
After a loading screen, you're simply back in front of the school from the beginning of the game, and can choose an ending. The Lady appears behind you, and then you are promptly pulled into the mirror by your mirror image. Instead, you sit in a chair and look at a mirror.
Near the end of Act 2, you're heading to the Lady in Red's room in order to finally confront her. A scene that doubles as a funny moment: In the large lobby of the mansion, which is set up like a wedding reception, the poltergeist in the room can launch a motorcycle, out of nowhere. She only attacks when you're too close while finding her. Pretty much all she does is hide in plain sight, run away and then hide again. After doing that in only two places, he's done. Combined with the fact that he actually makes a lot of noise betraying his presence, it's possible to approach him safely and take your shot. While he can take you down in one hit, he waits in particular spots and can be attacked from well outside his own attack range. He's built up to be a major threat, an especially deadly menace that you won't see coming. Despite some enemies changing tactics when you finally confront them, this boss is essentially the same as when he ran, so you're already used to defeating him by then. He will keep running until you collect the items associated with him, upon which you're informed that you will have one final fight with him. Seeing Blind is a relatively lethargic enemy and has a basic attack pattern. Anti-Climax Boss: Keepers of the Dark has a wide variety of enemies it considers bosses, so some can be this. Was she a malicious entity and left Linda a power that may make her equally evil and dangerous over time? Or was she a Stealth Mentor who prepared Linda to be the one who will face an even greater evil in the future? Yayan talking about the proper path they should have taken at the beginning can now be seen as foreshadowing that Siska took the wrong turn on purpose, and Siska easily could have locked Yayan in the bathroom while they were exploring the school. Siska was last seen with Shelly and is almost certainly her killer (even if you assume she was possessed). We don't see Siska until she runs into Linda and Shelly, so it's more than possible she was the one who actually killed Doni, and this makes it likely that Doni is the one who wounded her. If we assume that Miss Siska was Evil All Along, it fills in the gaps. To elaborate on the latter, when confronted about Doni's death, the Third Sister claims they don't kill the living, and doubts even her crazy sister would have done so. At the end of the game, is Miss Siska a victim like Linda and Ira, and now possessed by some malicious entity? Or is she behind all this (or at least The Dragon of someone else), and brought the students in the abandoned town intentionally?.