The story of Di Renjie Episode 32

Tongtian Di Renjie Episode 32 Plot Introduction

  The emperor invited Di Renjie into the palace to investigate the case Mei Niang describes the case to Di Renjie

After

   retired, the emperor couldn't do anything about Hongwenguan. At this time, Lord Gongsun arrived. Master Gongsun told the emperor Xuanyu's dissuasion from the family to go to Dongshan Temple, and the emperor was amazed. Gongsun then told the emperor that he had witnessed Xuan Yu's practice of the soul going out of the body, and the guards had also seen Xuan Yu appear in the Hongwen Hall, and after Xuan Yu had finished the practice, he had seen fox hair in her hand.

   Xuan Yu appeared at this time, and she reminded the emperor whether he heard an unknown knock on the door of Zhaoyi Palace at night, and the emperor confirmed that this happened. Xuan Yu said with certainty that Wu Meiniang was possessed by the fox demon. The emperor was skeptical. Xuan Yu took the opportunity to ask the Emperor Wu Meiniang to drive out of the palace.

   Yan Li went to Di Renjie with great heart, and he told Di Renjie about the palace. Di Renjie was very angry, he didn't believe what the fox said. Yan Liben went on to tell him that the emperor didn't believe it at first, but then he asked Xuan Yu to test Wu Meiniang, but the emperor was convinced after seeing it. So far, the emperor ordered the mother and son of Wu Mei to be imprisoned.

   Di Renjie was furious, he thought it must be Xuan Yu pretending to be a ghost. Yan Liben said that it was not he who came to ask him to decide the case, but someone else. Yan Liben took Di Renjie to meet the person who invited him, who turned out to be the emperor. The emperor solemnly entrusted Di Renjie to investigate the case thoroughly.

   Because of the many involvements in this case, the emperor asked Di Renjie to investigate the case. In order to conceal their identity, the emperor asked Di Renjie and his party to disguise themselves as father-in-law and court ladies into the harem. Di Renjie was arranged to Zhaoyi Palace and met Wu Meiniang. Wu Meiniang was very depressed. Di Renjie told Wu Meiniang that the emperor had asked herself to investigate the case. Wu Meiniang finally saw hope again.

   Di Renjie interrogated Wu Meiniang about some of the case, and Wu Meiniang told him that she was asleep on the night of the crime, so she didn't hear the door knocking at all. But afterwards, she found something, and after speaking, she took out a handkerchief. Di Renjie took the blood-stained handkerchief and looked at it carefully. He suspected that the blood was related to the door knock.

   At this time, the father-in-law Wang Fu came over and told Di Renjie that some things he saw might not be true. He said that the emperor wanted to do something by himself, so Di Renjie could go with him.

   Prince Duke brought Di Renjie and Mo Yu to the front of Hongwen Hall. Di Renjie looked at the sealed Hongwen Pavilion. The prince officially stated that the fox demon was reported to be a monster and was sealed up after the accident. Now the emperor ordered to clean up himself, so he called Di Renjie together. Di Renjie knew it well.

  The three of them entered the Hongwen Pavilion together, and Di Renjie saw a horrible scene in the museum. The ground was covered with animal hair and some torn pieces of letter paper. Mo Yu stepped forward to identify that the hair was indeed fox hair, and he found the fragment with the word "Your Majesty" from the scraps of paper on the ground.

   Di Renjie observed that the doors and windows of the room were intact, and he didn't seem to notice anything unusual. The prince showed fear, he said that maybe the fox demon changed invisible. But Di Renjie felt that the scene was too unreasonable, and there was always unreasonable unreasonableness. Di Renjie proposed to the prince to approach Ji Xuanyu, and the prince promised to arrange for Di Renjie to deliver meals to Ji Xuanyu who was resting in the palace. (Original plot of Lujuba, please indicate the source for reprinting!) To