At that time, Qin Shihuang had not unified the six countries. He is only the son of Evonne and has no right to rule or oppose. At that time, Qin Shihuang was tall and straight, but unfortunately he didn't have the right to make decisions for himself. Empress Huayang supported Qin Shihuang, saying that support is more like control.
Therefore, Qin Shihuang didn't have many choices. It happened that Empress Huayang was still in good health and lived until Qin Shihuang was thirty. Empress Huayang also sympathized with Qin Shihuang. She married Mrs. Chu for Qin Shihuang and gave birth to her eldest son Fu Su.
Empress Huayang is not actually Qin Shihuang's biological grandmother, so she is more or less not so close. She is considering the overall situation, whether the consorts of Queen Huayang can be stable, not what Ying Zheng thinks, and whether she is happy or not.
As a man, Qin Shihuang was naturally unwilling to be a puppet. Until he met a woman who was not the cousin of Queen Huayang and had nothing to do with the game of thrones. Ying Zheng is young and promising, and the women are beautiful. They fell in love at first sight. The Empress Dowager Huayang knew it, but Ying Zheng was on a whim. After all, men at that time were all three wives and four concubines.
So Ying Zheng and that woman gave birth to Hu Hai. Seeing his infatuation with women, Queen Huayang was afraid that Ying Zheng would get out of hand, so she poisoned the woman. Ying Zheng never recovered. Historians recorded this passage. In order to maintain Ying Zheng's reputation, they had to accuse this woman of being a scourge. Ying Zheng was furious, burning books and burying Confucianism, and burning these words to ashes with a torch.
A woman who is not recorded in history has given birth to a favored Hu Hai, which shows Ying Zheng's deep affection for her. This fabrication cannot be viewed from a historical perspective.