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A Lemon Candy, She Remembered Me for Fifteen Years Story Description

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A Lemon Candy, She Remembered Me for Fifteen Years

Story Description

At 27, Li Puru is trapped in a soul-crushing cycle as an internet company product manager: endless overtime, thankless work, and crushing loneliness in a sprawling city where he feels completely invisible. For five years, he has taken the blame for corporate failures while leaders take all the credit, surviving in a cramped 15-square-meter rental apartment, and walking the same late-night subway route home, surrounded by equally worn-down, numb strangers. No one ever asks if he’s tired, or acknowledges his struggle—until one fateful night on an empty subway car.

Across the aisle sits Zhang Xiaoyu, a young woman in a crumpled business suit, a broken high heel strap wrapped in tape, and lipstick smudged on her mask, mirroring his own weary defeat. When the subway jolts her awake, their eyes meet, and she offers him a bright yellow lemon candy with a soft, empathetic smile: “Just finished working overtime? Have a candy, it’ll sweeten your mood.” For the first time in years, someone sees his exhaustion and cares. The sour-then-sweet candy cuts through his numbness, and she slips a second one into his pocket before leaving, with a quiet, warm “See you tomorrow.” He has no idea this single candy will upend his entire life in 72 hours, or that she has waited for this exact meeting for 15 long years.

That night, three clumsy men in ill-fitting black suits break into his apartment, revealing themselves as members of the Puru Organization, a grassroots mutual aid network with over 3,000 volunteers across the city. The candy he ate was an activation token: 15 years prior, a young Li Puru had handed a crying new transfer student—Zhang Xiaoyu, the group’s revered “Sugar Brother”—a lemon candy outside their primary school bathroom, telling her “Have a candy, and you won’t be afraid anymore.” She has carried that small, forgotten act of kindness with her for 15 years.

Li Puru soon learns Puru’s core mission: taking down Kangfu Group, his company’s biggest and most important client. Beneath its wholesome family candy brand image, Kangfu is rotten to the core: it produces toxic counterfeit candies laced with illegal chemicals that cause irreversible neurological damage, traffics the private data of over 12,000 unknowing consumers, and uses its immense wealth and power to silence anyone who dares to speak out. Zhang Xiaoyu’s lost childhood memories and the faint scar on her wrist are inextricably tied to Kangfu’s dark crimes. For the first time in his life, Li Puru has a purpose beyond a paycheck and a promotion: he joins Puru, using his product manager skills to map Kangfu’s system loopholes, outmaneuver its hired thugs, and fight for justice.

What follows is a high-stakes fight against corporate greed. Kangfu launches a vicious nationwide smear campaign, branding Puru a scam and a pyramid scheme, and Li Puru is swiftly fired from his job to appease the corporate giant. Left broken and humiliated in the rain, he tries to push Zhang Xiaoyu away, convinced he will only drag her down—but she refuses to leave. She simply hands him another lemon candy, and repeats his 15-year-old words of comfort back to him. On a brutal, freezing snowy night, they risk everything to deliver Kangfu’s final incriminating evidence to the police, aided along the way by the very people Puru once helped.

In the end, Kangfu’s leaders are brought to justice. Li Puru leaves his corporate career for good, opening a small lemon candy dessert shop, where he and Zhang Xiaoyu continue their mission of kindness, handing out free candies and hot soy milk to struggling strangers. Puru spreads to over 30 cities across the country, its quiet kindness rippling outward one lemon candy at a time.

This is a heartfelt story about the transformative, unshakable power of small kindnesses. It proves that a single, forgotten gesture can be remembered for 15 years, can build a home and a family for the lonely, and can remind even the most worn-down among us that they are seen, they are not alone, and life—like a lemon candy—is always sour before it is sweet.

