At a reception Henry, a mischievous boy, grabs a guest's cake. The guest confronts his mother Wynne, threatens to tell Lance—who already dislikes Wynne and her son—and demands punishment. Wynne apologizes as other guests whisper the boy is a jinx after past injuries to those who scolded him. Old grudges surface when Melissa is accused of drugging Lance years ago and someone vows revenge. Suddenly Wynne collapses and is declared dead; a bystander pressures Henry to take "medicine" to save her. The scene ends with a public announcement, "Dear passenger, please put that down!", leaving Henry's choice unresolved.
During a routine inspection, Ms. Lane (Wynne) is caught in chaos when Mrs. Shelton 'goes nuts'—people shout that a piglet was born and notice blood on Wynne's face. Security orders her to put her hands up; she's confused, finds her handcuff, and sees she's suddenly fat. Panicking, Wynne realizes she has traveled through time into an NPC who shares her name—called Madam Pig—and now inhabits a 200-pound woman with a stupid son. She only skimmed the novel and doesn't know what's next. Tracy and Greta are ordered to slap her, leaving Wynne facing immediate danger.
A mother shields her son as attackers strike; she fights back, slapping Wynne to protect him. Meanwhile a crime boss is told someone is after their dock firearms and orders his men to find and kill them within three days. He learns Mr. Jones sent women but singles out Ms. Lane as suspicious after she rescued him at the embassy and orders digging. That night Ms. Lane confronts Mrs. Shelton, gun drawn; they trade blows and a woman shouts Governor Lance Shelton is the child's father. The scuffle ends with a cry for Lance, leaving fallout unresolved.
Wynne is pinned and publicly humiliated in the building lobby while Lance and bystanders struggle to control the scene. A young boy, Henry, speaks up—calling out “Daddy” and “Aunt Lane”—as neighbors accuse Wynne of scheming and mock her with nicknames like “Madam Pig” and “silly piglet.” The confrontation turns physical: someone threatens slaps, another struggles to hold Wynne down, and an argument escalates into a dangerous bluff. A person produces a gun and snarls, “Perhaps I can go home if I shoot the hero’s head off,” leaving everyone frozen in a tense standoff.
Mrs. Shelton storms into Governor Shelton's office and demands "I want a divorce!" and custody of son Henry. The governor refuses, accuses her of shooting him, and orders guards to lock her in a cell and starve her for three days. Locked and starving, she struggles with her weight and hunger until a Weight Loss System activates, explaining points are earned by losing weight and redeemable for food, props, furnishings, weapons and more. Realizing the system can be exploited, she vows to turn the tables and begins a forced diet under guard, leaving how she will spend earned points unresolved.
At a social gathering, Mrs. Shelton shames and force-feeds a struggling new mother (Ms. Lane), taunting her about weight and saying the governor forbade her to eat for three days. Wynne intervenes and scuffles with Mrs. Shelton while the mother’s hungry child, Henry, begs for food. The fight unexpectedly burns calories tracked by a system that awards Wynne 2,000 points; she redeems a fried chicken burger meal to feed the child. Mrs. Shelton vows to tell Lance, leaving Wynne facing possible retaliation even as she brings food to the hungry child.
Grandma arrives to find Wynne and Henry confined; servants claim Wynne assaulted Lance. She offers a jade statue said to bless children and maybe cure Henry, but a relative objects, insults Henry, and plots to seize it for her future child. Lance says the imperial jade seal may be hidden inside and wants it. Grandma insists she only accepts Henry as grandson and orders their release. Later, the protagonist activates the weight-loss System, learns Henry was drugged and that Omni-Heal pills require burning 45,000 calories, so they must earn the points to get the cure.
After Lance seized their firearms, a group vows revenge—they blame him for lost men and the need to make more drugs. They plan to kill Lance at his mother's birthday, assigning one person to fetch “the stuff” and another to hide a jade statue so the party becomes a funeral. At the venue the matriarch insists Wynne and Henry attend despite staff warning they're locked up and would be mocked, provoking insults and threats. The conspirators move to action: a countdown begins — 36 seconds — and a practiced shot hits the bull's-eye, leaving the celebration seconds from violence.
At party prep, staff order Wynne brought and told to dress properly so she won't embarrass the governor. After someone splashes swill, an angry speaker vows to make Wynne a joke before guests. The butler is told to fit Mrs. Shelton into an excessively tight dress and to refuse any carriage to that 'fatty' and her son, forcing them to walk and blaming the Governor. Meanwhile a child, puzzled by Aunt Lane's thoughts, blurts, 'I really can't stand the Gapanese,' then declares, 'Let's go get her!' The episode ends with the public humiliation set in motion as the child runs.
At a formal birthday reception, guests greet the celebrant and Mr. Sutton while anxiously waiting for Wynne and her son Henry, who insisted on walking and may be late. Small talk turns into harsh gossip: attendees claim Wynne put on weight after Henry's birth and doubt she'll show. The hostess orders Wynne and Henry to be fetched; someone says it's unnecessary because Wynne will come herself. The chatter dies when Wynne suddenly appears in the doorway, silencing the room — a guest stammers, "You are... Wynne?"