The Bone StitchingRead Full Free

The Bone Stitching

2026-03-03

I am the last inheritor of the Bone Stitching Technique in my family, skilled in mending fractured bones and saving lives. That day, a hill villager brought me a severely injured woman, imploring me to save her. I devoted three days and nights of relentless effort and finally saved her. Yet when she awoke, she turned against me, accusing me simply because she believed I left her scars. Meanwhile, the father of the child in my womb blamed me to side with her and even tried to throw me off a cliff, forcing me to pay a harsh price...收起

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Chapter 1 of "The Bone Stitching"

My name is Quincy Scott, the last inheritor of the Scott family's Bone Stitching Technique. Before his last breath, my grandfather pressed the ancestral Silver Needle to my fingertip, saying that this needle could mend broken bones, revive crippled limbs, and, above all, discern the human heart. Only later did I realize that the human heart is sometimes more inscrutable than fractured bone. That late spring, the mountain rain had just ceased, and the earth still bore the damp, musty scent. Three mountain villagers carried a makeshift stretcher, bursting through the wooden door of Harmony Clinic. The woman on the stretcher was drenched in blood; her pale pink dress torn to tatters, stained with blades of grass and shards of stone. Her left lower leg was twisted at a grotesque angle, and the faint rise and fall of her chest was barely discernible. "Dr. Scott, she fell from Eagle's Beak Cliff!" The lead mountaineer wiped the sweat from his brow, his voice trembling. "She hung on the wild grapevine at the cliff's edge for half the night. When we found her, the vine was nearly snapped!" I knelt down, and the moment my fingertips touched the woman's wrist, I sensed her pulse, faint and fragile like a dying candle flickering in the wind. Undoing the bloodstained collar of her garment, I saw the skin over her ribs was swollen, and pressing down, I could feel the sharp edges of broken bones. This was the unmistakable sign of a rib bone piercing through a pulmonary lobe. Look closely at her left leg: the skin over the tibia is torn open, the wound so deep that the bone is exposed, with shattered bone fragments mingling with droplets of blood seeping outward. Even the ankle joint was dislocated. The most dangerous wound was at the back of her head—a three-finger-wide gash crusted with dark purple blood scabs. A gentle touch caused her to emit a stifled groan of pain, tears welling at the corners of her eyes. "Prepare hot water and strong liquor, and bring the Silver Needles and elderwood from the East Chamber." I turned to the medicine girl Shirley and gave instructions, my voice steadier than I had anticipated. Shirley had just turned sixteen, nervously fumbling as she boiled the water. I had already sterilized my hands with strong liquor and aimed the first silver needle, three inches long, precisely at the woman's acupoint. The Bone Stitching Technique requires that "the needle follows the bone, the energy flows along the needle," especially when mending skull fractures; even the slightest error could harm the nerves. I fixed my gaze on the tiny copper bell at the end of the silver needle, waiting until its faint, trembling chime steadied before I dared to proceed with the next stitch. That first night, I kept vigil by her bedside, changing the needles every two hours. The candle flickered and crackled, casting pale light upon her face, as white as paper. Suddenly, I noticed a slender scar on her earlobe, as if grazed by a sharp object. Only later did I learn she had deliberately carved it with porcelain shards, intending to frame me in the future. At dawn, her breath grew sudden and rapid; her chest heaved violently, and pale pink blood foam spilled from the corner of her mouth. A chill tightened in my heart—I knew then that her pulmonary lobe wound was bleeding. I immediately retrieved the ancestral 'bone connecting medicine', blending it into a paste with warm water, and fed it to her slowly, spoonful by spoonful. That medicine was meticulously brewed by my grandfather using ten-year-old Angelica sinensis, Panax notoginseng, and a rare bone-setting herb—extraordinarily precious. I usually wouldn't even dare to use it on my own minor injuries. On the second night, her left leg began to swell, the skin stretched taut and shiny, as if it would burst. I repeatedly applied hot compresses with warm towels, then pierced the swollen skin with the Silver Needle to release the accumulated blood. Each time I drained the blood, she would groan, and my heart clenched in sympathy. My fingertips, rubbed raw by the Silver Needle, reddened and blistered; when the blisters broke and mingled with the medicinal powder, the pain pierced me to the core. But I dared not stop; if I did, this woman would truly be lost beyond hope. Shirley saw I was truly exhausted and wanted to take over the needle for me, but I shook my head. The Scott family's Bone Stitching Technique insists on 'the harmony of the hand's energy'; it is easy for outsiders to sever the vital flow if they take over. I could only grit my teeth and brace my arm on the edge of the bed, refusing to let myself collapse. On the third night, as the herbal medicine stew reached its third boil, she finally showed signs of response. First, her fingers twitched lightly, then her eyelids fluttered. I leaned closer and saw a faint glimmer of light through the slits of her eyes. "Water..." Her voice was as faint as a mosquito's hum, squeezed from the depths of her throat. I quickly poured a cup of warm water and fed it to her mouth little by little with a small spoon. Watching her cracked lips gradually moisten, the heavy stone in my heart finally fell away. As the morning light filtered through the window lattice, she fully opened her eyes. They were a pair of exquisitely beautiful eyes, their corners slightly upturned, carrying a delicate fragility. Yet when she looked at me, that beauty concealed a barely perceptible chill. "Thank you..." Her voice was still hoarse as she spoke, her hand gently stroking the back of her own hand. I followed her gaze and saw a scar two fingers' length long on the back of her hand. It had been torn by shattered stones during the fall from the cliff; the wound had long since crusted over and, by all rights, should not have caused serious trouble. Yet in the next moment, her voice suddenly rose, carrying a purposeful note of grievance. Tears fell like beads slipping from a broken thread: "It was you... it was your neglect that left a scar on my hand!"

"The Bone Stitching" Comments

Miss Popcorn 🌟🌟🌟🌟

The romance in "The Bone Stitching" is warm and delicate, turning misunderstandings into understanding... On SnackShort, every reunion feels sweet and addictive.

Dream Chaser 🌟🌟🌟🌟

"The Bone Stitching" offers gripping drama and life lessons... Watching on SnackShort sparks reflection and enjoyment.

Galaxy Traveler 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟

The plot of "The Bone Stitching" is striking and immersive... Smooth viewing on SnackShort with more popular novels recommended.

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Read Full
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Limited-Time Free Event: This free novel campaign is jointly launched by SnackShort and FreeDrama. Click the button to download the app and watch all chapters of The Bone Stitching for free.

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