Follow
Chapters
Share
The gods and Buddhas remain silent, but they see the spring breeze Novel Cover

The gods and Buddhas remain silent, but they see the spring breeze

Chapter 1 Everyone in the capital knew Lord Bradley Sterling, heir to the Sterling estate, was hopelessly in love with Miss Layla Cunningham, the minister’s daughter. Then, after Layla inadvertently drew a divination slip at Kingsport Monastery that read “fated to bear no children,” not a soul dared propose. So Bradley declared he had drawn the same ill-fated lot. He knelt in the ancestral hall for three days and nights, endured thirty-three lashes, and nearly gave his life to secure her hand. On their wedding night, the man who claimed no religious belief summoned the abbot to seek a remedy. Willingly taking vows, he donned monastic robes and entered seclusion at Kingsport Monastery for three years, chanting prayers and striking the ritual block. All that time, Layla lived as a wife in name only. Yet she never complained, steadfastly awaiting their reunion. For nine hundred and ninety-nine days, without fail, through rain or shine, Layla would climb the mountain path to the monastery, kneeling and bowing low with every third step. At the summit, she copied a volume of the Diamond Sutra in her own blood and burned it as an offering. The abbot said sincerity would move the heavens. Today was the final day. Layla had come especially early. It was the dead of winter. The rain had frozen into stinging pellets that turned to ice upon the ground. “May my husband, Bradley Sterling, find joy and health, and live a long life.” With devout reverence, Layla bowed her head, performing ritual prostrations every few steps as she climbed, the prayer a constant whisper on her lips. Her maid, Julia, held an umbrella to little avail. Icy pellets dusted Layla’s fox-fur cloak. She shivered, her breath misting the air, yet the relentless rhythm of her ascent never faltered. The staircase seemed endless. A single misstep would send her tumbling to her death. Reaching the monastery gate, she stumbled and fell, striking her forehead hard enough to raise a lump. Her cloak was smeared with dark mud. Layla scrambled to her feet. To approach the sacred task in such a state felt disrespectful. So Julia found her a warm cell in which to change. One final volume, copied in blood, and the curse of their “childless fate” would be broken. Bradley could return to her. They would raise a family and grow old together. At the thought, a smile warmed Layla’s face. The familiar, sharp pain returned as the dagger sliced her wrist. She dipped the brush into the welling blood—but before it could touch the paper, indecent sounds drifted from the adjoining cell. “My lord, you spend every day here entangled with me. What if your wife discovers us?” “She’s too busy with her prostrations and her bloody scriptures. Now, be good. Turn over.” “But today is the last day. What will become of me after this, Eva?” “To make a place for you as my mistress, I arranged for her to draw that barren lot. Yet on the day she entered my house, she still looked down on you, humiliated you. Three years have passed. That pride of hers must be worn away. Does it not reassure you, watching her pitiful decline with me here every day?” Eva had been his mistress—the concubine his mother had selected to secure the succession. On the day Layla wed Bradley, he had presented the girl to her. “This is the woman Mother chose to bear me an heir…” Layla had immediately thought of her own fate and frowned uneasily. Unable to bear her distress, Bradley sent Eva away at once, holding and comforting Layla for a long time. But Eva appeared on a chair outside their bridal chamber, a white silk cord in hand, weeping bitterly. “If my lady cannot abide me, then grant me this cord. Let me hang myself and be done with it.” Fearing a scandal would displease his mother, Bradley spent the entire night coaxing Eva in a side chamber. He never came to the bridal suite, never consummated the marriage. He had said, “Layla, my love, our wedding day should not be tainted by such ill omens.” Yet the very next day, he produced a divination slip from Kingsport Monastery, marked with the worst fortune. “The abbot says a childless fate is our divine will. But if the one I love kneels in prayer for nine hundred and ninety-nine days and copies the sacred texts in her own blood, the curse can be broken. Layla, are you willing?” In their childhood, Layla had fallen into the water. Bradley risked his life to save her. Since that day, her heart had been his. Later, it was Bradley who fabricated the lie about his own barren fate and insisted on marrying her. Disregarding her parents’ objections, Layla began her devotions for him the day after the wedding, becoming the capital’s notorious, love-mad fool. To show his sincerity, Bradley waited for her at the monastery each day. He said, “Dearest, you do so much for me. I will never fail you!”
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

