Resumen del episodio 33 de Rebirth
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The unexpected death of Zhuge Muqing left Qingshan Court without a leader. Having lost his martial powers to the Emperor of Yong’s poison, the old lord finally succumbed to a fatal fit of rage. Zhuge Yue stood before his grandfather’s memorial, where he was met by his loyal Moon Guards.
While Yue Da and Yue Liu urged him to leave and follow his own path, Yue Ming warned that his departure would leave them at the mercy of the Zhuge family's cruel Third Branch. Knowing that Chu Qiao had killed their former patriarch, Zhuge Xi, the guards feared they would be tortured to death once Prince Zhao Yang and the Third Branch took control.
After intervening to save Yue Ming from execution for attempting to flee, Zhuge Yue resolved to return to Zhenhuang City with the official Zhan Fu. He vowed to protect the court and hopefully persuade the Emperor to stop the offensive against Ximeng. Meanwhile, in the Ximeng military camp, Chu Qiao remained unconscious after losing a significant amount of blood.
He Xiao attempted to bar Yan Xun from entering, but the King of Yanbei remained steadfast by her side, refusing to leave until she woke. Under the cover of night, Zhuge Yue secretly visited the camp to check on Chu Qiao. He recognized that her wounds were caused by "glazed iron" from Qingshan Court, a specialized weapon whose injuries were notoriously difficult to heal.
He instructed Yan Xun to treat her with a medicinal wine made from Silver Viper blood and Huaying Grass, predicting she would wake in two days. Before leaving, Zhuge Yue placed a letter under her pillow and asked Yan Xun to protect her until his return, choosing to trust his childhood friend one last time. However, after Zhuge Yue left, Yan Xun read and burned the letter before taking up a solitary vigil by Chu Qiao’s bed.
When Chu Qiao finally regained consciousness days later, she was met with the heartbreaking news that Ming Lu had succumbed to her injuries just as they reached the camp gates. Overwhelmed by grief, Chu Qiao sought answers about Zhuge Yue. Yan Xun manipulated the truth to drive a wedge between them, claiming that Zhuge Yue had already surrendered to Dayong and chosen to draw a clear line between himself and Chu Qiao.
He argued that a man born into the powerful Zhuge clan could never truly walk away from his heritage and family. To further sow doubt, he reminded her that Zhuge Yue had once stood by the Emperor while the Yan family was slaughtered. Despite Yan Xun’s insistence, Chu Qiao refused to believe Zhuge Yue would abandon her so easily. In Yanbei, unrest flared as the Lanchuan Tribe rose in rebellion while Yan Xun was away.
Driven by the heavy burden of the war, the tribal elders seized the opportunity to attack Yandu. Helian Ling was forced to flee the city as the rebels closed in, witnessing the death of her maid who sacrificed herself to protect her. She was eventually rescued by Cheng Yuan and General Huan, who arrived to suppress the uprising. The investigation into the rebellion revealed a shocking betrayal; soldiers from the Helian Tribe were found among the captured rebels.
Helian Ling’s own brother, the Elder of the Helian clan, had conspired with the Lanchuan Tribe. Facing his sister, the Elder showed no remorse and tried to blame her for the clan's loss of status. Helian Ling, prioritizing the laws of Yanbei over blood ties, refused to save him. As he was led away to be executed for treason, her brother cursed her as a traitor who would bear the blood of her own kin.
Back in the capital of Dayong, Zhuge Yue faced the Emperor and returned the ring that served as his token of authority. He confessed to having lived as a puppet after being poisoned by the Ximeng people and requested that the Emperor dissolve Qingshan Court, allowing its spies to retire in peace. The Emperor, still harboring resentment over Zhuge Yue’s faked death, refused to let anyone leave the court alive.
The situation escalated when Prince Zhao Yang arrived, bringing with him the captured Moon Guard, Yue Shiyi. The prince presented a sadistic choice: Zhuge Yue could drink a lethal, agonizing poison, or Yue Shiyi could do it in his master's stead. Before Zhuge Yue could act, Yue Shiyi seized the cup and drank the poison, wishing to save his master and his fellow guards.
As the poison took its toll, the Emperor finally pardoned Zhuge Yue’s past offenses but warned that any further disobedience would result in the total annihilation of every person in Qingshan Court. Zhuge Yue returned to Qingshan Court carrying the body of the devoted Yue Shiyi, only to find more tragedy waiting. He was presented with the identification tags of three other guards—Yue Sheng, Yue Bo, and Yue Shijiu—who had been interrogated by the Muhe family.
To avoid betraying their master, all three had committed suicide. The weight of these losses was compounded when Zhuge Yue discovered that the official Zhan Fu had already seized the personal files of the deceased guards. Because they were branded as criminals for their "treasonous" silence, their families had already been executed as well. Surrounded by the tokens of his fallen soldiers and the knowledge of their families' deaths, Zhuge Yue's resolve only hardened in his grief and indignation.









