” At the table, Lauren took one bite and slammed her chopsticks down. “The meat’s too tough, the sauce is off—are you trying to sabotage my creative inspiration?”
I rushed to apologize. “Sorry—maybe the heat was off today. Should I make you something else?”
“Don’t bother. I’ve lost my appetite.” She shot me an icy look. “Have you been getting more careless lately? If you can’t even handle something as simple as cooking, what are you even good for?”
[Aha, she’s jealous! Lauren must have seen him chatting with the girl at the convenience store yesterday. This is her way of marking her territory!]
[A bestselling author staking her claim! We love to see it.]
I looked at the comments, then at her utterly unapologetic face, and felt a cold wave tighten my chest.
What was I good for?
I could queue at five a.m. to buy the soy milk she loved from that old shop.
I could drive three hundred kilometers overnight to a mountain in the next city because she “wanted to see snow,” nearly losing my fingers to frostbite.
I could recite the best passages from her books, offer ideas when she was stuck—and yet my name was forever absent from her acknowledgments.
I abandoned my major, my friends, my family, everything—just to be the man behind her success.
And in the end, all I earned was: “What are you even good for?”
Deep inside, something finally, quietly broke.
What finally woke me up was a casual afternoon tea between Lauren and her friend.
That day, Lauren had arranged to meet her writer friend at a nearby cafe. As usual, I was bringing her some homemade pastries. Before I reached their booth, I caught her friend’s voice—slightly exaggerated.
“Lauren, your Anthony really is the perfect boyfriend. Treats you like a queen. Honestly, what do you even see in him? No money, no career to speak of.”
Instinctively, I stopped and hid behind a nearby potted plant.
Lauren gave a light laugh—a cold, superior tone I’d never heard from her before.
“Him?” Her voice was lazy. “He’s just a free live-in maid. You think I actually like him? I keep him around because he’s obedient, takes good care of me, and lets me focus on my writing.”
An invisible fist clenched around my heart, stopping it cold.
Her friend let out a low whistle. “Damn, you’ve really got him wrapped around your finger. Has he ever tried to push back?”
“Push back? He wouldn’t dare.” Lauren’s tone dripped with disdain. “He gave up everything for me—his family, his future. Now he’s just a useless nobody. Without me, he couldn’t even afford rent. People like him are pathetic. The worse you treat them, the more they cling to you, thinking it’s love.”
She continued, cool and detached. “Sometimes I deliberately pick fights, tear him down until he’s nothing. And you know what he does? He gets on his knees and apologizes. Tell me, why would I ever give up a servant that useful?”
Everything inside my head snapped.
So my five years of devotion, in her eyes, were just “pathetic.”
All my compromises and sacrifices were nothing but the desperate flailing of a “useless nobody.”
The love I believed in was an elaborate scam she’d designed—a brutal trampling of my dignity.
Like a zombie, I turned and left the cafe.
The pastry box slipped from my hand and hit the ground. The delicate macarons shattered into pieces, just like my heart.
Back in the apartment that still carried her scent, I felt a bone-deep chill. Revulsion, for the first time.
The fortress of love I’d been so proud of was just a cage built from lies and contempt.
And I was the fool who’d willingly locked myself inside.
That night, when Lauren came home, I’d already regained my composure.
She tossed her bag at me as usual. “I’m exhausted. Run me a bath.”
I looked at her, my eyes calm and dead as still water.
“Lauren,” I said, my voice hoarse. “Did you ever love me?”
She paused, then frowned impatiently. “What’s wrong with you now? Why ask something so pointless?”
[He’s starting to act up again—isn’t this a trap question?]
[Lauren, just comfort him! He’s feeling insecure!]
I ignored the bullet comments and kept my eyes locked on her.
My stare made her uneasy. She brushed me off. “Yes, yes, of course I did. Now go run the bath. I’m feeling inspired tonight—I need to write.”
With that, she walked straight into the bedroom.
I stood there, unmoving, for a long time.
The last faint ember in my heart finally went out.