Everyone in the capital knew Lord Bradley Sterling, heir to the Sterling estate, was hopelessly in love with Miss Layla Cunningham, the minister’s daughter.

Then, after Layla inadvertently drew a divination slip at Kingsport Monastery that read “fated to bear no children,” not a soul dared propose.

So Bradley declared he had drawn the same ill-fated lot. He knelt in the ancestral hall for three days and nights, endured thirty-three lashes, and nearly gave his life to secure her hand.

On their wedding night, the man who claimed no religious belief summoned the abbot to seek a remedy. Willingly taking vows, he donned monastic robes and entered seclusion at Kingsport Monastery for three years, chanting prayers and striking the ritual block.

All that time, Layla lived as a wife in name only.

Yet she never complained, steadfastly awaiting their reunion.

For nine hundred and ninety-nine days, without fail, through rain or shine, Layla would climb the mountain path to the monastery, kneeling and bowing low with every third step. At the summit, she copied a volume of the Diamond Sutra in her own blood and burned it as an offering.

The abbot said sincerity would move the heavens.

Today was the final day. Layla had come especially early.

It was the dead of winter. The rain had frozen into stinging pellets that turned to ice upon the ground.

“May my husband, Bradley Sterling, find joy and health, and live a long life.”

With devout reverence, Layla bowed her head, performing ritual prostrations every few steps as she climbed, the prayer a constant whisper on her lips.

Her maid, Julia, held an umbrella to little avail. Icy pellets dusted Layla’s fox-fur cloak. She shivered, her breath misting the air, yet the relentless rhythm of her ascent never faltered.

The staircase seemed endless. A single misstep would send her tumbling to her death.

Reaching the monastery gate, she stumbled and fell, striking her forehead hard enough to raise a lump. Her cloak was smeared with dark mud.

Layla scrambled to her feet. To approach the sacred task in such a state felt disrespectful.

So Julia found her a warm cell in which to change.

One final volume, copied in blood, and the curse of their “childless fate” would be broken.

Bradley could return to her. They would raise a family and grow old together.

At the thought, a smile warmed Layla’s face. The familiar, sharp pain returned as the dagger sliced her wrist.

She dipped the brush into the welling blood—but before it could touch the paper, indecent sounds drifted from the adjoining cell.

“My lord, you spend every day here entangled with me. What if your wife discovers us?”

“She’s too busy with her prostrations and her bloody scriptures. Now, be good. Turn over.”

“But today is the last day. What will become of me after this, Eva?”

“To make a place for you as my mistress, I arranged for her to draw that barren lot. Yet on the day she entered my house, she still looked down on you, humiliated you. Three years have passed. That pride of hers must be worn away. Does it not reassure you, watching her pitiful decline with me here every day?”

Eva had been his mistress—the concubine his mother had selected to secure the succession.

On the day Layla wed Bradley, he had presented the girl to her. “This is the woman Mother chose to bear me an heir…”

Layla had immediately thought of her own fate and frowned uneasily.

Unable to bear her distress, Bradley sent Eva away at once, holding and comforting Layla for a long time.

But Eva appeared on a chair outside their bridal chamber, a white silk cord in hand, weeping bitterly.

“If my lady cannot abide me, then grant me this cord. Let me hang myself and be done with it.”

Fearing a scandal would displease his mother, Bradley spent the entire night coaxing Eva in a side chamber. He never came to the bridal suite, never consummated the marriage.

