Seema
and Romeo discuss recent events with Rosy the new widow. Seema tells her that
she feels it is her duty to help Rosy and her son, since it was because of her
that D'Souza was killed. Rosy says that they have (apparently done off-screen)
already provided money enough to last the rest of her life, so they needn't do
more. They are interrupted when Rosy sees the car that performed the hit-and-run
driving by the cafe! Romeo leaps to his feet, kisses Jango, and throws him into
the air to follow the car. Yes, we're trusting a homing pigeon to tail the
gangsters. *sigh*
Just wait. It gets better.
We see Jango following the car around the city, and eventually coming to a stop at a traffic light. Jango lands on the license plate, takes a good long look at it, then flies away. We find ourselves at the police station where we have an completely unfunny exchange between Johnny Lever and Ravi. They do reveal one nugget of plot though - Rosy's statement about her husband's death is not going to do much good for them, since no one saw the plates. (Do you see where this is going? How quickly are your eyes rolling?)
Romeo
appears in the doorway and offers to give them the number they seek. He reaches
into his jacket and pulls out Jango, who promptly flops onto the desk. Romeo
says that Jango was with them at the cafe, and chased the car in question.
According to Romeo, Jango can tell us all the license number of the car and will
be happy to do so.
Ravi's feeling generous, so he lets Romeo do his thing. Romeo deals out some numbers on bits of cardboard onto the desk, and tells Jango to point out the numbers. Jango does so (and chooses the numbers upside down!) and pecks out all four digits. Ravi has Johnny Lever check the information on that car, and invites Romeo to have some tea before he goes.
A phone call takes Ravi away from his desk for a moment, and Romeo has a seat to collect his little number cards. As he looks around the desk, he notices the paperweight that Ravi's using - the lock from their childhood. Romeo asks Ravi if the lock belongs to him, and Ravi says that it does. Romeo then asks where the key is, but Ravi merely replies that he lost it in his childhood. Ravi goes back to finish his phone call, and Romeo tries his key. It opens the lock! Romeo is shocked by this discovery, but doesn't let on what he's learned. He also realizes that he and his long-lost brother are on opposite sides of the law, so he has to play this carefully.
It
gets even more melodramatic, as Ravi's mother and sister arrive at the police
station. Ravi must take them to the doctor, so he excuses himself to Romeo and
heads out. Romeo watches his newfound family walk away in slow motion, and
realizes that he's going to have to make a choice if he wants to be with his
family again. He swears to himself that starting tomorrow, he's done with the
crime business.
Seema's off having her own little reverie, and psyches her self up for tomorrow's big job. Over at Jugran's, the plans are ready to go over one last time to carry things out. Romeo announces that he's not going to do the job after all. This is unwelcome news to Jugran who pulls a gun on Romeo and asks him to please reconsider.
Jango once again comes to the rescue, and attacks Jugran. He lands on Jugran's arm and starts pecking and scratching at his hand that's holding the gun. Eventually Jugran throws the gun away, and Romeo conveniently catches it. Jango flies to safety as all of Jugran's henchmen draw on Romeo, but now things are a little more even. Jugran swats at Balwant's gun to lower it, and marvels at how deeply he's been scratched by Jango.
To
make matters worse, Seema shows up and notices that things are a little tense in
the room. Jugran alludes to Romeo changing his mind about the job, while Romeo
gets a look on his face that seems to say, "Oh crap, I hadn't thought of this."
Jugran leans in and quietly tells Romeo that Seema is waiting for an answer if
Romeo will do the job or not. After a few moments of deliberation, Romeo tells
Jugran that he'll do the job, but that's the last thing he's going to do in the
world of crime.
Before he leaves the room, Romeo also adds that if Jugran doesn't tell Seema what she wants to know, or if what he tells her is fake information, then none of Jugran's guards or defenses will be able to protect him from Romeo's wrath. Jugran quips about how interesting it is that love can make anyone do damn near anything.
With that, it's time for the big job!