4yöu
Favoured Frenzy
There was a fire. Flames roared through the NGO building until nothing was left but twisted metal and rising smoke. Raga was inside —and then, just gone.No one else knew. No sirens, no headlines. Just Aadi and his trusted friend.If Raga was there when the fire hit... he didn’t make it out.Aadi’s phone buzzed. The voice on the other end was sharp and irritated —Minister Durjan Singh.“Aadi! Didn’t I tell you to bring the girls? What’s the holdup? Everyone here is waiting.”Aadi, cold and unshaken, replied, “Don’t worry, Minister. I’m on my way... with the girls.”He ended the call and immediately dialed one of his men.“Get four or five young girls ready. I need them tonight,” he said without a trace of emotion.The reply was short: “Understood.”His car rolled to a stop at a quiet crossroads under a flickering streetlight. Another vehicle approached and parked beside his. The windows were tinted black. Shadows moved inside.Aadi stepped out and walked toward it. As the door opened, the girls were pulled out one by one —trembling, eyes wide with fear, tears running down their cheeks.They cried softly, overwhelmed and unsure. The night air only made their fear worse.“Move them into the other car. Quickly,” Aadi ordered.The men obeyed, silently transferring the girls. None of them resisted —too afraid, too broken to fight. Their faces told a story of trauma and helplessness.Aadi stared at them. His tone was quiet... dangerous.“Tonight is meant for silence. Don’t make a sound.”But the smallest of them, unable to hold back, began to sob. Loud, panicked, uncontrollable.Aadi looked at her with dead eyes. Then he stepped forward, waved his men away, and took her gently —almost mockingly —to the backseat of his own car. He closed the door behind her.Lowering the window slightly, he spoke to his men.“Take the others to the minister’s farmhouse. I’ll come.”The window rolled up. From outside, the car was still. No screams. No cries. Just silence —swallowed by black glass and a darker night.The rest of the cars headed off into the distance.
At the farmhouse, laughter echoed, wine poured, music thumped. High-profile guests mingled behind closed gates.The girls arrived.“Where’s Aadi?” one of the guards asked.Durjan’s men explained everything —including the fire.“The NGO’s gone,” one said.Durjan’s eyes narrowed. “Raga was inside?”They nodded. “The explosion was huge. No one could’ve survived.”
Back on the roadside, it was exactly midnight.Aadi stood next to his car. His shirt was half-buttoned, his phone in hand. His expression was calm —too calm.The minister called again.“So, it’s done? You got him?”Aadi gave a faint smile. “To grow a business, Minister... the first step is to remove the competition.”Durjan’s voice dropped. “Go underground. This is big. Too loud.”Aadi looked ahead into the dark, then whispered,“I don’t hide in the dark, Minister...I am the dark.”The gang from Aadi’s crew leaves the girls at Minister Durjan’s place and walks away.The minister says, “I’ll call you once those girls’ job is done. Then bring them back.”They reply, “Alright, Ministerji.”Without warning, the minister takes those three girls to a party.In the crowd, the girls vanish without a trace.
A little later, the phone rings —Officer Raja calling the minister.The minister, adjusting his kurta, smoking a cigarette at his farmhouse, presses the phone between his ear and shoulder as he talks.“Raja, what’s this? Calling so late at night?”Raja responds, “Minister, what are you doing right now?”The minister replies, “Nothing much. What’s up?”Raja says, “A girl’s dead body was found at the crossing near Raga’s NGO. Minister ji, is this how you deal with girls? Killing them brutally like this? If the media catches wind, it’s going to be a massive problem.”“We’re only a few here, just me and a couple of my men,” Raja adds.Raja snaps, “Why did you kill her? You could have just sent her to me —I would have handled it differently.”The minister sharply replies, “Quiet. Now tell me exactly what happened.”The man on the line says, “That girl was beaten badly, she didn’t even have clothes on. A lighter was found near her.”Raja says, “That lighter definitely belongs to Aadi. My men confirmed it.”The minister picks up his phone and calls Aadi.“Hey Aadi, what the hell have you done? First Raga, now this? At this rate, your life’s going to end up in jail.”Aadi answers calmly, “Chill, Ministerji. She was making too much noise; I couldn’t take it anymore.”The minister hangs up and immediately calls Raja again.“Get this case buried. Dispose of that girl somewhere far, and make sure no one finds out.”Meanwhile, on the other end, Aadi’s arrogance is growing, like nothing can touch him because the minister’s backing him.
