Our Secret Episode 3 Recap
> Our Secret Recap
While playing basketball on the court, a ball nearly hit Ding Xian. Zhou Siyue quickly pulled her into his arms and blocked the ball with his arm. Ding Xian blushed and ran away. Back in the classroom, everyone was sharing chocolates. Ding Xian turned back and gave Zhou Siyue a piece.
But his desk mate Wanwan brought out the class rules and said they shouldn’t eat, and even if Zhou Siyue liked chocolate, it had to be imported—her family had lots and she would bring him some later. Ding Xian felt a little embarrassed, but Zhou Siyue didn’t care and snatched the chocolate from her hand and ate it. Everyone sneered at Wanwan’s behavior—she always belittled others to elevate herself.
At home, Ding Xian’s mother told her to go to the arcade to find her brother. Ding Juncong didn’t want to go home and even lied that Ding Xian hit him, making her furious. She grabbed his ear and tried to drag him home. Just then, Zhou Siyue and some classmates also came to play. Ding Xian quickly let go of her brother. Zhou Siyue coldly told Ding Xian to move back after school and left.
Wanwan told Ding Xian that Zhou Siyue had talked to her and wanted to switch seats back because Ding Xian’s grades were poor, and he wanted to help tutor her. While playing games, Ding Xian beat Song Ziqi at the dance machine, which made everyone see her in a new light. Later, she lost to Zhou Siyue at the claw machine and, feeling frustrated, went home with her brother.
Back home, Ding Xian asked her mom if she could buy a phone. Her classmates had a hard time contacting her, but her mom didn’t agree, thinking students shouldn’t have phones and should focus on studying. Homeroom teacher Mr. Liu questioned Zhou Siyue, suspecting he had ulterior motives for sitting with Ding Xian. Just then, Ding Wencheng arrived. Zhou Siyue quickly said he wanted Ding Xian to help him in Chinese while he helped her in math.
Ding Wencheng thought it was a good idea, and the homeroom teacher agreed, allowing them to sit together. Ding Xian’s math grades had plateaued, leaving her feeling helpless. She never expected to get into a top university—her goal was just Hangzhou. Zhou Siyue told her she could ask him if she didn’t understand. Though Ding Xian thought Zhou Siyue never paid attention in class, his grades were always excellent.
Ding Xian believed that more time spent would lead to results, but Zhou Siyue told her the method mattered too, or she would just be wasting effort. At home, her mom saw that she had fewer notes and thought she was slacking off, but her dad believed focusing on key points was a good strategy. Ding Xian told them it was Zhou Siyue’s idea, and her parents agreed she should learn from him.
The next day, Zhou Siyue and Ding Xian went to school together. Zhou Siyue helped carry her heavy schoolbag. At school, they ran into Yang Chunzi, who was on sick leave. It seemed she also liked Zhou Siyue. During lunch, she even approached Zhou Siyue, making everyone think Ding Xian had a rival. The homeroom teacher asked the class to elect class committee members. Deng Wanwan, who had been acting class president, volunteered to continue and asked for support.
The teacher asked Zhou Siyue to be the academic rep, but he declined and passed it to He Xingwen. Song Ziqi volunteered to be sports rep. When it came to the arts rep, Sun Disha nominated Ding Xian, but Yang Chunzi jumped in before Ding Xian could stand up. Later, Yang Chunzi saw Ding Xian was good at drawing and asked her to work on the class bulletin board together.
Sun Disha warned not to be fooled by Yang Chunzi’s sweet appearance. Ding Xian always used Chinese characters to annotate her English vocabulary. Zhou Siyue told her to use phonetic symbols instead. Ding Xian was impatient. During class, when the teacher called on her, her pronunciation was off, and she was criticized. Then Yang Chunzi read with perfect pronunciation, making Ding Xian feel inferior in front of Zhou Siyue. She later went to talk to Su Baicong about it, thinking Zhou Siyue liked Yang Chunzi. Su Baicong reassured her, saying that kind of feeling was common during adolescence.
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