CompletedOnly when Miao Wan was on the path to exile with her husband's family did she realize she had transmigrated into a palace infighting novel.
Of course, palace infighting had nothing to do with her. She was Qiao Ruichen's cannon fodder original wife, married by parental decree, who was also the male protagonist's childhood sweetheart cousin.
The Qiao family was implicated by the palace infighting, framed by others, and tragically exiled. This original wife wasn't accustomed to the harsh cold of the Northwest; after a miscarriage, she fell ill and died, eventually appearing as a tombstone in the novel's extra chapters.
Miao Wan looked at her trembling mother-in-law doing embroidery to support the family in a broken house, and her sister-in-law with swollen, radish-like hands washing vegetables, and sighed, touching her bulging belly.
Forget it, since she's here, she'll make the best of it. First, a small goal: avoid becoming a tombstone and earn a ridiculously large sum of money. As for not being accustomed to the harsh cold of the Northwest and having a miscarriage?
She was a native Northwest girl, a well-known pig-raising queen. She could raise thousands of pigs well, so how could she not raise a bun? Impossible.
Reading tips:
1. This is a fictional historical mash-up; there is no ambiguous relationship between the male lead and the original novel's female lead.
2. Ah Wan gets pregnant right after transmigrating, starting in the Northwest, ensuring a satisfying and unfrustrating experience.
3. The main plot focuses on raising a bun and making money; the romance plot is minimal, with the male lead serving as a tool.