Our Discord Server: .gg/PazjBDkTmW
You can buy coins here to unlock advanced chapters: https://gravitytales.com/coins-purchase-page/
Advanced chapter at Patreon.com/caleredhair
âHahahaâŠâ
Laughter echoed from the presidentâs office of the Chamber of Commerce.
Many merchants nearby turned toward the sound in surprise.
They recognized the voiceâit was unmistakably Prince Qi himself.
This stirred excitement throughout the building.
The prince rarely visited the Chamber of Commerce. Usually, only Li Kaiyuan managed affairs from the presidentâs office.
Now, inside the office bearing the Chamberâs nameplate, Cao Zhengyang looked confused as Xiao Ming laughed loudly and without restraint.
He was starting to doubt whether he could fulfill the task his father had given him.
âMay I ask why Your Highness is laughing?â he finally asked.
Xiao Ming stopped laughing and said coldly,
âIâm laughing at your audacity.
If Prince Chu finds out youâre standing here saying this to me, your entire Cao family could be wiped out overnight.
Do you really think that just because youâre rich, Prince Chu wouldnât dare touch you?
Wrong. Your fortune is only being held temporarilyâit ultimately belongs to the prince.
A pig is fattened for slaughter.â
âYour Highness speaks with sharp insight,â Cao replied calmly.
âBut perhaps you underestimate the Cao family.
We never put all our eggs in one basket.
Our assets are spread across the empireâand beyond.
Even if we must flee Great Yu, we have places to go.
But our roots are here. If there is a stable corner to anchor ourselves, we would rather stay.â
After a pause, he added,
âYour Highness, thereâs another reason Iâve come.
Our trading ships encountered your fleet at sea.
Do you know a man named Yue Yun?â
âWhat?!â
Xiao Ming stood up abruptly.
His expression turned dangerous.
Sensing his fury, Zhao Long and Zhao Hu immediately drew their swords, ready to strike.
âSo it is your man,â Cao said calmly.
âItâs unfortunateâthe three galleons were shot to pieces.
Youâve probably lost more than a million taels in that battle.â
Xiao Ming calmed himself.
He hadnât heard from Yue Yun in months and had feared the worst.
But now it seemed something had happened.
âWhatâs your point?â he asked coldly.
âThe Cao family is helping Yue Yun repair his ships.
Within a month, Your Highness should see your fleet return.
Thatâs our show of goodwillâour sincerity in proposing an alliance.â
âAnd what does your Cao family want in return?â
Xiao Ming sneered.
âYour fleet proves your strengthâand thatâs what we need.
My father believes Your Highness can offer the Cao family a different future.
Of course, if you were willing to allow us to open banks in Qingzhou, weâd be even more enthusiastic.â
Xiao Ming was no fool.
Politics is the art of exchanging interests.
He asked,
âThatâs your condition?â
âYes. We know Your Highness is planning a Qingzhou state bank, but you lack capital and talent in this industry.
Progress has been slow.
If you allow the Cao family to take over the banking operation,
we guarantee that in three months, weâll establish branches in every county of your domain.â
Xiao Ming hesitated.
The Cao family was asking for a lot.
Banking was essentially the financial industryâand anyone from modern times knew how powerful that could be.
Had it been anyone else from the empire, theyâd have been completely fooled.
But the Cao family had misjudged Xiao Ming.
Now it made sense why they were suddenly so eager:
His plan to build a state-run bank had threatened them.
Right now, Yue Yun and the fleet were in their hands.
According to Cao Zhengyang, without their help, the fleet wouldnât make it back.
And so far, they hadnât told Prince Chu anything.
This was leverage.
They were raising the price.
If Xiao Ming didnât offer a good deal, the Cao family might walk away.
Coming from modern times, Xiao Ming knew full well the power of capital.
The Cao family had clearly evolved beyond your typical Great Yu merchant house.
They were looking for a fertile ground for capitalâand he was it.
Thatâs why they dared to approach him.
After a momentâs thought, Xiao Ming said:
âI will not abandon my Qingzhou bank.
But I wonât stop the Cao family from opening your own banks in my territory.
Thatâs my bottom line.â
âYou are indeed as clever as rumored.
Thatâs exactly what my father predicted.
We accept,â Cao Zhengyang replied.
Xiao Ming gave a small snort.
This outcome was a win-win for both sides.
Originally, he had hoped to monopolize finance, but in this era, that wasnât realistic.
To grow quickly, he needed to ride the wave of capital and build a coalition of aligned interests.
Only when merchants consistently profited from working with him would they continue to invest in his ventures.
Thatâs how the East India Company had risenâthrough aligned profits and political power.
From this moment, Xiao Ming would begin building an economic alliance around himself,
drawing merchants into his orbitâsuppliers of materials, money, and wartime funding.
He didnât care whose territory they came from.
If they could supply goods and funds, he could use them.
After all, business was mutual exploitationâand backstabbing was part of the game.
With Cao Zhengyang agreeing, Xiao Ming shifted gears.
He dropped a bold proposal.
âI have a business opportunity. One with even higher returns.
Interested?â
âPlease go on.â
âI plan to march north against the barbarians and reclaim Youzhou.
You may have heardâthe Emperor already agreed: any land I conquer becomes mine.
But I lack supplies.
So I plan to crowdfund this war.
In return, investors will share in the war profits, based on how much they contribute.
Does the Cao family want in?â
âWar profits?â
Cao raised an eyebrow.
âWhat kind of profits?â
âLand.
Barbarian livestock.
Horses.
Captives.
Control of their trade routes.
Youâve heard of the Sixteen Prefectures of Yan and Yunâimagine the wealth in that land.
If I conquer it, there will be tons of propertyâ
fields, slaves, flocks, and trade rights.
Just give me money, and Iâll be your front-line investment.â
Cao Zhengyang stared, stunned.
This prince⊠truly thought differently from the rest.