You can see the hurt in the other daughter's eyes when her mom says the jewelry is for Rachel now. She has been the one there for twenty years, yet she is being treated like a second-class citizen. The mom dismissing her feelings with 'I will buy you more later' is so careless. It ignores the sentimental value and the years of loyalty. This family dynamic is getting messy fast.
Rachel saying 'Not really' when asked if she remembers the room breaks my heart. She is physically back but mentally still a stranger in this house. The mother's hope that she would return one day kept this room pristine, but now that she is here, the disconnect is obvious. It is a beautiful tragedy watching them try to bridge a twenty-year gap in a single afternoon. The acting here is top notch.
Only in dramas like (Dubbed)A Baby, a Billionaire, And Me do people argue over hundreds of millions in jewelry like it is pocket change. The scale of wealth is hard to comprehend. Twenty properties as a dowry? That is real estate empire building. But money cannot buy back the memories Rachel lost. The contrast between the material abundance and emotional scarcity is the real story here.
The mother is clearly overcompensating out of guilt. Keeping the room untouched was her way of coping, but now it feels like pressure on Rachel to be the little girl she once was. Telling the other daughter to wait while Rachel gets everything first is terrible parenting. She is trying to fix the past by spoiling the present, but she is damaging her relationship with the daughter who stayed.
The final shot of the two sisters on the staircase says it all. One walking away in anger, the other standing alone in confusion. The golden railing and crystal chandelier highlight the luxury, but the distance between them is huge. This visual metaphor for their relationship is perfect. No words needed, just the heavy silence of a family fracturing under the weight of secrets and money.