A little later, the minister brings the girls back, places his hand roughly on their heads, and says, “No crying. We’ll drop you at your homes now. Understand?”Then the minister calls Durjan’s men.Their car arrives shortly after, and they take the girls with them—intoxicated, lifeless.After a while, sitting in the car with a group of ruthless people, Aadi gets a phone call. Aadi picks up the phone, and one of the men says to him, “What do we do with these girls now? Where do we take them?” Aadi replies, “Kill them all. Because of them, if not today, then tomorrow, we’ll all get caught.” The men say, “Hey Aadi, the minister told us not to kill them.” Aadi says, “Look, the minister has power, but you and your men can go to jail anytime. Understand this, play with these girls, kill them, and throw them away.
”A little later, we see Aadi driving to the police station, talking to Raja. Raja says, “Is this your lighter? You’re acting like the devil’s own devil.” Raja says, “Listen, the minister told me you’re his new man, but you’re doing all this. Don’t throw bodies on the road this time, or do such acts in public. Because of your actions, the minister and all of us will get caught. Get out of here.” Saying this, Aadi stares at Raja as if Raja has mocked him, insulted his honor. Aadi quietly leaves from there.Just then, while Aadi is on the road, his accomplice calls him and says, “What do we do with the girls now? Where do we bury them?” Aadi says, “Bring the girls in the car to the road near our old hideout, I’ll take care of it.” Then we see those men bring the car to the place Aadi mentioned, and Aadi exchanges the car there and tells them to leave. Aadi is also driving away, and we see it's midnight, and he’s brought the car to the police station intersection. We see Aadi stop the car; the intersection is completely empty. He takes out a knife from his car, one he always keeps with him, marked with the symbol of Baphomet. He goes to the back with the knife and starts attacking the already dead girls with it, like a madman, as if he’s taking out all his anger against Raja on their bodies. His car is covered in blood—his seats, his glass, everything is drenched in blood. And then, in that state, he lifts the dead girls one by one, throws all four of them at the intersection, along with his knife, and leaves from there.
At 4 a.m., the scene shifts to the crime scene where three bodies are found in a horrific state. A crowd has gathered there, and the police are present too. This entire incident happened right near Officer Raja’s police station, so now people have questionsabout Raja, wondering how someone could commit such an act right in front of his station while he was there. Raja knows full well that this is all Aadi’s doing, and he is furious. Ignoring the crowd’s murmurs and the reports, he is lost in angry thoughts.He directly calls the minister. The minister, Durjan Singh, was sleeping and picks up the phone, saying, “What’s wrong, Raja? Won’t you let me sleep today?” Raja says, “Minister, what kind of man have you roped in with us? This guy will get us all hanged!” The minister gets out of bed, puts on his glasses, and says, “What happened, Raja?” Raja says, “Your man Aadi left three blood-soaked bodies at the police station intersection, and along with them, he left his knife with that satanic Baphomet symbol, as if he’s not afraid of anything.” Raja says, “Minister, I’m not listening to you anymore. I’ll catch him and break his legs wherever I find him.” The minister says, “Wait, let me talk to him. Stay on hold.” Then he calls Aadi, but there’s no answer from Aadi’s side. The minister reconnects with Raja and says, “Aadi isn’t picking up the phone.” Raja says, “No matter, Minister, I’ll drag that rat out from any corner.” While all this is happening, we see that at this crime scene, far in the distance, Rudra is standing. He has a cap on his head and is wearing glasses.
The minister kept speaking Dhruv about that night five years ago when Aadi vanished after the incident. He recalled how Aadi returned to Mumbai after those five years, completely changed. The minister said, “Even as a leader, I was nothing in front of him. He had gained immense power and connections, somehow. Whenever the police, especially Raja, thought of taking action against him, calls would come from higher-ups. His wealth and connections grew so much that no one could touch him. But I had a hand in turning Aadi to Kaliyug, and because he still had some respect for me, he didn’t harm Raja when I asked him not to. So, we all started working together. But day by day, his behavior grew more bloodthirsty; he was drowning in the intoxication of arrogance.” Dhruv asked, “Minister, where was he during those five years? Do you know anything?” The minister replied, “No, there was no trace of him anywhere. He came back with a new name.
