It wouldnât be long before the entire world knew of the emperor respecting the peopleâs will. The citizens would be immensely comforted then and speak even more highly of the emperor, and hold greater faith for the divinity of Xuan Su Temple.
Qin Yining gave orders to Xingyu and Bixue at this time. âMy maids are here with my things. They can stay and serve me in the future. All of you can go back to the palace now.â
Xingyu, Bixue, Little Ning, and Little Yang looked incredulously back at the girl. Theyâd never heard of anyone dismissing servants that the emperor had assigned himself!
âIn response to Master Xuan Su, the emperor means for us to serve you.â
A cold smile blossomed on Qin Yiningâs lips. âThe emperor wishes for me to be a layman Taoist, but how will it look like if I have palace servants at my beck and call? My family has sent people to keep me company, so I no longer require your services. I need to meditate and seek enlightenment, so I really donât need that many serving me. If youâre afraid of the emperor finding fault with you, you can tell him that it was my idea.â
She was already forced to be here; it would be too much of a hardship if she had to use outsiders instead of her own people.
The four palace servants had firsthand knowledge of how much the emperor loved Qin Yining, and had also seen how exceptional her methods were. Sheâd caused the emperor to publicly punish Consort Lin, someone whoâd served him for many years! And despite the imperial majesty being literally hopping mad, he still couldnât bear to touch a single hair on her head.
The Qin fourth miss handed Riceball to Qiulu with a smile. âI feel much more at ease now that all of you are here. See to the luggage first, Iâd like to talk to my father and mother.â
âUnderstood.â Qiulu, Jiyun, and Bingtang entered the house with various bundles.
Qin Yining had her parents sit down for some tea in the main hall of the first floor.
After a few days of torment in the palace, not only had Qin Yining been robbed of recovery time, but her health had in fact worsened. Needing to deal with the emperor and those in the palace at the same time meant that she was completely exhausted. The events of the past few days washed over her when she heard her motherâs words and she almost cried too.
She blinked forcefully, plastering a smile onto her face in the place of tears. âDonât be sad for me, mother. There wasnât much suffering. These are the circumstances that weâre in. Itâs already the best possible outcome that the emperor hasnât ordered my death in a fit of anger. We can make our plans slowly since Iâm still alive.â
The Qin fourth miss looked around and gave orders to Jiyun and the others, newly come downstairs after sorting out the luggage. âGo stand guard outside and keep a careful eye on the surroundings.â
Jiyun, Bingtang, and Qiulu understood that their mistress had important matters to raise with her parents. They nodded and left.
When she was certain that no one was listening in on them, Qin Yining whispered, âFather, I heard a few things in the palace these days that Iâm not sure if you know of yet.â
âWhat is it?â Upon careful reflection, nothing sprang to the marquisâ mind.
âI heard it from the emperorâs wet nurse, Jiao-mama. Apparently the emperor emeritus sold off this yearâs tax grain before it even reached the capital. It was resold during the journey and none of it arrived here. Is this true?â
Due to the nationâs founding emperor promoting use of treasury bills instead of gold and silver, treasury bills had been the currency of choice all these years. This also served to decrease the natural loss of gold and silver that occurred in transactions.
But because treasury bills were affected by inflation, and the condition of the bills themselves affected their value â the government collected taxes in the form of grain.
For a rich dynasty like Great Yan that was located in the fertile lands of the south, cargo ships full of grain crammed the ports and carriages clogged up the roads every tax season.
It wasnât tax season yet, nor was it quite harvest time for many areas, but the emperor emeritus had increased taxes before resigning from his position. Not only had he taken a large sum from the commoners and merchants from the capital, but all of the nationâs citizens had had a round of levied on them as well.
With the onerous taxes, it was easy to imagine that the tax grain this year would be much more than before. Add to that the natural disasters and war, it all made for great hardship for the people.
Qin Yining had heard Jiao-mama talk about this privately with Xingyu and the others, that the emperor emeritus had sold off the additional tax grain heâd collected!
Qin Huaiyuan was completely flabbergasted by the news â both stunned and horrified.
âMy daughter, is your news true?â
âMost likely. I heard it from the emperorâs wet nurse. The conversations in the palace all have to do with whatâs happening around them. Apparently the emperor got in an argument with his father the other day, and someone else heard that this yearâs tax grain has yet to arrive.â
âBut the Ministry of Revenue says that the tax grain will arrive in half a month.â Qin Huaiyuan frowned. âWhen I first learned of this, I tried to persuade the emperor emeritus otherwise. How could he stand to prey on wealth earned by the peopleâs blood, sweat, and tears?
âBut then I thought about it another way, how the Valiant Tigers would besiege the capital in the latter half of the war. This batch of tax grain might be put to great effect then. With the additional taxes, if all of the tax grain is stored in the capital, weâd have enough to feed the army and people for three years in the event of a siege!â
âThree years?!â Qin Yining exclaimed. âThat much? The capital can definitely hold out with that much grain! Though the hundred thousand strong Valiant Tigers are fierce, their supply lines have too much distance to cover. Great Zhou is newly founded as well. They took over the mess that Northern Ji left behind, so their national treasury is empty after many years of war. If we have three years worth of rations to depend on, we wonât have to worry about Great Zhou keeping the fight going then.â
âPrecisely. But if what you say is true, then things are dire indeed.â Qin Huaiyuan knocked a forefinger on the tabletop. âI know now. When I go back to request that the emperor send more guards to protect you, Iâll get to the bottom of this as well.â
Qin Yining was quite worried. âWith the emperor emeritusâ personality, I thought it strange when he so easily agreed to hand over the position. When he fleeced the people of their hard-won gains, I felt that this sort of action was terribly unbecoming of an emperor. So now it seems that heâs sold off all of the tax grain for money, likely to leave a back up plan for himself!