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Natsu Hyuuga

The Apothecary Diaries: Volume 1

  • alopsiahas quotedlast year
    She must have been much admired for her beauty in those halcyon days before she had arrived at the palace, but when she got here, she discovered she had known as much about the outside world as a frog who had spent its life in a well.
  • kierstendeavy6has quoted3 months ago
    “My sincere apologies,” Maomao said. “I couldn’t think of compensation that would be worthy of you, Master Jinshi.”
    Would’ve been rude to give a eunuch an invitation to a brothel, right?
  • elizabethmarch23has quoted10 months ago
    Maomao was a relatively objective thinker for a girl of seventeen, but she had a few qualities that continually dogged her. For one, curiosity; and for another, a hunger for knowledge. And then there was her budding sense of justice.
  • vxcybkyxb7has quoted10 months ago
    It was always possible he was the current emperor’s guardian, but considering Jinshi looked to be about twenty years old, it was hard to imagine. Maybe he was the son of the Emperor or something, but then why become a eunuch?
  • Garde Danica Remollohas quoted9 days ago
    “Oh, but you do. And I will do much more than this to show my gratitude to you—my daughter’s savior.”

    “I’m certain there’s been some misunderstanding. Perhaps you have the wrong person,” Maomao said. She felt herself break into a cold sweat: she was being polite, but she was still contradicting an Imperial consort. She wished for her head to remain attached to her shoulders, but she did not wish to be a part of anything involving people such as this—to be pressed into any kind of service for any kind of noble or royal.
  • Garde Danica Remollohas quoted9 days ago
    No, sir. I am of lowly birth. There must be some mistake.”

    Who the hell would teach me? she thought, but she would hardly have said the words if she’d been under torture. Maomao was set on acting as ignorant as she could. Maybe her language was a little off, but what could she do about it? Someone of such mean origins could be expected to do no better.
  • Garde Danica Remollohas quoted9 days ago
    message hadn’t been for Maomao alone. She made to leave the room with the others, only to feel a hand placed firmly on her shoulder. With much fear and trembling, she turned around to find herself confronted with the almost blinding smile of the nymph-man.

    “Now, now, mustn’t do that,” he said. “I want you to stay behind.”

    That smile—so bold, so bright—wouldn’t take no for an answer.
  • Garde Danica Remollohas quoted9 days ago
    What a waste, Maomao thought, not remotely blushing herself. The men in the rear palace were all eunuchs, deprived of their ability to reproduce. They now lacked the equipment they needed to bear children. Precisely how gorgeous the offspring of this man would have been would remain a matter for the imagination.
  • Garde Danica Remollohas quoted9 days ago
    women would cover themselves in it from their faces down to their necks, and it would eat away at their bodies. Some of them died from it. Maomao’s father had warned them to stop using it, but they ignored him. Maomao, attending at her father’s side, had witnessed several courtesans waste away and die with her own eyes. They had weighed their lives against their beauty, and in the end had lost them both.
  • Garde Danica Remollohas quoted9 days ago
    There were many kinds of women among this lowest class of servants. Some came from farming families; others were city girls; and although uncommon, a few were the daughters of officials. Children of the bureaucracy could expect a modicum more respect, but even so, the work a woman was given to do depended on her own accomplishments. A girl who couldn’t read or write could certainly not expect to become a consort with her own chambers. Being a consort was a job. You even got a salary.
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