3 Answers2025-10-31 05:50:14
I get really excited talking about this because the relationship arc is one of my favorite slow-burns in that story. In the novel, Li Xiuqi’s romantic fate is handled with a lot of quiet moments rather than a single big wedding scene. By the time the main plot settles, it’s clear he builds a lifelong partnership with the female lead—the one who matched him in stubbornness and in those small, intimate scenes where they learned to trust each other. The text frames their bond as mutual growth: she steels him against being closed off, and he becomes someone she can rely on in crisis. Those epilogue beats show them sharing household decisions and being present for each other’s families, which in the setting functions as social confirmation of marriage even when a formal ceremony isn’t spelled out in page-by-page detail.
Fans love to pick apart the chapters where they repair each other after losses, and those repair scenes are what convinced me that the author intended a permanent union rather than a fleeting romance. There’s also the way secondary characters treat them afterward—introductions, inheritances, and subtle references to joint responsibilities—those are the novel’s version of a matrimonial seal.
So, while you don’t get a big, ornate wedding page, you do get a clear, canonized pairing: Li Xiuqi and the female lead end up together in a way that reads like marriage to me. It’s the kind of ending that sneaks up on you and then feels exactly right.
3 Answers2025-10-31 08:05:26
I’m pretty sure the moment you’re looking for isn’t buried in the middle of the action but saved for the story’s wind-down. In the novel the reveal shows up in the final arc and then again in the epilogue—a gentle scene that ties up the main timeline and then gives a short flash-forward to clarify who Li Xiuqi ended up with. It isn’t thrown into a battle or a cliffhanger; the author chose a quieter payoff, so look to the chapters that follow the main conflict resolution rather than earlier plot twists.
If you’re watching an adaptation, that same information usually appears in the last episode or during a short post-credit scene. Adaptations sometimes split or move small scenes, so the exact placement can shift, but the narrative purpose is the same: it’s a coda. If you have the book, check the last five to ten chapters plus the epilogue and any numbered side stories; if you’re streaming, scan the finale and any special episodes labeled as extras or OVA-style add-ons.
On top of the canonical reveal, there are useful signs earlier on—tiny hints, a few exchanged letters, or a family register passed between characters—that make the epilogue’s reveal feel earned. I loved how the payoff was quiet and character-driven; it made the ending stick with me long after I closed the book.
3 Answers2025-10-31 14:41:39
My curiosity always pulls me into the small detective work of tracking down key scenes, so I dug through different copies to pin this down the way I would for any beloved series. The chapter that reveals whom Li Xiuqi marries tends to show up well into the latter half of the story — it's one of those payoffs that ties up a long thread rather than an early reveal. In many printed editions the moment is framed under a wedding or betrothal-type chapter heading; look for chapter titles that include words like 'wedding,' 'promise,' or 'betrothal' if your edition has translated headings.
If you have an e-book, the fastest trick that worked for me was a quick text search for Li Xiuqi's name paired with marriage-related words: 'marry,' 'wedding,' 'bride,' or the original language equivalent. On paper copies I checked the table of contents for anything that reads like a familial or ceremony scene and then skimmed those chapters for dialogue that settles the question. Keep in mind that serialized web versions, later collected volumes, and international translations sometimes renumber chapters or split/merge them, so the exact chapter number can shift between versions.
In short: find the chapter titled or described around the late-middle section where domestic-life threads get resolved — that’s where the book discloses who Li Xiuqi ends up with. I always get a little warm seeing how character arcs like that close, so I hope you find the same satisfaction when you locate it.
3 Answers2025-10-31 21:09:25
Surprisingly, the screen version does shift who Li Xiuqi ends up with — but it’s the kind of change that tastes different depending on how closely you cling to the source. In the original text he’s paired with the person who grew up beside him: their bond is slow, layered, and tied into family obligations and small emotional payments over years. The novel treats their marriage as the culmination of lots of quiet scenes and inner monologue, so on the page it feels inevitable and earned.
The TV adaptation, by contrast, streamlines that arc. It trims away internal beats and boosts external drama, so the producers either emphasize a different romantic thread or enlarge a secondary character to share the wedding spotlight. That means the on-screen spouse can feel like a narrative choice aimed at balancing screen chemistry and viewer expectations rather than the book’s slow-burn logic. I appreciated the chemistry and spectacle in the show — wedding scenes can be gorgeous on TV — but I missed the intimacy and the specific long-term threads the novel built. If you love emotional accumulation and the original partner’s motivations, the novel will satisfy more; if you enjoy tighter plotting and visual romance cues, the show’s swap isn’t unbearable, just different. Personally, I liked both for what they were, though I lean toward the book’s pairing for emotional depth.