searchIcon closeIcon
Cancel
icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

She Plays Two Shadows Chinese Drama

She Plays Two Shadows

She Plays Two Shadows

PrincessRebirthRevengeSubstituteHistorical Romance
In her past life, Rosie was falsely accused of adultery by her husband's concubine while pregnant and was beaten to death. Her general father later committed suicide because of her tragedy. After being reborn, she found herself back at her wedding night with Larry. Upon learning that Larry had sent his lookalike servant Louis to have sex with her in his place, Rosie decided to play along, skillfully maneuvering between Larry and Louis. She was determined to make Larry pay for his heartlessness in their previous life, while also testing whether Louis could become her pawn.
Play
The Placeholder Bride's Secret Billionaire Revenge

The Placeholder Bride's Secret Billionaire Revenge

Luo Ye
For two years, I was the invisible force behind tech billionaire Kieran Douglas, convinced that our "private" romance was his way of protecting us from the tabloid spotlight. I managed his mergers, warmed his bed, and waited for a future that didn't exist. The illusion shattered at 6:00 AM when a Page Six alert debuted Kieran's "real" romance with socialite Aspen Schneider. Before I could even process the betrayal, Kieran sent me a cold, professional text: "Order flowers for Aspen. Pink peonies. Her favorite." When I tried to walk away, my own mother called me a disgrace and threatened to lock my inheritance forever unless I married a sixty-year-old businessman to save her failing estate. At a high-society gala that same night, Aspen intentionally crushed my burned hand in front of the cameras, while Kieran stood by and dismissed me as a "mediocre assistant" who had overstayed her welcome. I stood in the cold New York rain, drenched in champagne and humiliation, realizing that every sacrifice I made for Kieran was a joke. I was a ghost in a penthouse that was never mine, discarded the moment his "soulmate" returned. To the world, I was just a placeholder whose time had run out. But Kieran forgot one thing: my father's multi-million dollar trust fund unlocks the moment I legally marry. I didn't need love; I needed a signature and a shield. I walked into a discreet law firm and signed a marriage contract with a man I believed was the city's most notorious, scandal-ridden playboy. I thought I was marrying a degenerate "beard" to buy my freedom and secure my revenge. I didn't realize the man who signed that paper wasn't a playboy at all, but Gaston Collins-the most powerful and dangerous man on Wall Street-and he had no intention of letting our fake marriage stay fake.
Modern PlayboyBillionaires
Download the Book on the App

Part of a densely grown garden; on the right benches; at the back a rail fence, separating the garden from a field.

SCENE I

Enter NĂĄDYA and LĂ­ZA

NĂĄDYA. No, LĂ­za, don't say that: what comparison could there be between country and city life!

LĂ­ZA. What is there so specially fine about city life?

NĂĄDYA. Well, everything is different there; the people themselves, and even the whole social order are entirely different. [She sits down on a bench.] When I was in Petersburg with the mistress, one had only to take a look at the sort of people who came to see us, and at the way our rooms were decorated; besides, the mistress took me with her everywhere; we even went on the steamer to Peterhof, and to Tsarskoe Selo.

LĂ­ZA. That was pretty fine, I suppose.

NĂĄDYA. Yes indeed, it was so splendid that words can't describe it! Because, no matter how much I may tell you about it, if you haven't seen it yourself, you'll never understand. And when a young lady, the mistress's niece, was visiting us, I used to chat with her the whole evening, and sometimes we even sat through the night.

LĂ­ZA. What in the world did you talk about with her?

NĂĄDYA. Well, naturally, for the most part about the ways of high society, about her dancing partners, and about the officers of the guard. And as she was often at balls, she told me what they talked about there, and whom she had liked best. Only how fine those young ladies are!

LĂ­ZA. What do you mean?

NĂĄDYA. They're very gay. And where did they learn all that? Afterwards we lived a whole winter in Moscow. Seeing all this, my dear, you try to act like a born lady yourself. Your very manners change, and you try to have a way of talking of your own.

LĂ­ZA. But why should we try to be fine ladies? Much good it does!

NĂĄDYA. Much good, you say? Well, you see the ladies promised to marry me off, so I am trying to educate myself, so that no one'll be ashamed to take me. You know what sort of wives our officials have; well, what a lot they are! And I understand life and society ten times better than they do. Now I have just one hope: to marry a good man, so I may be the mistress of my own household. You just watch then how I'll manage the house; it will be no worse at my house than at any fine lady's.

LĂ­ZA. God grant your wish! But do you notice how the young master is running after you?

