The Dead Girls Episode 2 recap: Captain Bedoya’s entry changes the balance

Sayan
The Dead Girls Episode 2 (Image via Netflix)
The Dead Girls Episode 2 (Image via Netflix)

The Dead Girls Episode 2 aired on September 10, 2025. It begins in January 1960, with Captain Bedoya extorting money from Arcangela to keep her son out of prison. By 1961, Serafina starts a relationship with Bedoya and sets up a brothel near an army base in Concepcion de Ruiz.

In The Dead Girls Episode 2, flashbacks reveal Arcangela’s earlier rise in 1936, when she took over Mexico Lindo and turned it into a profitable brothel. In 1961, the sisters opened Casino del Danzon, but political pressure and a new morality law led to all three brothels being shut down by 1962.

Captain Bedoya becomes tied to the sisters when Arcangela pays him in January 1960 to keep her son out of prison.

This first exchange introduces him as a man who uses his position for personal gain, and Arcangela as someone willing to meet his demands to protect her family. The relationship deepens when Serafina enters the picture in 1961. Her romance with Bedoya quickly turns strategic when he introduces her to Concepcion de Ruiz, a military town frequented by wealthy soldiers and officials, an ideal setting for expansion.

This setting gives Serafina the idea to expand her business ambitions. She convinces Bedoya to support her, and with money and influence exchanged, she establishes a new brothel there. This development shifts power, making Bedoya not only her lover but also her ally in securing official backing for the enterprise.

His involvement links the Baladro sisters more closely with military authorities, creating a dynamic where their survival depends on his favors. His entry into their story shows how personal relationships and business become intertwined, leading directly to Serafina’s decision to pursue expansion alongside Arcangela’s already thriving operations.


The Dead Girls Episode 2: Arcangela’s Rise Starts with Mexico Lindo

The Dead Girls Episode 2 (Image via Netflix)
The Dead Girls Episode 2 (Image via Netflix)

Arcangela gains her first major foothold in 1936 when she takes Mexico Lindo, a bar, from a debtor unable to pay her back. She had been working as a loanshark, and this acquisition allows her to enter a new business. Once she sees that customers are willing to pay for time with the waitresses, she transforms the bar into a brothel.

This decision marks the beginning of the Baladro sisters’ rise. The success of Mexico Lindo brings money and influence, and Arcangela establishes a strict code to protect her workers and ensure fairness. She bribes local officials to open a second location in Mezcala, laying the foundation for a growing network of profitable establishments.

Her approach is described as disciplined, with bouncers to protect the girls and rules that stop clients from cheating them. She builds a reputation for reliability that keeps both workers and customers loyal. However, when she offers the chance for her sister Eulalia to run Mexico Lindo, the offer is refused.

Instead, she turns the business over to Serafina, teaching her how to operate it. This moment sets up Serafina’s future role and shows how Arcangela’s initial ambition and control shaped the foundation of the sisters’ larger ventures.


The Dead Girls Episode 2: Casino del Danzon marks their biggest gamble

The Dead Girls Episode 2 (Image via Netflix)
The Dead Girls Episode 2 (Image via Netflix)

The Baladro sisters take their most ambitious step in September 1961 when they open Casino del Danzon. The brothel is set near the army base and designed to attract the wealthiest clients, including government officials and military men. The opening night features balconies, neon signs, cabaret shows, and live music. The sisters spend their savings to launch the venture, showing their confidence that it will secure their dominance.

The scale of the operation in The Dead Girls Episode 2 makes it stand out from their earlier establishments, signaling their transition from local operators to figures with influence over high-ranking officials. The event attracts attention from across the region, but the night does not end without issues. A drunken secretary to the governor exposes his secret in front of the crowd, and the ridicule he faces creates tensions. His humiliation becomes a source of conflict that reaches the governor himself.

This setback occurs just as the governor seeks higher office, making the existence of such brothels politically sensitive. What begins as a triumph for the sisters becomes the first step toward a larger clash with authorities. The grandeur of Casino del Danzon shows both its ambition and the risks that come with such a public expansion.


The Dead Girls Episode 2: A morality law brings everything down

The Dead Girls Episode 2 (Image via Netflix)
The Dead Girls Episode 2 (Image via Netflix)

The turning point in The Dead Girls Episode 2 comes when Governor Cabanas, under pressure from public scrutiny, introduces a morality law in 1962 that makes brothels illegal. The decision follows revelations about his corrupt activities and his plan to run for the presidency. To rebuild his reputation, he aligns with public demands for stricter laws.

The moral law forces the closure of all their establishments. Arcangela’s failed attempt to bribe a judge leaves them powerless, and their once-flourishing empire collapses almost overnight and they are left to operate illegally on a smaller scale through Mexico Lindo.

The once thriving businesses are gone, and the sisters must adapt quickly. Workers from the brothels face uncertain futures, with some sold to farms and others told to support themselves in different ways. The sisters’ wealth and stability disappear, and Serafina steps in to take tighter control as Arcangela struggles with the collapse.

Mexico Lindo becomes overcrowded as men flood in, knowing it remains one of the few places to seek such services. The new law represents a decisive blow, shifting the sisters from open operators with influence to figures forced back into secrecy. Their rise is undone by a political move aimed at saving face.


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Edited by Tanisha Aggarwal