Vivian is confronted after someone finds and shouts about letters she was hiding. Onlookers mock her as Isaac's girlfriend accuses Vivian of orchestrating the prank to get revenge and declares, 'If I can't have him, then no one else can.' The woman warns Vivian to stay away from Isaac and threatens public humiliation if she doesn't. Isaac tries to calm things and asks someone to check on Vivian, but the confrontation escalates into threats. The episode ends with Vivian pleading, 'Isaac, you promised you'd always protect me,' leaving his response unresolved.
A speaker who once declared a wish to be with Isaac forever packs to leave Isaac in this episode. The speaker gives Isaac the front seat, leaves medicine and oranges in case he gets carsick, and urges him to smile. The mood flips when the speaker announces they are leaving and discards a photo of the two of them. Tender care turns to final detachment as the speaker says, 'Goodbye, Isaac.' The episode ends with the discarded photo and an empty front seat, leaving Isaac's response unresolved.
Captain Lowe refits the house with wedding bedding and orders personal items discarded, prompting Ms. Walker to pack and announce she won't return. She gives Isaac a cold goodbye, wishing him and Gigi happiness and vowing they never cross paths. Isaac is told to throw away a homemade, expired hand cream. Later he rushes because of Vivian's school registration, admits he turned off her alarm, and argues with others over who will care for her. The episode ends with Isaac calling out "Vivian!" as the household fractures and the immediate outcome stays unresolved.
Vivian Walker thought her life had ended in quiet regret. She forced Isaac Lowe to marry her, only to live hollowed by loneliness while Isaac's first love, Gigi Smith, crept back in. On her deathbed she was deceived and died convinced he never cared. Then she wakes forty years earlier—at the exact moment she threw away her future. The shock is brutal. This time she refuses to be passive. With steady hands she rips up the withdrawal form. No more bargains, no more silent suffering. Choosing herself becomes a bold, decisive break from the past—a second chance to stop the cycle and claim the life she truly deserves.
Vivian Walker thought her life had ended in quiet regret. She forced Isaac Lowe to marry her, only to live hollowed by loneliness while Isaac's first love, Gigi Smith, crept back in. On her deathbed she was deceived and died convinced he never cared. Then she wakes forty years earlier—at the exact moment she threw away her future. The shock is brutal. This time she refuses to be passive. With steady hands she rips up the withdrawal form. No more bargains, no more silent suffering. Choosing herself becomes a bold, decisive break from the past—a second chance to stop the cycle and claim the life she truly deserves.
Vivian Walker thought her life had ended in quiet regret. She forced Isaac Lowe to marry her, only to live hollowed by loneliness while Isaac's first love, Gigi Smith, crept back in. On her deathbed she was deceived and died convinced he never cared. Then she wakes forty years earlier—at the exact moment she threw away her future. The shock is brutal. This time she refuses to be passive. With steady hands she rips up the withdrawal form. No more bargains, no more silent suffering. Choosing herself becomes a bold, decisive break from the past—a second chance to stop the cycle and claim the life she truly deserves.
Vivian Walker thought her life had ended in quiet regret. She forced Isaac Lowe to marry her, only to live hollowed by loneliness while Isaac's first love, Gigi Smith, crept back in. On her deathbed she was deceived and died convinced he never cared. Then she wakes forty years earlier—at the exact moment she threw away her future. The shock is brutal. This time she refuses to be passive. With steady hands she rips up the withdrawal form. No more bargains, no more silent suffering. Choosing herself becomes a bold, decisive break from the past—a second chance to stop the cycle and claim the life she truly deserves.
Vivian Walker thought her life had ended in quiet regret. She forced Isaac Lowe to marry her, only to live hollowed by loneliness while Isaac's first love, Gigi Smith, crept back in. On her deathbed she was deceived and died convinced he never cared. Then she wakes forty years earlier—at the exact moment she threw away her future. The shock is brutal. This time she refuses to be passive. With steady hands she rips up the withdrawal form. No more bargains, no more silent suffering. Choosing herself becomes a bold, decisive break from the past—a second chance to stop the cycle and claim the life she truly deserves.
Vivian Walker thought her life had ended in quiet regret. She forced Isaac Lowe to marry her, only to live hollowed by loneliness while Isaac's first love, Gigi Smith, crept back in. On her deathbed she was deceived and died convinced he never cared. Then she wakes forty years earlier—at the exact moment she threw away her future. The shock is brutal. This time she refuses to be passive. With steady hands she rips up the withdrawal form. No more bargains, no more silent suffering. Choosing herself becomes a bold, decisive break from the past—a second chance to stop the cycle and claim the life she truly deserves.
Vivian Walker thought her life had ended in quiet regret. She forced Isaac Lowe to marry her, only to live hollowed by loneliness while Isaac's first love, Gigi Smith, crept back in. On her deathbed she was deceived and died convinced he never cared. Then she wakes forty years earlier—at the exact moment she threw away her future. The shock is brutal. This time she refuses to be passive. With steady hands she rips up the withdrawal form. No more bargains, no more silent suffering. Choosing herself becomes a bold, decisive break from the past—a second chance to stop the cycle and claim the life she truly deserves.