But in the end, he shuffles it back to her desk, unread. Could stealing the selling price help ingratiate himself with Hyeong-woo? Perhaps. Poorly-repressed sexual tension makes for bad reflexes: Yeon-ah drops a confidential document, plunging Ho-woo into moral crisis. Our hero - lieutenant of the buying team - refuses to meet her eyes, presumably lest he intuit the minimum selling price from, say, the angle of her smile. And yet, in the romantic confines of the office elevator, two accountants from opposite camps exchange star-crossed glances…! Okay, so it’s Ho-woo and Yeon-ah, and it’s mostly a little awkward. Fraternization between the selling and buying teams is strictly forbidden. Jisan Bank has agreed to sell the firm’s bad debt to the highest bidder - with Taeil representing both Jisan, and Sanga, the potential buyer. Meanwhile, there’s the matter of People’s Entertainment’s hungry, hungry creditors. It would be so job-preservingly convenient if these very-unfalsified notes were to resurface. It’s a shame, he intones, that last year’s files are missing the board meeting minutes. As Hyun’s team huddle in dread, professional minion Hyeong-woo whips out his best “report this to HR, and you’ll bleed” voice. After all, the latter’s spendthrift son can’t be expected to keep himself out of prison. This, as Seung-jo remarks, is more than just sternly-worded paper… it’s war! Taeil must justify last year’s squeaky-clean report, whilst Vice President Han strives to pacify his old ally, CHAIRMAN LEE CHAN-JOO ( Jung Hae-kyun). The fallout of People’s Entertainment’s failed audit is immense. But in this game of corporate thrones, nothing is more powerful… than paperwork. ![]() Our heroes must navigate a bidding war, whilst avoiding playing into the hands of a certain villainous Vice President. People’s Entertainment is dead in the water following a failed audit.
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