Jade and Judgement
Wang Gensheng’s nightmare began with a drunken stumble through the woods. He picked up scattered money and a piece of jade, offerings meant for the dead. From that moment, he felt eyes drilling into him in the dark, and his dreams were invaded by a silent female ghost, endlessly beckoning him to lift her red bridal veil. Desperate, he sought help from a local wise man, but greed made him half-hearted—he buried only the jade, kept the cash, and forgot the crucial warning not to look back. The haunting intensified, clawing at his sanity until he broke, screaming out a secret he had buried for years. The secret was a crime: Wang Gensheng had once raped and murdered a young woman from his village, a beloved girl named Daniu. Her sister, Erniu, discovered the truth. Instead of seeking the law, she crafted a more personal justice. With the help of a blind accomplice, Erniu orchestrated a terrifying illusion. They planted the cursed money and jade, conjured the spectral bride in his dreams, and tightened the psychological vise until Wang Gensheng’s own guilt and fear unraveled him, forcing a public confession of his own atrocity. Justice, in this village, came not from a court, but from a sister’s relentless love and a perfectly staged revenge. As Wang Gensheng faced his punishment, Erniu finally brought the news of vengeance to her sister’s resting place—a closure woven from threads of terror and retribution.