Qin Huaiyuan couldnât help but caress his daughterâs head. This caused an increasing sense of wrongness to grow in Qin Yining. Why are the sensations so real in this dream? Her motherâs hug felt so warm. The few drops of tears that had landed on her had now turned cold, while her fatherâs hand felt equally warm and so real. There was also Pang Xiao smiling at her from the side, as well as Bingtang, Songlan, and Huzi.
Qin Yining abruptly came back to herself. âMother, youâre alright!â
âIâm fine, there was nothing wrong with me at all.â
âThatâs good, I was so scared when you fainted.â
âMother was the one who scared me. I thought Iâd never be able to see you again.â Tears rolled in Qin Yiningâs eyes as she spoke. However, she forced herself to smile and strove mightily to not let them fall. She looked at Qin Huaiyuan. âIt mustâve been father who rushed to motherâs rescue.â
Otherwise, her men wouldâve made their move, even if Pang Xiao was present.
âIt was little Prince Pang who saved your mother.â Qin Huaiyuan responded, a tad shamefaced. âI was in the palace with the emperor all along and didnât have a chance to come out. It was only when the emperor heard that His Highness had made a personal appearance that I managed to make it to the execution grounds.â
Qin Yining looked at Pang Xiao in surprise. She remembered. Pang Xiao had arrogantly ordered the executioner to bring the emperor himself for questioning. With the trash emperorâs personality, heâd likely have peed himself upon seeing Pang Xiao. Naturally, whatever the prince said went. So⊠Pang Xiao really did save mother?
Her face was as white as snow, without the slightest trace of color in it, and her body was still weak from what sheâd just endured. How would Pang Xiao be willing to let her go through with the courtesy? He quickly supported her. âWhat are you doing? Get up.â
Qin Yining refused to rise, but was unable to kowtow given that he had an arm holding her up. She could only gratefully lift her head up to the man leaning down to her.
âI have nothing with which to thank Your Highness for your repeated rescues, as well as the rescue of my mother this time. If Your Highness has a need in the future, just speak it. I will enter frothing currents and pools of fire, and will not shrink from dying ten thousand times over.â
Who could bear to let you die ten thousand times?! Pang Xiaoâs ears were now flaming red since Qin Yining was in such close proximity. He exerted a bit of force and lifted her up.
âYou donât need to be this way, Miss Qin. This prince just happened to be close by.â
Huziâs mouth twitched twice from off on the side. What, you were just fine in the nunnery, my prince, but charged here as fast as possible when you received the Elite Tigersâ secret report. Donât you know to make a big deal of it in front of the person who matters? Whatâs this bullshit of âhappened to be close byâ? How are you ever going to win the lady? This would be the death of him!
âHow is it possible for there to be so many matters of convenience in the world?â Qin Yining chuckled. âYour Highnessâ identity is special and itâs already difficult for you to walk about in Great Yan. Iâm not a mulish brat to not know right from wrong. Although Your Highness voices⊠rather rebellious words sometimes, I see your actions as well. If I say Iâll repay a favor, I will.â
Pang Xiaoâs admiration deepened with these words. He knew she was a smart one and indeed, sheâd lived up to his affections for her. She could wisely see to the heart of a matter. Although she didnât like his words, it hadnât erased what heâd done for her. He waved a hand nonchalantly.
âThink nothing of it, Miss Qin. Since youâre fine, this prince will be leaving now.â
Qin Yining knew that he must have other matters to attend to. She curtsied solemnly. âGo well, Your Highness.â
Pang Xiao took another deep look at her before leaving with Huzi. Qin Huaiyuan rose to see the prince off.
âSo mother didnât insult the emperor and empress? The rumors outside are that the empress bestowed two imperial concubines to father, and not only did you not agree, but you even clashed with the empress on the spot. They also said that you were sentenced to death after insulting the empress. The emperor tried to smooth things over, but you shouted that heâs a trash emperor instead. Thus, the emperor sentenced you to death via execution and public display in his anger.â
Although the imperial family had a great deal of authority, how would father not have a single word of complaint? Unless, theyâd explained things to Qin Huaiyuan already? The emperor may be able to destroy the entire Qin family with one hand, but Qin Yining also believed that her father was absolutely not the kind to take this kind of treatment lying down.
So there was only one explanation.
Father knew of this.
âFather?â Qin Yining asked, perplexed. âDo you know whatâs going on here?â
Qin Huaiyuan took a seat in the round chair by the window and played with the teacup lid in his hands.âI donât know the particulars either.â He sighed. âThe emperor kept me in the imperial study and said he wanted to chat, so he didnât allow me to return home. As for what happened in the execution grounds, I didnât know about any of it until I got there.â
âSo, there was no palace banquet either?â
Qin Huaiyuan shook his head and lowered his head, not meeting Qin Yiningâs eyes. She frowned in deep thought.
The emperor had used their family to set up a plot. But to what end?
Qin Yining mentally jumped with shock as her thoughts ran to a close. The emperor hadnât really wanted to kill her mother, so if her men had really raided the execution grounds, what wouldâve happened then? The emperor mustâve had additional men lurking in the shadows. Sheâd only had four on her side, and there was no saying whether they wouldâve escaped successfully or not. If theyâd been captured and the emperor had found out that she was the one behind everything, then the QinsâŠ
Cold sweat broke out all over the girl. She was beyond grateful that Pang Xiao had gotten to the scene in time and made a royal mess of things. Otherwise, her impulsive actions this time likely wouldâve spelled doom for the Qins!
And fatherâŠÂ Qin Yining looked at her father in terror and murmured, âFather, a-after the peace talks, did, did the emperorâs attitude towards you change at all? Should we be keeping a lower profile?â
The emperor had most likely been testing her father this time. Perhaps he suspected that Qin Huaiyuan harbored traitorous intentions?
Qin Huaiyuan looked at Qin Yining with a complicated look. There were some things that he couldnât tell her or his wife, so he could only let his daughter continue down her current train of thought. He was apologetic about his inaction, but some things would only result in greater trouble if he explained. He could only sigh softly.
âDonât worry, daughter Yi. Iâll take care of this. Now that youâre awake, and weâre in the capital, Iâve yet to set foot back home, so why donât we pack everything up and return to the manor.â
Qin Yining knew that her father must have his troubles, so she didnât press him further. But when she thought of the old dowagerâs irritating behavior, the Qin fourth miss shook her head. âYou can go back first, father, but I wonât go back so easily with mother.â
âDaughter Yi, what do you mean?â Qin Huaiyuan blinked and questioned in puzzlement.
âFather, I donât want to discuss the rights and wrongs of my elders.â Qin Yining smiled, but that smile was uglier than crying. âYouâll know whatâs happened if you ask after returning home. Iâm not being unfilial, but for the sake of me and my motherâs future in the manor, please understand why Iâm doing this.â
Qin Huaiyuan looked at his daughter with a deep look, as if he was assessing something. A weighty aura flared unconsciously from his figure.
The senior madame wasnât someone who was accustomed to concealing her emotions. She had to continue living in the manor in the future. If she knew everything, how would she be able to calmly face her mother-in-law from now on?
Therefore, Qin Yining only shook her head. âI hope father and mother can forgive my stubbornness. Itâs not that Iâm disrespecting the old dowager, but that I have to do this so that those in the manor donât bully us to excess in the future.â