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Hunter’s Wife

Jasmyn_Colon
21
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 21 chs / week.
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Synopsis
By day, Hao Yu is a gentle kindergarten teacher who adores children. By night, he is a merciless assassin feared in the shadows. He has spent his life protecting innocence while destroying evil—yet fate dealt him a cruel irony. A childhood accident left him infertile, ensuring he could never have the family he secretly longed for. Then, without warning, a bolt of lightning ends his life. But Hao Yu was never meant to die. The God of Creation, correcting a cosmic mistake, reincarnates him into a new world—granting him his memories, honed killing skills, and physical prowess from his past life. As compensation, he is allowed to choose three powerful “cheats” to aid him in this second chance. This time, however, he has only one true goal: Not power. Not glory. Not bloodshed. But a family. What happens when the deadliest man alive decides he wants to become a father?
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Chapter 1 - chapter 1

They say your life flashes before your eyes right before you die.

Mine didn't.

I didn't even get that courtesy.

One second I was walking home. The next, a bolt of strange purple lightning split the sky and struck me before I could blink. There wasn't even a cloud overhead. No thunder. No warning.

And just like that, I was gone.

I hovered above the scene, weightless, staring down at my own body sprawled on the pavement while strangers gathered in a widening circle. Someone screamed. Someone called for an ambulance.

It felt… anticlimactic.

After everything I had survived, this was how I died? Not in battle. Not bleeding out in some back alley. Not at the hands of an enemy.

Lightning.

I might have laughed if I still had lungs.

I endured years of childhood abuse. Torture disguised as "training" to mold me into an assassin. Countless missions that left me half-dead and soaked in blood—mine and others'. I had survived things that should have killed me a hundred times over.

And yet I died on an ordinary day, under a clear sky.

I was, admittedly, a little pissed.

Still, I didn't have regrets. Not really.

Maybe a little sadness.

I would never see the children again.

To conceal my identity—and because I genuinely loved children—I became a kindergarten teacher. My students became something dangerously close to family. I poured everything into teaching them about the world, hoping to give them the tools I never had.

They were so bright. So innocent.

I prayed they would never have to see the darkness I had. Even though I knew that was a foolish wish.

Children grow up. They learn the truth eventually—that the world is hypocrisy wrapped in pretty lies.

Sometimes I wanted to gather them all up and hide them somewhere safe. Keep them untouched by cruelty.

But I didn't.

And every year, when they moved on, my heart broke quietly as I said goodbye—knowing I would likely never see them again.

I had thought about having children of my own.

But an accident in my teens left me infertile.

Adoption was possible. I considered it more than once. But what right did I have to drag a child into a life steeped in blood? My enemies would have used them against me. Or worse—if I died, they would be left alone because of my choices.

So I remained alone.

With one last look at my body, I let myself fade, fully expecting to descend into hell for the sins staining my soul.

******************************************** 

Instead, I opened my eyes to white.

Endless white.

A vast room with no visible walls, no ceiling—just an overwhelming emptiness. In front of me stood a man who radiated something vast and immeasurable.

"I am the God of Creation," he said calmly.

I stared at him.

He informed me—without a hint of embarrassment—that my death had been a mistake. The lightning? A careless accident caused by a young god practicing.

I waited for anger.

It didn't come.

Maybe something was muting my emotions. Or maybe, after everything, I simply didn't care enough to rage at a cosmic clerical error.

He explained that I couldn't be returned to my original world. Doing so would disrupt its balance. However, as compensation, he would reincarnate me into another world.

I could keep my memories. My skills. My strength.

And he would grant me three reasonable wishes.

Three wishes from a god.

It sounded generous.

But I had lived too long as an assassin to believe in generosity without cost. Every deal has a price. Every favor creates a debt.

"I won't owe you anything?" I asked.

"No," he replied. "This is restitution."

I considered my options carefully.

If I had another life… I wanted it to be peaceful.

My first wish was simple.

"I want to be reincarnated into a world where being gay is fully accepted."

Even though gay marriage had been legalized in China, society remained far from kind. I was tired of hiding. Tired of caution. Tired of measuring my words and my gaze.

If I was going to live again, I refused to do so in fear of who I loved.

The god nodded without hesitation.

Encouraged, I continued.

"For my second wish, I want a portable space dimension. Time inside should stand still—nothing rots or decays. It should be stocked with food, weapons, clothing appropriate for the new world, and basic necessities. And… a well of spiritual water capable of healing injuries, detoxifying poisons, and strengthening the body."

I fully expected him to refuse or bargain.

Instead, he said, "Granted."

I blinked.

Apparently, gods were generous when they were guilty.

"For my last wish," I said after a moment, "I want comprehensive common knowledge of the world I would be reborn into—its languages, customs, geography, currency, power structures." 

He raised a brow slightly.

"It may seem small," I added, "some might even consider it a waste, but ignorance is deadly. I didn't want to stumble through my new life like a fool, nor be cheated because I didn't know the value of things. Most importantly, I didn't want to stand out."

I wanted to live quietly.

Peacefully.

After a brief pause, he nodded.

"Very well."

There was no contract. No ominous warning.

Just a faint smile.

"Good luck."

He snapped his fingers.

The white space shattered.

And my soul was pulled into a swirling portal, dragged toward whatever life awaited me next.