Yao Zhi looked at her husband and couldn't help but smile. She always thought that she married a rigid, cold person. Unexpectedly, he was far from what she thought.
When the old man returned with a bundle of fodder, Fu Chen'an handed a silver ingot to him. The old man grinned and quickly handed the change to him.
Fu Chen'an stuffed the money into his wife's hand and said, "Wife, you keep it."
Yao Zhi didn't refuse and put the money in her pouch. Afterward, she stored the pouch in her system's storage using her sleeve as a cover.
After they tied the fodder and bamboo basket on each side of the donkey, Fu Chen'an held the rein and led it while Yao Zhi walked beside him.
When they reached the grain store, it was crowded but not as crowded as a few days before.
With more grain stores opening for business, the price of the coarse grains was lowered to five wen per jin. While the price was still higher than before, the commoners were finally able to afford it.
