Reborn to Bring Treasures Home
A beloved cobalt-glazed rabbit-head vase from the Yongzheng era was shattered by invaders in 1900. Its soul traveled across a century and was reborn as Ning Le—the ignored legitimate daughter of a modern family, whose place had been stolen by her stepsister. With her new human form, Ning Le awakened a supernatural gift: she could hear the whispers of ancient artifacts and absorb their spiritual energy. No longer the timid girl who endured abuse, she fought back. When her stepsister came to slap her, Ning Le levitated using the room’s antique aura—stunning everyone into silence. She vowed to bring lost national treasures home. With her peerless appraisal skills, she bought a discarded imperial seal for fifty yuan and sold it for half a million. She made a bet with the market’s top picker, then uncovered one priceless relic after another: Wang Xizhi’s brush, the Yongle Encyclopedia, a Tang dynasty flying Apsaras. Her finds exceeded a hundred million yuan. She won, forcing her opponent to kneel, and became a rising star. Returning to her family with a fortune, she exposed her father’s bias and her stepmother’s greed, humiliated her vicious stepsister, and walked away for good. At a high-end auction, she met Gu Shiyan, the king of Haicheng’s antique world. He was captivated by her talent and patriotism. They joined forces, triumphed over conspiracies, and fell in love. His stepbrother and her stepsister plotted to destroy them. Ning Le escaped every trap. She bought a blind box for three hundred million and found three national treasures inside, costing her enemy one point two billion. She cracked open a black-market Buddha head to reveal pure Hetian jade—and refused a fortune to keep it, donating it to the state instead. But fate had other plans. While shielding Gu Shiyan, she was gravely wounded. At the same moment, the original vase was fully restored—and the porcelain soul had to return. They said goodbye on a Ferris wheel. Her soul drifted back into the blue vase. Years later, Gu Shiyan stood before the vase in a museum, tears in his eyes. He spent the rest of his life recovering lost Chinese relics—keeping a promise across life and death, and writing a legend of love and devotion to the nation’s heritage.