Heroes Episode 36 (Ending) Recap

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The seriously injured Wang Jialuo was no match for Mu Qing at all, but Mu Qing was not planning to kill Wang Jialuo, as he still needed to obtain the seal. However, Wang Jialuo believed that he did not have the seal on him. Mu Qing told Wang Jialuo that he himself was the seal. Mu Qing tied Wang Jialuo up in Futu Temple, and then took Ulan Shan to bid farewell to Liu Lin.

Ulan Shan told Liu Lin to leave in peace, and that when she returned, this country would definitely be better than she imagined, and the nation would certainly be strong by then. After cremating and burying Liu Lin, Ulan Shan took Mu Qing away from Futu Temple. Ulan Shan planned to go to the Beiyang garrison to send a telegram, and Mu Qing also had something he needed to settle.

Previously, Lin Haohan had given Ulan Shan a telegram address, instructing her to send a telegram to Hong Kong if something happened to him. At that time, his master would know what to do upon receiving the news. Ulan Shan came to the Beiyang garrison now precisely to fulfill Lin Haohan's past instructions. Mu Qing went alone to the Japanese garrison, where he used the Japanese side's firearms to kill Nogami Han and Qingyi Xinfeng to avenge Lin Haohan.

Prince Qi brought Imperial Household Department officers to the Beiyang garrison. The Beiyang army temporarily changed their minds about supporting Prince Qi's coup. Prince Qi knew that Zhong Haichao had ultimately chosen the Beiyang. In recent years, Prince Qi had single-handedly promoted Zhong Haichao to a position with real power, and now Zhong Haichao had actually betrayed him.

Zhong Haichao believed that Prince Qi chose him as his son-in-law back then because he saw his intellect and ability, but how could a truly capable person be willing to be controlled by others? For years, Prince Qi had been guarding against him, which made both him and the Beiyang feel hopeless. Zhong Haichao believed that the Great Qing's adherence to old ways and self-degradation were the reasons it was bullied by numerous foreign powers.

These words angered Prince Qi, who ordered his men to directly execute Zhong Haichao. Prince Qi originally intended to kill Haitang as well, but Ulan Shan appeared and persuaded Prince Qi to spare Haitang, hoping Haitang could see the world in the future.

Ulan Shan told Prince Qi that she hated him not because he forced her to marry someone she didn't love, but because her father was clearly forcing her, yet still put on a facade of doing it for her own good. And all of this was not for her benefit, but for his own desires. Prince Qi knew his daughter still had feelings for Mu Qing.

Now he agreed to the marriage between Mu Qing and Ulan Shan, but Ulan Shan stated that their marriage would not require Prince Qi's permission in the future. Mu Qing and Ulan Shan waited for the Banyuan Successor with the unconscious Wang Jialuo. After Wang Jialuo woke up, he found himself on a boat. Mu Qing told him that the Bodhidharma seal had always been on Wang Jialuo, specifically the tattoo on his back.

Afterwards, the Luohan Hall senior brothers came with the Banyuan Hall successor. Mu Qing told Wang Jialuo that the tattoo on his body had long been imprinted, and urged Wang Jialuo to join the revolution and change the country together. However, Wang Jialuo was still blindly loyal and preferred death to joining the revolution and defying the Qing court. He slit his throat and fell into the sea. Mu Qing and Ulan Shan collected all four seals.

Lin Haohan had previously told Ulan Shan how to interpret the seals. They gathered the four tattoos, analyzed the pattern content, and pieced the locations together in order. The intersection point was the location of the secret treasure. Subsequently, Mu Qing led the Luohan Hall senior brothers according to the diagram to the location and successfully retrieved the secret treasure, which he dedicated to the revolution.

Mu Qing and Ulan Shan erected a monument for the unnamed people who died searching for the Jingtan Secret Treasure. Afterwards, Ulan Shan planned to go to Hong Kong first. Lin Haohan's senior and junior brothers were now transporting the treasures from the secret藏 (zàng), and she was responsible for supervising the inventory. Ulan Shan told Mu Qing to go to Wuchang first, and the two agreed to meet again in Wuchang later.

On December 30, 1911, Ulan Shan spoke to Mu Qing on the phone in Hong Kong. The Wuchang Uprising had now succeeded. Mu Qing said that this was just the beginning. He hoped that more people would come to change the world, and he was willing to believe that everyone could see it through. Now that the world was changing, he saw hope. He also saw hope in marrying Ulan Shan.

The two, who had agreed to reunite, hung up the phone and rushed into the revolution. On August 29, 1913, Mu Qing was killed in action in Nanjing during the Second Revolution. On October 10, 1926, Ulan Shan was hit by a stray bullet during the final assault on Wuchang with the Northern Expedition's Fourth Army, and she passed away in Guangzhou a year later. After they parted ways in Fujian, they never saw each other again in this life.

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