"I know, so of course we have to meet the person who could have a hand in this," Liu Qingsong yawned as he spoke.
Ran Yan pondered for a moment and then knocked on the carriage wall, signaling they could depart.
"Qujiang," Liu Qingsong instructed.
"The person you're talking about is..." The Great Tang had too many important figures; Ran Yan couldn't immediately recall who would be appropriate to handle the matter.
"Prince Wei, Li Tai," Liu Qingsong replied succinctly this time.
Ran Yan's heart skipped a beat, and a phrase Su Fu once said suddenly came to mind: I was once an assassin under Li Ke and now serve Prince Wei, Li Tai. Does that mean she would have to deal with Su Fu's employer?
For some reason, Ran Yan felt resistant. Perhaps she believed that since she had made her position clear with Su Fu, it would be inappropriate to have too much contact, or perhaps she lacked confidence in herself, or maybe she was worried that Xiao Song would be displeased.