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The Mafia Boss Calls Me His Little Ancestor

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Synopsis
The monsoon season of Nanyang carried a humid sensuality as Liao Qiao pushed open the hotel’s carved wooden doors, only to overhear Shang Lu’s mocking sneer: “Are you following me? Still not over me?” A sharp reprimand cut through the drama. “Show some respect to your sister-in-law!” The shadow of a black shirt swept over Liao Qiao’s shoulder. Shang Yu exhaled a plume of smoke, his gaze dropping to the crumpled figure on the floor. “Take him to the Dark Hall,” he ordered, his voice like glacial steel. Liao Qiao studied the man’s chiseled profile. This was Shang Yu, the ruthless tycoon of Nanyang. He stood at the rain-soaked veranda, cigarette smoke curling around him, the faint scent of snow pine lingering in the air—a blade sheathed in elegance. Their next meeting unfolded in the underground lounge of a nightclub. Liao Qiao sipped a Mojito, watching Shang Yu stub out his cigar with a snap. “Mr. Yan requests your presence.” Before the bodyguard could finish, she sauntered into the private room. Under crystal chandeliers, Shang Lu retched into a toilet bowl while Shang Yu tapped his fingers on the marble table. “Explain the annulment yourself.” Before the words echoed, Liao Qiao leaned against the doorframe, spinning a car key between her fingers. “I heard Mr. Shang owns a Maybach. Care to lend it for a spin?” On the manicured lawns of Nan Yang Manor, Shang Yu knelt to tend to a cut on her ankle. Liao Qiao traced the mole near his eye, laughter bubbling. “So anxious, Mr. Shang? Could it be…” His hands yanked her into an embrace, his palm pressing against her wounded back. “If it hurts, bite me.” The night Shang Lu’s yacht exploded, Liao Qiao stood by the manor’s floor-to-ceiling windows, watching Shang Yu’s silhouette rigid against the lightning-flashed horizon. Thunder cracked. For the first time, she understood why her father called her “Nanyang’s curse”—she had a knack for shattering and reshaping the trajectories of those around her without rhyme or reason. When Shang Yu returned from Palma, he pressed a platinum card into her palm. “Want to see where you were born?” Liao Qiao traced the intricate engravings, finally deciphering the truth in her father’s indulgent eyes—she was never just a heiress. She was the wildfire he’d always kept burning in his palm.
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Chapter 1 - The Broken Engagement

In the southern city of Nanyang, May always came with endless rain.

By dusk, the drizzle had just stopped. A faint mist hung in the damp air, and even the wild roses outside the hotel entrance drooped with a melancholy grace.

In the rear garden just outside the private banquet hall, Qiao Li leaned lazily against the wall of the rain corridor. She stared at the handsome man rambling in front of her, a flicker of impatience glimmering in her eyes.

"So, do you understand now?" he said coldly. "I'll never love you—let alone marry you. I don't care how this engagement came about. You'd better give up on this marriage while you still can."

His name was Shang Lu, a renowned doctor with a fortune to match—or so the rumors said.

Qiao Li didn't know much about him. The only connection between them was the engagement arranged before they were even born.

Classic. Cliché. Pathetic.

Her feet were getting sore, so she shifted her weight slightly and sighed, her voice airy and calm.

"Alright. Got it."

"…And another thing—wait, what?"

Shang Lu blinked, caught off guard. He clearly hadn't expected her to agree so easily. For a second, he was stunned.

Outside the corridor, the rain had returned, falling in light, steady drops. The sound of rain tapping against the banana leaves was crisp and soothing.

The soft rhythm snapped him out of his daze.

He looked up—only to realize she was already gone.

He looked around. At the far end of the corridor, only the dark green hem of a dress disappeared around the corner.

Qiao Li strolled leisurely along the rain-drenched corridor. Just ahead was a glass pavilion designed for admiring the rain.

The VIP lounge to her right was empty.

She gathered her dress and took a seat by the window. Outside, the sky was overcast, but her mood was surprisingly bright.

Truth be told, this was her first proper meeting with Shang Lu. The engagement that had bound them for years was no childhood sweetheart story—far from it.

In fact, to her, the whole arrangement felt vague and suspicious.

If it had truly been a big deal, her family wouldn't have been so evasive whenever it was brought up.

So, now that it was over?

Good. One less problem in the future.

As Qiao Li sat there in thought, the rain softened further—

And then she heard it.

A cry for help.

"Help… me—"

It wasn't her imagination.

The voice was faint. Barely audible.

Like someone was being choked, struggling to plead for their life.

Qiao Li straightened up in the high-backed chair, tilted her head slightly, and listened for a few seconds.

Then she rose and followed the sound toward the open-air greenery beside the rain pavilion.

Dusk was falling fast. The sky above was a heavy gray, and a fine rain continued to fall silently.

Guided by the broken fragments of a cry, she moved through tall and low plants alike.

At the far end, she gently pushed aside a banana leaf—

And what she saw stunned her.

In the heart of the emerald garden, beneath an octagonal pavilion, sat a man by a stone table, unmoving like a mountain.

In her twenty-two years of life, Qiao Li had never seen a man wear black so handsomely.

A black shirt. Black trousers. Polished shoes without a single speck of dust.

His sleeves were casually rolled up, one arm resting on the stone table. Even the way his collar hung open gave off a wild, untamed energy.

In that small corner of the world, his presence was overwhelming.

"Master Yan, I was wrong! Please… save me…"

The voice called out again, and Qiao Li snapped out of her daze.

Her gaze shifted slightly and finally landed on a frail middle-aged man lying on the slippery stone floor, his face twisted in pain.

At that moment, her instincts screamed—this was a place she should not have entered.

Just then, the man referred to as Master Yan slowly raised his hand, calmly smoothing the creases on his sleeve.

His deep, magnetic voice echoed in the quiet pavilion.

"Looks like you've forgotten the rules of Nanyang."