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The Drowing Summer

CamelliaRosette
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Xia Xiaoman remembers everything—the blood on the pavement, the shattered glass, the whispers of a debt too large to repay—everything except how her parents truly fell to their deaths. As an investigative journalist, she infiltrates the world of Li Moting, the ruthless heir to a financial empire, armed with nothing but a recorder and her perfect memory. "Three therapy sessions a week," he offers, fingers steepled, his voice colder than the rain outside the window. "In exchange for your silence." But what begins as a calculated game of revenge spirals into something far more dangerous. He scales a crumbling factory to save her from kidnappers, his hands bleeding, yet claims it’s merely "asset protection." She discovers ledgers in his study that implicate his family in her parents’ ruin—yet finds her childhood lullaby tucked in his desk drawer, the notes still intact after twenty years. On the night the truth comes crashing down, he kneels in the snow, pressing a pair of worn ballet flats into her hands. "Hate me if you must," he murmurs, "but let me remember you properly this time." And when she plays back the tapes—the ones she swore were evidence—all she hears is the unguarded hitch of his breath when she entered the room, the quiet, damning confession: *", Xia Xiaoman you were never part of the plan."*
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Chapter 1 - "Stealing Shadow: The Fatal Encounter between the President and the Undercover Reporter"

**The Li Manor in the night rain loomed like a crouching beast**, its Gothic spires piercing the thick darkness, while the light filtering through stained-glass windows bled into hazy smears of color in the downpour. Xia Xiaoman crouched in the ornamental shrubbery, the icy rainwater trickling down her spine and seeping into the borrowed evening gown clinging to her back. For the seventeenth time, she regretted taking this undercover assignment.

"Ten more minutes," came the raspy voice of Editor Chen through her earpiece. "When Li Moting delivers his speech, you must get a shot of him exchanging documents with the director of the Land Resources Bureau."

Xiaoman wiped the rain from her face, smearing cheap mascara across her fingertips. Her fingers brushed against the miniature camera hidden in her corset, its metal casing now warmed by her body heat. The rented Dior gown squeezed her ribs, making each breath a struggle, but at least it perfectly concealed the backup memory card strapped to her calf.

(Note: The translation preserves the original meaning while enhancing the literary quality with phrases like "loomed like a crouching beast," "hazy smears of color," and "making each breath a struggle." The syntax remains natural in English while maintaining the atmosphere of tension and discomfort.)**The Li Manor in the night rain loomed like a crouching beast**, its Gothic spires piercing the thick darkness, while the light filtering through stained-glass windows bled into hazy smears of color in the downpour. Xia Xiaoman crouched in the ornamental shrubbery, the icy rainwater trickling down her spine and seeping into the borrowed evening gown clinging to her back. For the seventeenth time, she regretted taking this undercover assignment.

"Ten more minutes," came the raspy voice of Editor Chen through her earpiece. "When Li Moting delivers his speech, you must get a shot of him exchanging documents with the director of the Land Resources Bureau."

Xiaoman wiped the rain from her face, smearing cheap mascara across her fingertips. Her fingers brushed against the miniature camera hidden in her corset, its metal casing now warmed by her body heat. The rented Dior gown squeezed her ribs, making each breath a struggle, but at least it perfectly concealed the backup memory card strapped to her calf.

Li Moting stood on the second-floor balcony, an unlit cigar between his fingers. Rainwater pooled at his feet, reflecting the distorted silhouettes of guests inside the banquet hall. His gaze swept across the courtyard, then abruptly paused—the shrubs in the southwest corner trembled unnaturally, not once, but twice.

"Pull up surveillance feed B-3," he murmured into his cufflink. A retinal projection instantly displayed an infrared image: a crouched figure clumsily adjusting the hem of a dress.

*Interesting.* This was already the third corporate spy this month.

Li Moting undid his cufflink, feeling the familiar throb of a migraine pulsing at the base of his skull. The sleeping pills his doctor prescribed were tucked inside his suit pocket, but he'd developed a pathetic tolerance for them by now. Maybe dealing with this little rat himself would grant him a good night's sleep.