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Chapter 38 - Chapter 38: A Wife’s Heist

Night fell like a curtain over the quiet village. Lanterns flickered in

doorways, and the streets cleared as vendors packed up their stalls. From

the upstairs window of the teahouse, Taotao scowled at his reflection — still

in the floral skirt, scarf, and clutching a wicker basket.

> "I am risking my life dressed as a middle-aged cabbage seller," he

muttered.

> "And you'll risk more if you don't bring something back," Ju Xian replied

sweetly from the corner, sharpening a pair of borrowed scissors. "Try not to

steal from anyone too poor. And don't get caught."

> "Helpful. Very helpful."

Taotao crept into the street, hunching like a dutiful village wife on a late

errand. He had scoped the area earlier: a merchant with too many goods

and not enough locks. A jewelry box left half open. A coin pouch hanging too

carelessly from a belt. Tempting.

He moved with practiced ease, his fake limp convincing, his basket clutched

like he was buying tofu instead of plotting petty theft.

As he neared the merchant's side shed, he whispered, "Alright, Taotao. Just

a quick lift, no drama…"

He reached out for the unattended coin pouch tied to the merchant's cart.

> "Can I help you, auntie?" came a voice from behind.

Taotao froze.

He turned, slowly, flashing a toothy grin. "Oh—just admiring your… rope

quality. Very sturdy."

The young guard squinted. "Haven't seen you before."

> "Newly married," Taotao said with a sudden falsetto, fluttering his

eyelashes. "Moved into town with my strong, silent husband. You know how

it is. Always following him around like a silly goose."

The guard blinked, unsettled. "Uh… well. Alright then. Be careful, auntie."

As the guard walked off, Taotao swiped the pouch cleanly and disappeared

around the corner.

Back at the teahouse, Ju Xian was waiting with her arms crossed.

> "You took long enough," she said.

He dropped the pouch into her lap. "I just robbed someone while pretending

to be your wife. I deserve soup."

> "You deserve an award," she said with a smirk. "I'm starting to think you

were made for the role."

> "I will strangle you with this scarf."

They both laughed quietly.

Outside, the village returned to its peaceful rhythm — unaware that fate,

dressed in rags and floral prints, had just passed through.

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