NĂĄDYA. Much good it'll do him! Of course, he's a pretty fellow, you might even say, a beauty; only he has nothing to expect from me; because I am decidedly not of that sort; and on the other hand, I'm trying now in every way that there may be no scandal of any sort about me. I have but one thing in mind: to get married.

LíZA. Even married life is sometimes no joy! You may get such a husband that 
 God help you!

NĂĄDYA. What a joy it would be to me to marry a really fine man! I, thank God, am able to distinguish between people: who is good, who bad. That's easy to see at once from their manners and conversation. But the mistress is so unreasonable in holding us in so strictly, and in keeping everlasting watch over us! Indeed, it's insulting to me! I'm a girl that knows how to take care of herself without any watching.

LĂ­ZA. It looks as if the master were coming.

NĂĄDYA. Then let's go. [They rise and go out.

LEONĂ­D comes in with a gun.

SCENE II

LEONĂ­D and then POTĂĄPYCH

LEONĂ­D. Wait a bit! Hey, you, where are you going? Why are they always running away from me? You can't catch them anyhow! [He stands musing. Silence.

A GIRL sings behind the rail fence:

"No man may hope to flee the sting

Of cruel affliction's pain;

New love within the heart may sing-

Regret still in its train."

LEONĂ­D. [Running up to the fence] What a pretty girl you are!

GIRL. Pretty, but not yours!

LEONĂ­D. Come here!

GIRL. Where?

LEONĂ­D. To me in the garden.

GIRL. Why go to you?

LEONĂ­D. I'll go to town and buy you earrings.

GIRL. You're only a kid!

She laughs loudly and goes out. LEONĂ­D stands with bowed head musing. POTĂĄPYCH enters in hunting-dress, with a gun.

POTĂĄPYCH. One can't keep up with you, sir; you have young legs.

LEONĂ­D. [All the while lost in thought] All this, PotĂĄpych, will be mine.

POTáPYCH. All yours, sir, and we shall all be yours
. Just as we served the old master, so we must serve you
. Because you're of the same blood
. That's the right way. Of course, may God prolong your dear mamma's days
.

LEONĂ­D. Then I shan't enter the service, PotĂĄpych; I shall come directly to the country, and here I shall live.

POTĂĄPYCH. You must enter the service, sir.

LEONĂ­D. What's that you say? Much I must! They'll make me a copying clerk! [He sits down upon a bench.

POTĂĄPYCH. No, sir, why should you work yourself? That's not the way to do things! They'll find a position for you-of the most gentlemanly, delicate sort; your clerks will work, but you'll be their chief, over all of them. And promotions will come to you of themselves.

LEONĂ­D. Perhaps they will make me vice-governor, or elect me marshal of the nobility.

POTĂĄPYCH. It's not improbable.

LEONĂ­D. Well, and when I'm vice-governor, shall you be afraid of me?

POTĂĄPYCH. Why should I be afraid? Let others cringe, but for us it's all the same. You are our master: that's honor enough for us.

LEONĂ­D. [Not hearing] Tell me, PotĂĄpych, have we many pretty girls here?

POTåPYCH. Why, really, sir, if you think it over, why shouldn't there be girls? There are some on the estate, and among the house servants; only it must be said that in these matters the household is very strictly run. Our mistress, owing to her strict life and her piety, looks after that very carefully. Now just take this: she herself marries off the protégées and housemaids whom she likes. If a man pleases her, she marries the girl off to him, and even gives her a dowry, not a big one-needless to say. There are always two or three protégées on the place. The mistress takes a little girl from some one or other and brings her up; and when she is seventeen or eighteen years old, then, without any talk, she marries her off to some clerk or townsman, just as she takes a notion, and sometimes even to a nobleman. Ah, yes, sir! Only what an existence for these protégées, sir! Misery!

LEONĂ­D. But why?

POTåPYCH. They have a hard time. The lady says: "I have found you a prospective husband, and now," she says, "the wedding will be on such and such a day, and that's an end to it; and don't one of you dare to argue about it!" It's a case of get along with you to the man you're told to. Because, sir, I reason this way: who wants to see disobedience in a person he's brought up? And sometimes it happens that the bride doesn't like the groom, nor the groom the bride: then the lady falls into a great rage. She even goes out of her head. She took a notion to marry one protégée to a petty shopkeeper in town; but he, an unpolished individual, was going to resist. "The bride doesn't please me," he said, "and, besides, I don't want to get married yet." So the mistress complained at once to the town bailiff and to the priest: well, they brought the blockhead round.

