Hanie becomes friends with the town's head policeman Salihin and his teenage daughter Azura, who begins to work part-time at La Luna.
Eventually La Luna becomes a success as it attracts customers from across the region, and becomes popular with Kampong Bras Basah's women after an amorous husband and wife, whose sex life has been reignited by La Luna's lingerie, accidentally broadcasts their lovemaking session over the village mosque's loudspeakers.
While Hanie, Salihin and many of the villagers attend an outdoor film screening, an arsonist sets La Luna on fire with Azura still working inside.
Suspicion falls on Pa'at after they discover that he had purchased cans of petrol, and later that night he confronts a defiant Yam with a gun, telling her that without La Luna she is no longer safe.
He takes back the lighter, telling Salihin that this is the only evidence that he has over him, unaware that his confession had been broadcast to the village over the mosque's loudspeakers.
Hanie tells Salihin that she is leaving Kampong Bras Basah but finds the entire village out rebuilding La Luna and decides to stay.
"I'm incredibly lucky to have the opportunity to work with such great talents in the region, and I can't wait to introduce La Luna to the world.
Noel Wong, writing for Free Malaysia Today, wrote: "A good chunk of laughs are derived from the sexual repression of the villagers, thanks to Tok Hassan’s oppressive rules.