Three Years After My Death: The World Mourns Me Now
"Dr. Wen Tianyue stood on the brink of curing two deadly pandemics when her world collapsed. After years in a secret lab, she sacrificed everything to protect the research—shattering her legs in an ambush. With her last breath, she entrusted the lifesaving formulas to Wen Shuya, the adopted sister she’d raised as her own. Shuya discarded one cure and ordered Tianyue’s torture murder. As Tianyue died bewildered in agony, Shuya carved her own skin to pose as the hero who ""rescued"" half the research. She spun a vicious lie: Tianyue had stolen the other cure, defected, and murdered a colleague. The lie became truth. Tianyue’s detective husband Huo Linye saw Shuya’s scars as proof. Her father Wen Dahai disowned her. Her son Xiaoyu learned to curse her name. For three years, Shuya reigned as a medical saint, harvesting awards while stealing Tianyue’s family—drawing Huo Linye’s parents into her web and turning Xiaoyu against his mother. Tianyue’s spirit returned to a home that worshipped her killer. She watched her son stomp on her photo, heard her father wish her erased, and saw Huo Linye—tortured by doubt yet chained to the lie—prepare to marry Shuya. When a skeleton surfaced in Tianyue’s work uniform bearing her handmade star-sign lion emblem, forensics exposed the horror: shattered legs, ripped fingernails—no traitor’s death. Only Detective Li Zhang challenged Shuya’s myth, silenced by Huo Linye at every turn. At Shuya’s UN award ceremony, as Huo Linye reached for a ring, Li Zhang crashed the stage. Restored surveillance footage streamed globally: Shuya discarding the cure, ordering the kill, and slicing her own arm with icy precision. The hero became a prisoner. At trial, Shuya spat at Huo Linye: “You loved a comfortable lie more than your bleeding truth.” The nation apologized. Tianyue received posthumous honors. But as Huo Linye knelt at her rebuilt monument, he pressed his service revolver to his temple. Tianyue’s spirit watched his blood seep into stone. Justice had come. Vindication had come. Yet the child wept between two graves. All that lingered was the echo of Shuya’s sneer—some poisons outlive their makers."