LEONĂ­D. You don't say.

POTĂĄPYCH. Yes, sir. And even if the mistress sees a girl at one of her acquaintances', she immediately looks up a husband for her. Our mistress reasons this way: that they are stupid; that if she doesn't look after them closely now, they'll just waste their life and never amount to anything. That's the way, sir. Some people, because of their stupidity, hide girls from the mistress, so that she may never set eyes on them; because if she does, it's all up with the girls.

LEONĂ­D. And so she treats other people's girls the same way?

POTåPYCH. Other people's, too. She extends her care to everybody. She has such a kind heart that she worries about everybody. She even gets angry if they do anything without her permission. And the way she looks after her protégées is just a wonder. She dresses them as if they were her own daughters. Sometimes she has them eat with her; and she doesn't make them do any work. "Let everybody look," says the mistress, "and see how my protégées live; I want every one to envy them," she says.

LEONĂ­D. Well, now, that's fine, PotĂĄpych.

POTĂĄPYCH. And what a touching little sermon she reads them when they're married! "You," she says, "have lived with me in wealth and luxury, and have had nothing to do; now you are marrying a poor man, and will live your life in poverty, and will work, and will do your duty. And now forget," she says, "how you lived here, because not for you I did all this; I was merely diverting myself, but you must never even think of such a life; always remember your insignificance, and of what station you are." And all this so feelingly that there are tears in her own eyes.

LEONĂ­D. Well, now, that's fine.

POTĂĄPYCH. I don't know how to describe it, sir. Somehow they all get tired of married life later; they mostly pine away.

LEONĂ­D. Why do they pine away, PotĂĄpych?

POTĂĄPYCH. Must be they don't like it, if they pine away.

LEONĂ­D. That's queer.

POTĂĄPYCH. The husbands mostly turn out ruffians.

LEONĂ­D. Is that so?

POTåPYCH. Everybody hopes to get one of our protégées, because the mistress right away becomes his patroness. Now in the case of these she marries to government clerks, there's a good living for the husband; because if they want to drive him out of the court, or have done so, he goes at once to our mistress with a complaint, and she's a regular bulwark for him; she'll bother the governor himself. And then the government clerk can get drunk or anything else, and not be afraid of anybody, unless he is insubordinate or steals a lot
.

LEONĂ­D. But, say, PotĂĄpych, why is it that the girls run away from me?

POTĂĄPYCH. How can they help running? They must run, sir!

Read Now
Plays

Plays

Aleksandr Nikolaevich Ostrovsky
Plays by Aleksandr Nikolaevich Ostrovsky
Literature
Download the Book on the App
Marriage drama

Marriage drama

Nura
💓 Marriage 👰 drama 💓 I just wanna keep my marriage Prologue Meet Ryan Gold.. The CEO of "Ryan enterprises company." one of the youngest billionaire in the country. He is just 25years.handsome jerk..you can say that again he is very handsome and grumpy.. he is sweet but only to his mother Every
Adventure
Download the Book on the App
Washington Square Plays

Washington Square Plays

Various
"[...]afterpiece of our parents. It has been frequently said by those optimists who are forever discovering the birth of the arts in popular amusements that vaudeville audiences will appreciate and applaud the best. This is only in part true. They will appreciate the best juggler, the cleverest trai
Literature
Download the Book on the App
The Chinese Fairy Book

The Chinese Fairy Book

Various
The Chinese Fairy Book by Various
Literature
Download the Book on the App
China and the Chinese

China and the Chinese

Herbert Allen Giles
This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curated for quality. Quality assurance was conducted on each of these books in an attempt to remove books with imperfections introduced by the digitization process. Though we have made best efforts - the books may have occasional errors that do not
Literature
Download the Book on the App
More Translations from the Chinese

More Translations from the Chinese

Various
More Translations from the Chinese by Various
Literature
Download the Book on the App
Four Plays of Gil Vicente

Four Plays of Gil Vicente

Gil Vicente
Four Plays of Gil Vicente by Gil Vicente
Literature
Download the Book on the App
The Growth of English Drama

The Growth of English Drama

Arnold Wynne
This book (hardcover) is part of the TREDITION CLASSICS. It contains classical literature works from over two thousand years. Most of these titles have been out of print and off the bookstore shelves for decades. The book series is intended to preserve the cultural legacy and to promote the timeless
Literature
Download the Book on the App
Held by Chinese Brigands

Held by Chinese Brigands

Charles Gilson
Held by Chinese Brigands by Charles Gilson
Literature
Download the Book on the App
His Drama Queen

