Okay - two more versions; final crop but this time with out any skin cleanup and one with moles and skin softening.
1. Moles, blemishes and dry skin not touched. No skin softening
2. Moles, blemishes and dry skin not touched. Overall skin softening
Just to add another comment on the ethics of retouching. This is an extremely interesting topic and one that was discussed in some depth at an advanced Photoshop course I took a few years ago at the local community college. Opinions ranges from no retouching whatsoever at one extreme to trying one's best to make a person look "perfect" at the other extreme.
There was also a discussion of the ethics of makeup versus retouching, when both could achieve virtually identical results in an image. Consensus here seemed to be makeup was usually okay in all cases, but getting the same result in post-processing might be "less okay". Just as an aside, I did take a professional makeup course in order to become a better retoucher, at the suggestion of one of the photography profs.
Frankly, this is an area of photography where it is hard to reach any form of consensus, and I admit I went a bit overboard on the face cleanup side to get this discussion going.
I normally do not touch "permanent" markings on a subject (moles and scars) without talking to the subject first. I've found that men, more so than women, are proud of their scars; almost a "mark of honour". I worked with one subject who had plastic surgery to remove a significant facial marking, but did not want the minor side effects of that surgery removed from the image.
Acne, dry skin and other transitory blemishes are things I remove without hesitation. Signs of aging (wrinkles, crows feet) or cases where the camera exaggerates an imperfection (an example one one my daughters has a mole that looks blazing red in a photo, but not at all in real life), those things are a lot trickier to figure out and I try to feel out the subject on this and the answer varies a lot. If I don't get any direction, I will use my discretion and see what the feedback is when people see the proofs or final image. Most people seem to like the middle ground here, but here are exceptions.
Anyhow, a tricky business, especially when dealing with someone else;s work.