"The current sect leader of the Chongyun Sect is named Ji. The Queen... is his direct granddaughter and the most favored daughter of the Chongyun Sect. Her identity is naturally unusual."
Ji Yuanyun said calmly, "She can let Lord Feng kill people for her because of her status. However, Lord Feng doesn't need to listen to her orders. Whether she accepts or not depends entirely on her own will."<
/p>
In fact, Master Feng was just someone specially assigned by Chongyun Sect Leader to protect his little granddaughter.
This is the Queen's amulet, but it does not mean that she can command Feng Zun at will.
After all, the status of the four dignified venerables is also extraordinary, but she is not just a little granddaughter of the sect master who can do whatever she wants.
As for why Master Feng came to hunt Yun Luo on behalf of the Queen...
Ji Yuan thought sarcastically——
Maybe that high-ranking venerable man didn't take these "ants" in the four countries to heart at all, thinking that they were just something that could be easily crushed to death.
So, I agreed without any care.
Unexpectedly, it failed in the end!
If this spreads back to the sect, I'm afraid Master Feng will lose his old face.
It’s really not worth the gain!
At this moment, Ji Yuan still doesn’t know that Master Feng’s failure in chasing Yun Luo was not just a simple loss of humiliation, but also an unprecedented loss!
Not only was he poisoned, but he also lost an arm... I was so angry that I almost died!
Yun Luo didn't think so much, he just felt puzzled.
"Since Ji Xiuling is the daughter of the sect, why did she marry to the Cangyun Kingdom? Don't the people of the two sects and one palace always regard the people of the Four Kingdoms as ants?"
"Yes, but the Queen's situation is different. During her early years of training, she fell in love with His Majesty at first sight and insisted on marrying him. Chongyun Zong also disagreed with this, but couldn't stop it, so in the end he had no choice but to comply with her wishes.
Meaning."
Ji Yuan explained.
Yun Luo frowned and guessed: "When she fell in love with His Majesty at first sight, His Majesty should have already married, right?"
Ji Yuan sighed slightly, "His Majesty was still a prince at that time, and he already had a concubine, who later became the late empress."
Yun Luo suddenly sneered.
It was just as she expected.
"What happened next? How did she marry His Majesty?"
She had heard that Emperor Cangyun had a deep love for the late Queen and his wife. As a third party, if the Queen wanted to intervene, she might not have done so in a clean way.
Ji Yuan only used one sentence to explain: "Your Majesty is unwilling to divorce his wife and marry another woman. The queen volunteered to be a concubine and help your Majesty ascend the throne to the Chongyun Sect."
To put it simply, the queen wants to marry Emperor Cangyun life and death, and would even rather be a concubine.
In order to fulfill the wish of this charming lady, the Chongyun Sect allowed Emperor Cangyun to marry her in exchange for assisting Emperor Cangyun in ascending the throne.
After Emperor Cangyun ascended the throne, his first wife became the queen.
Ji Xiuling was named a noble concubine.
The first empress and Ji Xiuling were pregnant at almost the same time, and they were both princes.
But for some reason, Ji Xiuling gave birth to the emperor's eldest son prematurely.
The late Queen gave birth to Jun Wuchen soon after, and died due to dystocia.
Ji Xiuling thus ascended to the throne of the harem.
In the next few years, Emperor Cangyun put the elder and the younger first and established her son as the prince and Jun Wuchen as the King of Jing.
This pattern continues to this day.
Yun Luo finally figured out this old royal story, and her eyebrows twitched slightly when she learned that Ji Xiuling would rather be a concubine than marry Emperor Cangyun, and that she only ascended the throne after the death of the first empress.
Ji Xiuling always behaves in an arrogant and ruthless manner...
Yun Luo couldn't help but wonder about the cause of the queen's death. Did she really die in childbirth?