Back at her father's house, Miss Jessel is worried about her daughter. She's worried that the police will think she's been kidnapped and that her family is a "mafia" . She begs her father to be more sensitive, but he refuses to listen. He tells her that he's tired of her dad's "scarecrow underlings" , and that he wants her to be a maid instead of a bodyguard. He also reminds her that her father has asked her to dress up in a maid's clothes so that she doesn't feel "awed out" by having a bodyguard around her. He asks her if she has any choice, and she admits that she does. She tells him that she was once in a romantic relationship with a man, but that the man left her, and now she wants to "teach" him a lesson. She also tells her father that her daughter is crying because of her relationship with the man. She asks him if he can help her daughter, and he says that he can't, because he has to "cover up this mess" and "rescue" his men.
Back at her father's house, Miss Jessel is worried about her daughter. She's worried that the police will think she's been kidnapped and that her family is a "mafia" . She begs her father to be more sensitive, but he refuses to listen. He tells her that he's tired of her dad's "scarecrow underlings" , and that he wants her to be a maid instead of a bodyguard. He also reminds her that her father has asked her to dress up in a maid's clothes so that she doesn't feel "awed out" by having a bodyguard around her. He asks her if she has any choice, and she admits that she does. She tells him that she was once in a romantic relationship with a man, but that the man left her, and now she wants to "teach" him a lesson. She also tells her father that her daughter is crying because of her relationship with the man. She asks him if he can help her daughter, and he says that he can't, because he has to "cover up this mess" and "rescue" his men.