- Pope Alexander authorizes a search for missing son Juan as Savonarola continues to resist torture, and Lucrezia seduces her fiancé.
- The Pope is increasingly worried about the welfare of his son Juan, who has vanished and orders Cesare to find him. Cardinal Sforza tells his men to start looking in the city's morgues. When his body is found, the Pope is grief-stricken and orders that his son will not be buried until his killer is found. Cesare is also tasked with getting a confession from Brother Savonarola but that is also proving to be a difficult task. In the end, Cesare follows Machiavelli's advice. Lucrezia has a new suitor but toys with him pretending to be one of Lucrezia's servants. When the young man falls in love with her she decides to reveal her true identity and agrees to marry him. Meanwhile, Cardinal Della Rovere's assassin strikes.—garykmcd
- Girolamo Savonarola stubbornly stands torture, likely to die without confession, so Cesar ends up faking one to send him to the pyre with his tongue ripped out. Posing as a mere confident in waiting, Lucrezia tests charming, pristine Aragonese prince Alfonso's true infatuation for her charms and agrees to marry him. As the pope's anxiety over Juan's disappearance only grow, Cesare lets the Tiber-washed up corpse be found. Even mistress Farnese can't maintain never having regretted the rebel having been born. Cesare strikes a deal to get absolution and, crucially, release from the clergy to divulge what happened. Giuliano Della Rovere's angel of death started to despair but gets his chance to die with the pope.—KGF Vissers
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