Taiwanese collage
Copyright© 2025 by qiuchengwei30
Chapter 2
Historical Sex Story: Chapter 2 - It tells the historical story of how Taiwan's aborigines, under the influence of communism and national liberation ideas, formed armed guerrillas to resist Japanese colonial rule during the Japanese occupation.
Caution: This Historical Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including Fiction Historical Alternate History Interracial White Female Politics Violence
After Yapu Mona was arrested by the Japanese army, he was unable to speak and had to be executed. This matter caused a great headache for the Governor-General of Taiwan, Sakuma Yahiko He didn’t know how to handle it!;Naruwan Mayaw, also known as Rahol Malibu’s wife, was rescued by Taiwanese Hokkien financial banker Liu Qingshui, but in exchange she became Liu Qingshui’s concubine.
Who was Liu Qingshui? Liu Qingshui was born in Dadaocheng, Taipei City, in 1898-1899, the year before the outbreak of the First Sino-Japanese War, and grew up there. His family was involved in the Taiwanese tea trade from a young age. There were three children in the family, and Liu Qingshui was the eldest. He had two younger brothers who were twins, born in Dadaocheng, Taipei, Taiwan during the Russo-Japanese War. The other two younger brothers inherited their father’s business, dealing in tea. However, Liu Qingshui, the eldest son, was not interested in tea but rather in finance. Initially, his father objected, and it was only because his grandmother strongly supported him that he was initially unable to go. In 1910, his family respected his wishes and sent him to Japan to study finance.
In 1921, he and three Japanese entrepreneurs jointly established the Formosa World Bank in Taipei.
Late March 1923 Liu Qingshui met Naruwan Mayaw and immediately married the beautiful woman from the Amis tribe.Naruwan Mayaw felt grateful but also afraid, especially of Liu Qingshui’s first wife, Lin Zhaodi.
Note: During the Japanese occupation, Taiwan’s concubine system was in a transitional phase. Although Japan promoted monogamy (as enacted in the Japanese Civil Code), it adopted a “non-interference” or lenient approach to Taiwanese men taking concubines, allowing for a system of “one husband and multiple concubines.” There were even conditions for taking a concubine, requiring police reporting. However, the concubine’s status was legally lower than that of the principal wife, which conflicted with the spirit of modern law. At the time, some reformers (such as Lin Hsien-tang and Yeh Jung-chung) believed that keeping concubines was a bad habit and that the country should move towards monogamy, but traditional values remained deeply ingrained.
In 1937, Liu Qingshui passed away in Taipei at the age of 44, leaving Naruwan Mayaw a widow! Liu Qingshui’s passing was a huge blow to the whole family. Naruwan Mayaw became a widow, bearing the grief of losing her beloved husband alone, feeling as if the sky had fallen.
Gazing at Liu Qingshui’s cold body, Naruwan couldn’t help but recall everything they had experienced together. She remembered him holding her hand, and whispering in her ear in Japanese ... as if their love story had come to a perfect end. However, Naruwan Mayaw was completely unaware that fate had other plans. Lin Zhaodi, resentful of being replaced by a younger concubine, decided to take matters into her own hands. A strong resolve ignited within Lin Zhaodi, and when Naruwan Mayaw saw her storm into the room in a rage, her eyes widened in terror. She angrily shouted at Naruwan Mayaw... ,”You’re nothing but a concubine; you’re not worthy to be the mother of my husband and son! Get out!你不而過是一个妾室,你不配做阮翁婿後生的老母!緊輾吧!Lí put-jî-kò sī tsit ê tshiap-sik, lí put-phuè tsò guán ang-sài hāu-senn ê lāu-bú! kín liàn pa!”
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