He had said, “Layla, my love, our wedding day should not be tainted by such ill omens.”

Yet the very next day, he produced a divination slip from Kingsport Monastery, marked with the worst fortune.

“The abbot says a childless fate is our divine will. But if the one I love kneels in prayer for nine hundred and ninety-nine days and copies the sacred texts in her own blood, the curse can be broken. Layla, are you willing?”

In their childhood, Layla had fallen into the water. Bradley risked his life to save her. Since that day, her heart had been his.

Later, it was Bradley who fabricated the lie about his own barren fate and insisted on marrying her.

Disregarding her parents’ objections, Layla began her devotions for him the day after the wedding, becoming the capital’s notorious, love-mad fool.

To show his sincerity, Bradley waited for her at the monastery each day.

He said, “Dearest, you do so much for me. I will never fail you!”

“Having no heirs was never the great matter. But now that we are joined, if my fault leaves you childless and full of regret, no punishment could ever atone.”

“I will wait for you at Kingsport Monastery. Let us strive together, husband and wife, for our future child.”

“My sweet, though I have taken vows, my heart is not pure. I pray all the gods will take pity and allow me to devote myself to you alone.”

Back then, Layla wept with gratitude, believing she had found her lifelong happiness—believing Bradley had shouldered the burden of a barren fate for her sake, sparing her the pain of her own exposed wound.

But today, the gods had opened her eyes. The one to whom he had devoted himself was not her, but that servant girl—Eva, who had initiated him into the ways of the bedchamber.

His daily visits to “wait” for her were merely an excuse to watch her humiliation with his mistress!

It was divine mercy that let her see the full truth today, turning three years of devotion into a bitter jest.

Amidst Eva’s soft moans, the brush in Layla’s hand snapped. The broken piece struck the paper, the blood spreading in a sinister bloom.

She caught Julia’s arm as the maid moved to kick the door down and shook her head.

So these three years of kneeling had all been a lie—a colossal deception constructed around a fabricated crime.

Layla’s face turned deathly pale. She stared at the wound on her wrist, opened anew each day for three years, never allowed to heal. It gaped like a mouth, the raised, gnarled scars around it like twisted worms mocking her stupidity.

With a bitter smile, she took up a new brush. She had copied 998 volumes for him. This final one would repay the debt for her childhood rescue.

Saturating the brush with fresh blood, she set to work with solemn, single-minded focus.

When it came time for the final dedication, her brush halted. The once-familiar phrase, “May my husband, Bradley Sterling, find joy and health, and live a long life,” now refused to form.

After a moment’s thought, she wrote instead: *May the man who saved me in childhood achieve his heart’s desire.*

Layla stood. Suddenly, she remembered the young man who, three years ago, had mounted his horse for the frontier, his eyes full of quiet sorrow. “Layla, I go to the border where life and death are uncertain. If you ever change your mind, as long as I live, even if mountains crumble and oceans run dry, I will come for you.”

Layla lowered her gaze. For three years, he had sent her letters each month. They spoke of camp life, polite and distant. Only the final two words, “Awaiting your reply,” held a thread of earnest hope.

She had never answered.

Layla looked at the scripture before her, the ink still wet. Her eyes rested on the phrase: “achieve his heart’s desire.” A strange feeling stirred within her.

She said, “Julia, send a letter to the General’s residence. Tell him…”

“In seven days, I will be waiting for his bridal carriage.”

