The Husky And His White Cat Shizun Apr 2026
By the final volume, when Mo Ran finally understands the depth of Chu Wanning’s devotion, and Chu Wanning allows himself to be vulnerable, readers will have cried, raged, and ultimately, believed in the possibility of a second chance. This is not just a love story. It is a requiem for the people we used to be—and a hymn for the people we can become. “In this life, I will chase you, protect you, and love you properly. I will never let you be alone again.” — Mo Ran
In the vast landscape of Chinese danmei (MM) fiction, few titles have carved a legacy as fierce and heartbreaking as The Husky and His White Cat Shizun . Often abbreviated as 2Ha (a play on the Chinese pronunciation of "Er Ha," meaning "silly husky"), this novel is not merely a romance or a cultivation fantasy—it is a sprawling, 800,000-word epic that weaponizes memory, regret, and the agonizing question: If you could go back, could you love the monster you once despised? The Core Premise: Rebirth and Revenge The story begins at its darkest point. Mo Ran , the tyrannical and ruthless Emperor of the cultivation world, has achieved everything through bloodshed. He has killed his beloved master, Chu Wanning , and forced the world to kneel. Yet, in his moment of ultimate triumph, he is betrayed and dies in disgrace, despised by all. The Husky And His White Cat Shizun
But fate is crueler than death. Mo Ran wakes up—not in the afterlife, but . He is once again a 16-year-old disciple at the cultivation sect Sisheng Peak. His bitter enemy, the cold and aloof Yuheng Elder , Chu Wanning, is alive and still his Shizun (master). Mo Ran’s goal is simple: destroy Chu Wanning before Chu Wanning can destroy him. By the final volume, when Mo Ran finally