His Drama Queen

LencySlamet
Nicole Vargas. Spoiled, rich, smart, and melodramatic. She graduated Fashion Design in Brazil and was the daughter of a well known artist and the CEO of 'The Vargas' hotel and casino chains. She could get anything she wants at just the snap of her fingers. Even her career. But she didn't. And
Young Adult
Download the Book on the App

Trending

One Night with the Brother-In-Law: An Erotic Tale Hotter Than Hell Chasing the Alpha BEE Sugar Baby MATED TO HER Unexpected Attraction
The Caillaux Drama

The Caillaux Drama

John N. Raphael
Late on Monday afternoon, March 16, 1914, a rumour fired imaginations, like a train of gunpowder, all over Paris. In newspaper offices, in cafés, in clubs, people asked one another whether they had heard the news and whether the news were true. It seemed incredible. The wife of the Minister o
Modern
Download the Book on the App
Honors Night, Unscripted Drama

Honors Night, Unscripted Drama

Juline Walden
The Annual Honors Convocation. My valedictorian speech was a triumph, the applause warm, my parents’ faces beaming with pride. I had given it all to academics, and this was my moment of glory. My future felt bright, endless possibilities stretching before me. I was ready to step off that stage and i
Young Adult CrimeFamilyModern
Download the Book on the App
The Game He Plays

The Game He Plays

makrisorpilla
Sammy, with her strong personality and self proclaimed independence vowed never to be used as a trophy girlfriend. Rob, a player by choice and profession will deliberately make her one and lure her in his game. Who will win if Sammy becomes the master player and used Rob’s game against him?
Romance LustModernUnrequited loveCourageousMultilinear narration
Download the Book on the App
A Lady's Captivity among Chinese Pirates in the Chinese Seas

A Lady's Captivity among Chinese Pirates in the Chinese Seas

Fanny Loviot
A Lady's Captivity among Chinese Pirates in the Chinese Seas by Fanny Loviot
Literature
Download the Book on the App
She

She

H. Rider Haggard
She by H. Rider Haggard
Literature
Download the Book on the App
Complete Plays of John Galsworthy

Complete Plays of John Galsworthy

John Galsworthy
British novelist John Galsworthy is regarded as a literary figure of key importance because his work reflects the transition from the strict social mores of the Victorian era to the more modern sensibility that began to emerge in the Edwardian period. This engaging collection of essays, vignettes an
Literature
Download the Book on the App
My Lady of the Chinese Courtyard

My Lady of the Chinese Courtyard

Elizabeth Cooper
"In these letters I have drawn quite freely and sometimes literally from the excellent and authoritative translations of Chinese classics by Professor Giles in his "Chinese Literature" and from "The Lute of Jude" and "The Mastersingers of Japan," two books in the "Wisdom of the East" series edited b
Literature
Download the Book on the App
The Stepmother, A Drama in Five Acts

The Stepmother, A Drama in Five Acts

Honoré de Balzac
The Stepmother, A Drama in Five Acts by Honoré de Balzac
Literature
Download the Book on the App
Fated to the She-Alpha: I have two mates.

Fated to the She-Alpha: I have two mates.

Haliverse
"For Better for worse, I, Athena Williams, The She-Alpha, will always Love and cherish the both of you. And there is nothing in this world and beyond that would make me think or do otherwise... " Athena proclaimed Heartily, her eyes dancing with uncontrolled affection for the speechless men standing
Werewolf R18+MysteryFantasyFirst loveRevengeCEOArrogant/Dominant
Download the Book on the App
Chasing Shadows

Chasing Shadows

Killerpants
One girls story of love, pain, revenge and the man who changes her life. Hannah was an ordinary little girl...until her father was brutally murdered. Now she vows to never let anyone close to her again...until fate stepped in!
Romance CrimeMystery
Download the Book on the App

Trending

She Plays Two Shadows Chinese Drama novel read online freeShe Plays Two Shadows Chinese Drama pdf free downloadShe Plays Two Shadows Chinese Drama epub vk downloadShe Plays Two Shadows Chinese Drama amazon kindleShe Plays Two Shadows Chinese Drama
Read it on MoboReader now!
Open
close button

She Plays Two Shadows Chinese Drama

Searching for She Plays Two Shadows Chinese Drama full movie online? Watching She Plays Two Shadows Chinese Drama full episodes free on Moboreels. Find more free Chinese dramas about She Plays Two Shadows Chinese Drama dailymotion, She Plays Two Shadows Chinese Drama youtube, She Plays Two Shadows Chinese Drama reddit.