Dong-eun does not confront her. Instead, she sends Yeon-jin’s criminal records to the new husband. He leaves Mi-hee. Alone, broke, and finally feeling a fraction of Dong-eun’s childhood abandonment, Mi-hee calls her daughter. Dong-eun answers. Silence. Then she hangs up. Joo Yeo-jeong gets his own arc. Motchill highlights his backstory with the prisoner who killed his father. In a scene too brutal for network TV (Motchill’s "18+" warning flashes red), Yeo-jeong does not kill the prisoner. He operates on him— without anesthesia —to remove a bullet lodged near the spine. The prisoner screams. Yeo-jeong whispers, "Now you know what helplessness feels like."
The comment section collapses: "PHẦN 3 KHI NÀO?" (WHEN IS PART 3?) 9.9/10 Top Comment: "Tôi đã khóc, tôi đã cười, tôi đã muốn đập màn hình. 10/10 sẽ xem lại." (I cried, I laughed, I wanted to smash my screen. 10/10 will rewatch.) The Glory Phan 2 Motchill
Dong-eun stands on the rooftop of the abandoned school. Snow falls (not rain). Yeo-jeong approaches. He doesn't hug her. He simply hands her a new passport. The name: Moon Hee-jin – a mix of her real self and a new beginning. Dong-eun does not confront her
She looks at the camera. The Motchill screen fades to the title card: THE GLORY – PART 2: THE GILDED NOOSE . Alone, broke, and finally feeling a fraction of
The Motchill chat explodes with skull emojis. A user types: "Anh này yêu chị Moon nhưng tâm thần vler" (This guy loves Ms. Moon but is mentally insane fr). The climax. Yeon-jin, desperate, organizes a secret charity auction to flee to Vietnam (a nod to Motchill’s home base). The item: her remaining shares in the foundation. Dong-eun appears in the crowd, wearing a white dress—the color of innocence she never had.
We open not in Korea, but in a sterile Vietnamese hospital in Hanoi. (Song Hye-kyo) is not there. Instead, Ha Do-yeong (the husband) sits in a private room. He has just woken from surgery—not for an injury, but for a voluntary organ donation. He has given a kidney to the dying father of Joo Yeo-jeong (the doctor), securing the younger man’s loyalty and medical expertise for the final phase of the plan.