At a celebratory company party for Mr. Regan, his wife’s roast is served—until a huge bug is found in the dish. Guests and potential partners erupt, publicly insulting the cook’s single‑parent background and demanding she apologize to save the deal. Under mounting pressure she is forced to bow and repeatedly beg forgiveness while colleagues warn the partnership is at risk. The scene flips when a woman at the table is identified: she’s not only Regan’s mistress but the wife’s own ex‑lover. The episode ends with that revelation hanging over the ruined reception and the wife’s next move unresolved.
When Cora is introduced as the new lawyer at Regan's company, coworkers gush that she's a perfect match for Mr. Regan and urge him to leave his 'shabby wife.' His wife snaps, "Don't compare someone like me to Cora!" and watches Cora with mixed memory and anger. She recalls that looking at Cora once made her love overflow and that was when she was happiest. Now she says Cora trampled and broke her. She vows never to forgive and refuses to give in to Cora's revenge. The episode ends with her determined stance and the rivalry unresolved.
At a company event a woman is publicly accused of embezzling funds and overspending at host clubs, and a group forces her to kneel to pressure her into silence. Organizers urge the crowd to treat it as entertainment, but evidence—apparently planted—comes to light: someone says, "She put that in it herself." Claims scramble between an apology and denials, then a colleague insists it was not a performance but staged by the woman. Cornered, she mutters, "My hand slipped." The episode ends with her culpability unclear and exposure of the embezzlement still imminent.
A woman confronts a man after discovering he used company money and obsessively spent time at host clubs. The confrontation escalates when another man, invoking Mr. Dupont's favor, reveals a dismissal resolution has already passed and threatens to get him fired. She then uncovers that a bug in the food was likely arranged by her husband and Cora to abandon 'her' when she became useless. An incriminating video has been circulated, and she realizes the leak came from spies her father, the Dupont CEO, planted to monitor her. The episode ends with firing and public exposure looming.
Under surveillance on her father's orders, a woman is pressured to stop investigating evidence that her husband Marvin is having an affair with Cora. An aide insists the affair may be Cora's revenge and warns to stop digging, while the chairman calls demanding grandchildren and offering to make appropriate arrangements, even give Marvin leave to protect family line. She fears that intervention will expose that she is the chairman's daughter and endanger Cora. With only her secretary Sara aware, they cling to secrecy. The episode closes with the chairman poised to intervene, leaving the affair hidden and her future unresolved.
In a tense meeting a man says, 'I'll handle Cora myself—don't tell my father about the revenge or affair.' The other insists on protecting him, forbids harming Cora, but gives one month to stop her revenge or he'll report to the chairman. The first man accepts punishment, says he'll let Cora take revenge to atone, and apologizes. Security checks reveal the attacker was a hotel employee described as your wife's fans and note her popularity from recipe videos and a TV cooking appearance. The episode ends with a hurried exit and the parting barb, 'Who do you think you're defying?'
At a company briefing about a major project whose faulty documents could cause over $50 million in damages, executives introduce new legal advisor Cora Maxwell. The narrator presents his wife, a culinary researcher who runs a cooking school and oversees the company's cooking app, but watching her laugh with another man reopens a dark obsession: since 'that day' he hasn't stopped thinking about her. Despite dismissing the man, he resolves on revenge. His vow, 'I'll take everything from that woman,' ends the episode, his next move left unresolved.
Comments surface and Ms. Regan is shown them. A woman at the center tells Ms. Regan she will accept all of Cora's revenge to ease Cora's pain, even if it's cruel. The fallout escalates: staff quit and a scheduled TV appearance is canceled, threatening the woman's reputation. She warns that if the damage grows and her father finds out, Cora will be in danger, so she vows to absorb blame and keep harm focused on herself. She decides to let Cora vent, but whether she can contain the damage remains unresolved.
Facing a surge of complaint calls about recipe plagiarism and reports of food poisoning from Ms. Lena, company staff panic that online exposure will ruin a culinary researcher's career and endanger Cora. To stop the story, a company representative coerces the accused into kneeling and recording a formal apology to Marvin. The woman reluctantly complies, taking multiple humiliating takes while the filmer coaches her posture to the floor to protect Cora. The filmer then vows to show the footage to Marvin and "take Marvin for myself," leaving the fallout and the woman's fate unresolved.
My husband is having an affair with my high school first love—the very woman I once abandoned. She despises me and orchestrates precise revenge. What she doesn't know: I left her to protect her, because I'm the illegitimate daughter of a corporate chairman. I decide to accept her retribution, to atone for my betrayal. But tests, hatred, and provocation ignite something buried between us. Close encounters strain both revenge and restraint. One impulsive kiss shatters rules. As her plan falters and my guilt warps into longing, revenge and desire collide. A forbidden romance, born from past treachery and current betrayal, teeters toward chaos—can love survive the revenge that created it?