You may also like

A Betrayal Between My Husband And My Sister Novel Cover
8.1
Evelyn's betrayal of her own sister ends up revealing a shocking truth. Evelyn is pregnant with David's child-David, who is Steffy's husband, and Steffy is Evelyn's older sister. Confident that she will become the heir to the Willson family fortune, Evelyn secretly conducts a DNA test on Steffy and Hendri Willson. But is the result of that DNA test truly valid? And what truth will ultimately come to light-one so shocking that it leaves everyone stunned?
A Substitute Wife's Billion-Dollar Revenge Novel Cover
8.6
Elena Miller spent three years trying to be the wife Adrian Blackwood didn't know he had. She was the one who saved his company from a lawsuit no one knew about. The one who took a car to the hip so he wouldn't. The one who picked up his blood pressure medication every month for three years and placed it on his nightstand without a word. She was eight weeks pregnant the night he made her kneel in his garden, in the pouring rain, picking up the broken pieces of a necklace another woman had given him. When he was done with her, he handed her a dirty handkerchief and told her to throw it away. By the next morning, she'd lost the baby on his kitchen floor while he checked on the woman he'd been waiting twelve years for. By the end of the week, she'd signed the divorce papers with two words in the settlement column: "Net zero." She walked out of his life with nothing. She came back owning everything. Because Elena Miller was a name she'd borrowed. Her real name is Elena Vance, and the little girl who saved his life in a snowstorm twelve years ago — the one he's owed his every breath to ever since — wasn't the woman he kept in his bed for the past decade. It was the woman he kept on her knees.
Bestie, My Husband is All Yours Now Novel Cover
9.5
Louise Cooper's death was a total flop. No glory, just a cheating husband, a treacherous "bestie", and a fatal tumble. 0/10, would not recommend. Fortunately, the Moon Goddess offers do-overs. Rewound seven years by a mystery soulmate she was too blind to notice in her first life, Louise is back-and she is pissed. The plan is simple: Stop being a doormat. Serve icy revenge to the cheaters with a smile. Track down the sexy stranger who messed with the space-time just to save her. Fate tried to kill her, but Louise is rewriting the script. And this time? She's getting the revenge and the guy.
CLAIMED BY THE DEVIL DON. Novel Cover
8.9
Isabella Romano is the neglected princess of her family, casted away unknowingly by her father, she has lived with her mother all her life, seeking some fatherly love but she learnt to stop caring. Now after a reckless night she finds herself tangled in the sheets of a man she was told to always hate. Vladimir Volkov. A man far more scary that what she has been told, he is not just the boogeyman he is the one you send to kill the boogeyman. Imagine her shock when she finds out she hasn't just gotten the attention of The Russian Don but is also carrying his child Follow the hate to love relationship of isabella and Vladimir and watch how they navigate their life in his dark world that he dragged her to, making her and his unborn child a target to the new arising enemy that aims to destroy both the Italians and the Russians.
Defending Love with a Knife Novel Cover
8.0
The cathedral stretched before me like a gilded cage, every pew packed with faces I'd known my entire life. Chandeliers dripped crystal light across marble floors, and white roses—thousands of them—perfumed the air with a sweetness that made my stomach turn. I stood at the altar in my mother's restored lace gown, my fingers clutching the bouquet so tightly the stems bit into my palms. Jameson stood across from me, devastatingly handsome in his tailored tuxedo, but his eyes were flat. Empty. He hadn't looked at me once since the ceremony began, his jaw clenched in that familiar way that made the muscle in his cheek twitch. I told myself it was nerves. That once we said our vows, once this was finally real, he would soften. He would remember why we'd fallen in love. Father Benedict's voice rolled through the cathedral, steady and warm.
Divorce from the Tyrant Novel Cover
8.6
On the day of her parents' funeral, Violette’s husband, Maddox Torres, commits the ultimate sacrilege: he desecrates her parents' grave to bury his pregnant mistress’s dog. For five years, Violette was his obedient "pet," enduring relentless humiliation only because Maddox’s face reminded her of Cristian, the man she truly loved who was presumed dead. When Maddox forces her to sign divorce papers and subjects her to a night of horrific abuse—feeding her parents' ashes to a dog—Violette finally breaks. But as she wanders the streets, broken and barefoot, a black Bentley screeches to a halt. Cristian is back from the dead, and he is ready to burn Maddox’s empire to the ground.