Summary

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Chen Huian, a transmigrator from a traditional Chinese medicine university, finds himself in Chitian Prefecture’s Jiangling County. His father, a herbalist, fell to his death half a year ago, leaving Chen Huian as a lowly itinerant peddler. The world is rigidly stratified into three, six, and nine grades; he barely clings to the lowest tier of the sixth grade. He has no golden finger and sees little hope. His only consolation is his engagement to Wang Erhua, the fisherman’s daughter. In September, he enters Fulong Mountain to collect herbs. The outer ranges have been picked clean for centuries. After days of searching, he discovers a rare Seven-Leaf Lotus on a cliff face. He harvests it and spots a cave opening. Hoping for adventure or more herbs, he enters. Inside, he finds an abandoned infant girl. Despite the burden, he takes her home. The infant is Luo Yunshuang, the supreme Empress of Central State who was murdered and reborn using a forbidden secret method. She is furious at her condition but sees Chen Huian as her last lifeline.

Back at his mud-brick house, Chen Huian discovers the infant has eaten his dried provisions and soiled her wrappings. He cleans her and hangs the swaddling clothes to dry, including a jade pendant inside. Just then, Wang Fisherman arrives and breaks the engagement: he has sold Erhua into slavery due to taxation and poverty. Chen Huian accepts. After Wang leaves, Chen Erdog, a fellow herbalist, visits and tells him that the county magistrate is taxing itinerant peddlers—two hundred cash per entry into the city—to fund a campaign against bandits. Chen Erdog plans to take the riskier path to Ghost Cry Gorge for better herbs. Chen Huian decides to return to Fulong Mountain rather than lose money selling his Seven-Leaf Lotuses for scant profit after the entry tax.

The next morning, Chen Huian brings the infant with him. On the mountain, he spots a Purple Backed Heavenly Sunflower. Before he can harvest it, a white tiger spirit appears, its claws wreathed in blue flames. The tiger attacks, knocking over the herbalist basket and throwing the infant out. Enraged, the infant Luo Yunshuang unleashes her spiritual sense, terrifying the novice tiger into flight. The effort causes a backlash, and she faints. Chen Huian picks up the broken pieces of the jade pendant. Suddenly, he is transported into a cave containing a plowed plot labeled “Spirit Garden,” along with a pill chamber and scripture pavilion, both empty. He finds his collected herbs beside a stone tablet. He plants the Seven-Leaf Lotus and Purple Backed Heavenly Sunflower into the Spirit Garden and waters them. The herbs grow visibly: the lotus becomes a Nine-Leaf Lotus, and the sunflower matures to five years, multiplying their value several times. He realizes he can enter and exit this space at will, and that the power likely came from the infant’s jade pendant. He returns to the mountain, finds the infant sleeping peacefully, and now has much more valuable herbs.

Chen Huian then goes to Fengling County. At the East City Gate, soldiers demand the entry tax and extra payment for the infant. They try to confiscate his herbs. Chen Erdog appears and bribes the soldiers with some Rehmannia Root, explaining Chen Huian’s recent loss of his father. The soldiers let them pass. Chen Erdog advises Chen Huian to abandon the infant or sell her, but Chen Huian keeps her because he suspects the spirit garden and jade pendant are tied to her. They enter the city and separate, Chen Erdog heading to the dock while Chen Huian heads to Shilin Pharmacy in the South Market to sell his improved herbs and buy winter supplies.

Associated Names

天命采药人:捡个女婴是女帝
Latest Release
DateGroupRelease
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c226
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c225
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c224
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c223
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c222
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c221
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c220
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c219
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c218
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c217
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c216
2026-05-29lightnovelasia c215

Community Reviews

Rating(4.1 / 5.0, 30votes)
5 stars
13(43%)
4 stars
8(27%)
3 stars
9(30%)
2 stars
0(0%)
1 stars
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30. Overall impression is solid and promising. It has realistic world-building, relatable characters, and a slow-burn fantasy system. The humor is well-placed, and the emotional moments are earned. It’s not groundbreaking, but it’s well-executed. I don’t like how the baby’s speech is written sometimes—too expositive—but it works most of the time. The author avoids common pitfalls like overpowered protagonists or clunky info-dumps. I’m invested in Chen Huian’s struggle. If it maintains this quality, it could be a very enjoyable series. The ending leaves me wanting more.
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2 The central conflict is “survive the winter,” and that’s a simple but effective drive. The taxation and the broken engagement add obstacles. The spirit garden gives a way forward. The baby adds emotional weight. It’s a tight plot. The pacing of the first few chapters is slow, but it builds the world. The ending of the last chapter provided sets up a conflict—he needs to get more herbs and money before winter. I’m curious if he’ll succeed or if the tiger spirit will return. The cliffhanger is mild but enough to want more.
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2 I wish the story spent more time on the daily routine of the village. The section where Chen Huian talks about Chen Erdog’s proposal to go to Ghost Cry Gorge is interesting, but it’s told, not shown. The author could have done more with the social dynamics of Chen Village—the gossip, the hierarchy among the villagers, the fear of bandits. It feels a bit underdeveloped. The county city is better described, but the village is just a backdrop. I hope future chapters flesh out the community more.
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2 The relationship between Chen Huian and Luo Yunshuang is fascinating. He sees her as a burden, but also a source of good luck. She sees him as a tool, but also a protector. There’s no love interest or instant bond—they’re both using each other. Chen Huian’s reasoning—“If used properly, it would be his reliance on turning his life around”—is cold but realistic. Luo Yunshuang’s pride also prevents her from seeing him as an equal. This dynamic is likely to evolve as she grows up, and I’m interested in how they’ll clash or cooperate.
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2 The story’s emotional beats are all earned because the stakes are so low. When Chen Huian loses the engagement, it’s not a love story; it’s a loss of a practical future. When he risks his life for herbs, it’s not heroic; it’s desperation. The tiger attack is not an action scene; it’s a near-death experience. This grounded approach makes the world feel dangerous. Even the spirit garden doesn’t feel like a power fantasy; it feels like a temporary solution. I appreciate how the author avoids making the protagonist too strong.
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2 The humor in the infant’s perspective is the highlight. When she’s in the wooden basin, thinking “How dare you be so rude to This One!” is hilarious because she has no power. When she struggles, it’s just a baby squirming. The author uses her former identity for comedy, not for super-serious drama. I like that. The idea that she’s keeping a “notebook” of grudges is cute. It makes her feel like a real person trapped in a baby’s body, not a generic reborn protagonist.
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