Before the morning bell of Black Stone Temple could rouse five-year-old Chinese girl Lin Wanxing, a torrential downpour churned up falling rocks and buried the ancient temple. When she was lifted out of the mud by an American rescue team, all that remained of her world was a half-piece of wooden plaque tucked against her body, carved with her eight-character birth chart — the only memento her master had left her.
Mr. and Mrs. Winston, leaders of a top-tier American financial clan, took the quiet Eastern girl into their thousand-acre estate and gave her the name "Hazel". Here, there were gleaming luxury cars, immaculately pressed maid uniforms, and two older brothers: 12-year-old Samuel, composed and distant, and 6-year-old Elias, with eyes as blue as sapphires.
The tranquil life in the wealthy household was soon disrupted by strange occurrences: Hazel stared at the cook and murmured softly, "Your mother’s cough needs a new medicine"; when the driver was crestfallen over his son’s failed college applications, she stated with certainty, "You’ll get an acceptance letter from the state university in three days". When the Winstons pressed her anxiously in shock, the girl traced the half-plaque with her fingertip and revealed the secret her master had taught her — eight-character fortune-telling holds the secrets of fortune and misfortune; Plum Blossom Divination reveals the order of the universe.
From identifying the dark auras of fates to predicting life paths, Eastern occult arts stirred ripples in the Western mansion. Hazel’s remarkable journey quietly began, and those sapphire eyes that always followed hers allowed her, beyond the realm of fate-telling, to comprehend for the first time the fate known as "affection".