The Wei army fought to the death, but could not withstand the large number of Beiqi troops. After Wei Zhong and Wei Shu sacrificed their lives for the country, Wei Qin, Wei Feng, Wei Ya and Wei Rong died in battle one after another, leaving only Wei Jun fighting hard.Wei Yun stayed behind to guard the rear, but the granary was burned down by Beiqi's army who sneaked in. Then Wei Yun heard that the Wei army was trapped in Baidi Valley.He ignored Wei Jun's instructions and led his army to support him. The Beiqi Army's octagonal crossbow was aimed at him.Wei Jun used his flesh and blood to block all the arrows and crossbows for Wei Yun.

With his last breath, Wei Jun handed Wei Yun the turban of the Wei Jiajun and told him to find out the details of the Ordnance Department.Wei Yun cried bitterly as she watched her brother die in front of her.The Wei army suffered heavy casualties in this battle, and Wei Yun ordered to retreat to Tianshou Pass to prevent Beiqi from attacking Huajing again.Afterwards, Prince Li Huan lied and claimed that Wei Zhong was greedy for power and did not listen to his advice, so he was ambushed.Yao Yong also helped the prince lie, and Ning Guogong said that the prince was young, so Emperor Chunde of Sui did not blame Li Huan.
Chu Yu was restless, and Wanyue hurriedly opened the door and came in, telling her that the Wei army was defeated, everyone in the family died in battle, and the 70,000 troops in Baidi Valley were destroyed.Wei Zhong led his seventh son to send out troops and his seventh son returned. The seventh son was the remaining seventh son.The heavy coffin carried the bodies of Wei Zhong and his six sons back to Huajing City. Wei Yun, dressed in a blood-stained battle robe, supported the coffin back to Beijing.Prince Jingzhi of Ning State told Emperor Chunde that the Wei family could not be blamed for the loss of 70,000 elite soldiers in Sui this time. However, Emperor Chunde said that after the marquis of Zhenguo was buried, he would leave it to Dali Temple for a thorough investigation.Wang Jingzhi wanted to say something more, but he hesitated and said nothing.
Emperor Chunde looked sad. After the death of the old general of Chu, Weizhong, the marquis of the country, also died for the country. There really was no general in Dasui who could resist Beiqi.Emperor Chunde is old and the prince is useless. Is Da Sui really going to negotiate peace with Beiqi?Wei Yun supported the coffin and returned to the Wei Mansion. Liu Xueyang and all her daughters-in-law burst into tears.Chu Yu was dressed in red wedding clothes and came on horseback.Wei Yun didn't know what Wei Jun and Chu Yu said before the battle, and he couldn't confirm whether Chu Yu's words were true.But Liu Xueyang remembered what Wei Jun said and thought that the person Wei Jun said he wanted to get married after returning was Chu Yu.
Liu Xueyang had to remind Chu Yu that if Chu Yu married into the Wei family at this time, she would be a widow.Chu Yu didn't know that her mother had already spoken cruel words to her before she came here. If she stepped out of the Chu family today, she would no longer be a member of the Chu family.But Chu Yu had no other choice.In front of the Huajing people, Chu Yu knelt down and asked Liu Xueyang, the wife of the Marquis of Zhenguo, to allow her to come in and mourn Wei Jun's widow.Chu Yu was determined to fulfill the agreement he made with Wei Jun.
Hearing that Chu Yu married into the Wei family and became a widow, Gu Chusheng felt troubled. Thinking of his past with Chu Yu, it became an out of reach past.Although he was married to Ning Guogong's Queen Linlang, they were not actually married.Thinking of these things, Gu Chusheng spit out a mouthful of blood and drew a red plum blossom on the drawing paper.Chu Linyang sent Wanyue to the Wei family to accompany Chu Yu. Chu Yu was about to go to the mourning hall and told Wanyue to stay in the room.In the Wei family mourning hall, everyone was keeping vigil for Wei Zhong and his six sons. Suddenly, they heard a servant calling out to the second lady urgently, thinking something must have happened.