Tang Rubao finally married the man she had loved.
After marriage, however, he refused to consummate their relationship. Later, while serving in the military, the first thing he did was buy a car and a house for his “white moonlight” (his first love).
Meanwhile, Tang Rubao lived a humble, oppressed, and miserable life, constantly bottling up her emotions until she became deeply unhappy and eventually developed breast cancer.
When she received her diagnosis, he was traveling with his first love.
When she died, he was hosting a grand wedding for his first love’s daughter.
When a nurse called to inform him of her death, he angrily scolded the nurse.
“How much did Tang Rubao pay you to put on this act with her?”
“She knew today was Xinxin’s wedding, yet she still called to curse herself to death, how vicious!”
“If she loves dying so much, then let her die! Send her to the crematorium and burn her to ashes!”
After being reborn, Tang Rubao decisively divorces him.
She refuses to serve the manipulative “white moonlight” anymore.
If she’s angry, she vents it on the spot. If someone deserves a slap, she delivers it immediately. She eats well, sleeps well, and lives freely, her life flourishing more and more each day.
Wasn’t he always eager to openly marry his first love? She has already filed for divorce to fulfill his wish, so why is he unwilling now?
Why is he now red-eyed, kneeling and begging for her forgiveness?
She kicks him away without hesitation and turns around to marry a sharp-tongued, boundary-setting young military officer.



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