Yan Dan had a theory about liberal arts boys: they were all a little unhinged. How else do you explain someone voluntarily choosing to sit in a classroom full of girls every day, reciting history and dissecting poetry while the rest of the world worried about physics? She stared at the empty seat next to her and felt the particular injustice of it. Someone, somewhere, had decided that exam seating should mix science and liberal arts students. That someone had never had to take a physics exam next to a person who didn't know what a formula was. The exam bell hadn't rung yet. Yan Dan was still clutching her textbook, running her eyes over equations she already knew she wouldn't remember. Around her, everyone was doing the same — faces nearly pressed to paper, absorbing knowledge through proximity. She looked up. A boy walked in. Tall. Unhurried. He checked the seating chart at the front with the calm confidence of someone who had nowhere better to be, found his seat, and ...
Linlang's patience ran out before Yu Mo even cleared the gate. "Go then," she called after him, one hand pressed flat against her belly, voice carrying the full authority of a woman who had earned the right to make threats. "But if you miss Qixi Festival, I will find this child a different father." Yan Dan bit back a smile. The cold look she got from two directions at once did nothing to stop it. She was past shame at this point, and besides, she had Yu Mo's leftover ink on her side. "A few more days and it's Qixi Festival," Linlang said, almost to herself. Yu Mo's mouth curved. "So what do you want?" Yan Dan turned her hand over and caught his. Bold, even for her. "Anything is really possible?" She let the question sit a moment. "Actually — turn back into your original form. Let me keep you for a day." The smile died at the corner of his mouth. "Half a day," she offered. He pulled his hand fr...