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Schemes Of A Flower

Crown Prince Yun Chi chose as his consort the youngest daughter of the Hua Family, Hua Yan, and the news shattered the hearts of countless ladies in the Capital City. It was said: the Crown Prince could write poetry at three, compose essays at seven, debate with the greatest scholars at ten, shoot arrows with precision at twelve, oversee the examinations of all scholars at fifteen, and was regent by the time he was sixteen. He reached the pinnacle in letters, the extreme in martial arts, his looks were world-shaking, and his presence unrivaled. Hua Yan felt as though a gigantic pie had fallen from the sky, landing squarely on her head. From then on, was she to compete with the entire world for this man? -------------------- Yun Chi: Standing at the pinnacle of the Azure Clouds, he learned the art of balance, practiced the strategies of an emperor, envisioned the land and skies in his heart. Within the nine-layered royal palace, he could turn his hands to clouds and his palms to rain, holding sway over the court and the nation, trimming himself into a figure free from desire and henceforth unyielding. Hua Yan: She viewed herself as beneath the dust, with all her emotions and desires, disliking the Son of Heaven's court, preferring the ordinary alleys, treading on ten feet of soft red and experiencing all facets of life. She believed that nothing was better than green mountains and clear waters. "If you promise me a lifetime, I will accompany you for an eternity."

Xiziqing · General
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670 Chs

Chapter 107 (1 update)_1

After dinner and taking her medicine, Hua Yan picked up a sachet to embroider. Caiqing widened her eyes, having not expected the Crown Princess Consort to actually be capable of needlework; she secretly thought: surely there is nothing the Crown Princess Consort can't do.

All women under the heavens are skilled in needlework. But in her view, that didn't include the Crown Princess Consort.

Although the Liu Family from the capital and the Hua Family from Lin'an were most proficient in needlework, the Hua Family had jade-woven fabrics, ink-cloud colored sandalwood satin worth ten gold pieces per inch, matched with the unique and exquisite Feitian Embroidery of the Hua Family, handed down through generations. To obtain a piece was to possess a treasure as valuable as a city, but, regrettably, the technique had been lost a hundred years ago.