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Single Mother Had No Idea That Her ‘Boyfriend’ Was Actually a Woman Too


A 41-year-old Wang Qi, divorcee met her lover, Qian, on the internet and at first had resisted ‘his’ advances. Wang initially resisted Qian’s advances, explaining that they would not work out because he was too young for her and she was divorced with a child. Qian would not be dissuaded, however, and by June of 2016, the two were officially dating.

Source: nobledrift

By 2017 the pair had moved in together, and Qian had even brought Wang to “his” home city of Haikou to introduce her to his parents. Qian insisted that although they could be affectionate and sleep in the same bed, they should hold off on having ‘sex’ until they get married.

Source: nobledrift

Source: nobledrift
Their relationship came to an abrupt six months later,in November 2017 when Qian suddenly and inexplicably disappeared. Wang couldn’t reach him via phone, and he changed his social media account name, leading Wang to believe that he had left her for someone else. She couldn’t allow him to disappear without a word of explanation, moreover, as she had spent over 300,000 yuan on him.

Source: nobledrift

Devastated, Wang did some amateur detective work, and in the process discovered that her estranged ex’s identification card listed “him” as a female.

The shocking revelation caused Wang to re-asses their entire relationship, notably the lack of intercourse. She told Chinese media that Qian was flat chested, did not look like a woman, and would always use the men’s restrooms while they were out in public together.

Source: nobledrift

Wang decided to traveled to Haikou to confront Qian’s parents over what she felt was a financial scam, but Qian’s parents denied that there had been any deception on her part.

However, the father did refer to Qian as “his only daughter, told the media that she had been a “tomboy” from childhood and enjoyed dressing up in men’s clothes. Qian’s parents refuse to help Wang track her down, and her whereabouts are still unknown.

Source: nobledrift

Wang is considering legal action to get her money back claiming that Qian scammed her for financial gain.

Interestingly, a similar story made news headlines in China two years ago. Back then, a man managed to trick no less than 11 men into thinking he was a woman, with some of them actually marrying “her”. The master con-artist also managed to disappear with large sums of money stolen from “her” victims.

Source: nobledrift

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