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Reborn as the Crippled King's Beloved

Murong Jiu, the Ninth Young Miss of the Marquis Mansion, was ugly and talentless, and her fate was to harm her relatives. She was raised in the countryside from a young age. Due to her exceptional medical skills, she was used by the Crown Prince, who drained her of all her value and then threw her into a deep well to drown. Only before her death did she realize she had been switched at birth. Others were rightfully enjoying everything that should have been hers; later, all her family died for her, becoming stepping stones for the Crown Prince! Reincarnated, she returned like a vengeful ghost from hell, making her enemies tremble with fear, ready to seek revenge for each grievance. Unexpectedly, she unintentionally became the darling of her biological family, which made her retract her sharp edges. As the substitute Princess Consort of Prince Ling, she and Prince Ling were a fake couple, intent only on finding the real father of the child in her womb, yet unaware that the man from that night was right in front of her…

Qing Shanshan · História
Classificações insuficientes
225 Chs

Chapter 33: It's her, the woman that night was her

The Second Prince spent half an hour before he understood what had happened in recent days.

He didn't even know that Murong Jiu was so wealthy as to casually produce tens of thousands of taels of silver for business ventures.

In the social hierarchy of scholars, farmers, artisans, and merchants, merchants are considered the lowest.

Yet in reality, those nobles and high-ranking officials in Capital City all held some form of private businesses.

Distributing gifts at festivals and maintaining household expenses cannot be covered by mere official salaries alone.

Jun Haoze himself also secretly owned many enterprises in Capital City, having a hand in all the highly profitable businesses such as grain shops, jade stores, fabric shops, spice shops, tea shops, and so forth.

Among these, the fastest money came from the spice shop, jade store, and the fabric shop.

Following these, were the grain and tea shops.