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Chapter 1: Late Night Subway, She Handed Me a Lemon Candy
A candy, three bumbling thieves, fifteen years. My name is Li Puru, twenty-seven years old, a product manager at an internet company. What exactly do I do? Every day, I take a casual demand from the client, break it down into three hundred task points, and then push the developers and designers to finish them overnight. If the work is done well, the credit goes to the leader; if it’s messed up, the blame is all mine. At nine forty-seven that night, I dragged my exhausted body into the subway car. The evening rush hour was long over, and the car was empty. The pale fluorescent tubes shone on the silver seats, like a mobile operating room. A girl sat opposite me. She was wearing a business suit, with a black laptop bag on her lap, her head leaning against the window, fast asleep. Her lipstick had smudged onto the side of her mask, leaving a faint red stain; the strap of her high-heeled shoe was broken, wrapped around several times with transparent tape. There was a Band-Aid on her thumb—probably from opening express packages and documents all day. I stared at her for two seconds. Not because she was beautiful, but because she looked so much like me. The same dark circles under the eyes, the same slouched shoulders, the same—alive, but only barely. The subway suddenly jolted to a stop. "Thud." Her head hit the glass hard, and she woke up suddenly. She flusteredly tidied her hair, looked up, and our eyes met. At that moment, I saw many emotions in her eyes: exhaustion, helplessness, and hidden vigilance. But beneath all of these, there was something else—stubbornness. The kind of stubbornness that said, "I’m going to keep going tomorrow." She pulled the corner of her mouth awkwardly, trying to squeeze out a smile. I also moved the muscles on my face as a response. Two people who had been beaten down by life exchanged a smile that wasn’t quite a smile in the late-night subway. Then she lowered her head and fished a candy out of her bag. The bright yellow candy wrapper glinted dazzlingly under the pale subway lights. She held it out to me across the aisle. "Just finished working overtime? Have a candy, it’ll sweeten your mood." I froze, my hand hanging in mid-air, not moving. Not because I didn’t want it, but because no one had spoken to me like that in so long. Colleagues only messaged, "The demand has changed, finish it tonight"; the leader’s WeChat Moments always said, "The hardworking you is the most handsome"; the landlord’s WeChat was only, "Rent is due the day after tomorrow, don’t be late"; even when my mom called, she only said, "Stay up less" and hung up. No one had ever said—"It’ll sweeten your mood." "Thank you." I took the candy, and my fingertips accidentally touched hers, which was cold. I peeled off the wrapper and put the candy in my mouth. Lemon flavor. First sour, then sweet. Just like my unremarkable twenty-seven years. The collapse of an adult is often not because of one big thing, but because no one has asked "Are you tired?" in too long. And sometimes, the one who saves you isn’t a hero. It’s just a candy. "Come on, see you tomorrow." We arrived at the station. She stood up, grabbed her laptop bag, and pressed the door open button. "See you tomorrow?" I asked subconsciously. She turned around, her eyes curving into crescents: "Don’t you work nearby too? I’ve been watching you for several days." The door opened, and she squeezed into the crowd. Her high heels clicked on the ground, and the transparent tape made a faint rustling sound. I walked out of the subway station, and the late autumn wind blew coldly. I touched my pocket—and found that she had secretly slipped another lemon candy into it without me noticing. I held the candy and stood in the wind. I had been in this city for five years, taking this subway every day, seeing countless numb faces. Some people stared blankly at their phones, some leaned against the handrails like withered wood. No one had ever given me a candy. No one had ever said "See you tomorrow." At that time, I didn’t know—that this candy would break down my door and turn my life upside down within seventy-two hours. I didn’t know even more that someone had been waiting for this encounter for fifteen years. I stood under the streetlight at the subway station, holding the candy, and suddenly remembered a detail—when she turned to leave, there was a faint scar on her right wrist. It was not long, like a burn, or something carved on. Fifteen years ago, I had seen an identical scar. No. Fifteen years ago, her wrist was clearly unharmed. At eleven o’clock that night, I sat in my fifteen-square-meter rental room in a daze. White walls, concrete floor, two packs of instant noodles that had expired half a year ago in the refrigerator. The lemon flavor in my mouth had faded. I took out the extra candy and put it on the table. The bright yellow wrapper reflected light under the desk lamp. Just then— "Click." The door lock made a faint sound. I thought it was the wind. "Click." Another sound. This time, it was accompanied by brute force. The metal sound of the bolt popping open was particularly clear in the quiet night. I sat up straight in an instant, grabbed the folding chair next to the table. The door was pushed open. Three black figures filed in.

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