”In the present,
Officer Dhruv stands outside the minister’s house, where a large crowd of people, reporters, and police are still gathered. Just then, Dhruv gets a phone call from the tea stall owner. Dhruv says, “Hello? What’s the matter?” The tea stall owner says, “Dhruv sir, I got an order.” Dhruv says, “What order?” The tea stall owner says, “I got a call to take 50 young girls to Kolkata.” Dhruv, hearing this, is a bit shocked because this is a massive human trafficking issue. Dhruv says, “Wait, I’m coming with you.” He tells the minister, “Minister, I’m leaving, there’s an urgent matter.” The minister says, “What happened, Dhruv? You seem troubled.” Dhruv says, “Our destination isn’t far now, Minister,” and he puts on his glasses and tells his fellow officers to take the bodies for postmortem. Just then, we see trucks parked on Mumbai’s highway, where Dhruv arrives in his car with his colleagues. The tea stall owner is in the driver’s seat of the truck, and Dhruv gets out of his car and sits in the passenger seat next to him. He starts the truck toward Kolkata. On the way, Dhruv and the tea stall owner are talking. Dhruv speaks to him as if trying to extract some truth. Dhruv says, “You must be happy today, tea stall owner.” Dhruv continues, “You got a big order today, probably because of your work style.” The tea stall owner laughs and says, “No, Dhruv sir, this isn’t the first time. I’ve gotten such orders before, and they were even bigger than this one.” Hearing this, Dhruv falls silent. He removes his glasses from his eyes and looks out the window, thinking. He thinks, “This means it’s not the first time; such massive human trafficking has been happening before.
” From this, we understand that Dhruv isn’t a bad person; he has always been good. He has planned to expose all this by staying among them to bring their deeds to an end. Dhruv then says, “Where did you get so many girls so quickly?” The tea stall owner says, “Sir, those NGO people, you know, ask for as many as you want, however you want, they provide that many girls. I even brought three or four extra ones; we’ll need them on the way for you and me.” Dhruv’s eyes are filled with anger, but he controls himself. Having come this far, he doesn’t want to make any wrong decisions that could ruin all his carefully laid plans.As the night turns pitch black while driving, we see the truck driver, the tea stall owner, step out to freshen up by the roadside. Just then, we see Dhruv sending his current location to someone on his phone. The tea stall owner returns, and they exchange a glance, giving a faint smile. The truck is started again.
A little further ahead, we see the highway is eerily deserted, as if this is the only truck moving, surrounded by darkness, with a faint light visible far in the distance. Suddenly, the driver notices something. As they move closer, they see another truck, identical to theirs, standing in the middle of the road. The tea stall owner, who is driving, honks repeatedly, but the other truck ignores it, as if no one is inside. He gets out and goes to talk tothe other truck’s driver. We see the driver slumped over the steering wheel, blood dripping from his head, a knife lodged in his back. Seeing this, the tea stall owner panics and goes to the back of the other truck, opening its door, only to find all the girls missing. The doors remain open, and for the first time, the tea stall owner looks genuinely terrified. He wipes his face with a handkerchief and calls out to Dhruv from near his truck. Dhruv comes down and says, “What happened?” The tea stall owner says, “The other driver is dead, and all the girls are gone.” He is visibly shaken and scared. Dhruv pretends to think, wipes his face, looks down at the ground, and says, “Before something happens to us, we need to get out of here.”
The tea stall owner says, “But who could have done this, sir?” Dhruv says, “Probably someone from a rival trafficking group is behind this.” Saying this, Dhruv quickly gets back into the truck, and they start driving away. Just then, we see the other truck still standing there, and on top of it are five people wearing black masks. They all remove their masks, and one of them is Rudra. This scene is utterly shocking because everyone thought Rudra was dead, and it was believed Dhruv had killed him, as the police had taken Rudra away, and a charred body was later found, assumed to be his. Rudra, now removing his mask and holding it in his hand, reveals his face clearly for the first time, marked with old scars, perhaps still fresh. He says to his companions, “Our work is still incomplete. We have to finish it now,” and he begins to smile faintly.
As the truck keeps moving, the second day has begun, and it’s already evening. The truck has reached its destination. We see it has arrived at Petrapole. Dhruv and the tea stall owner are both exhausted, and the truck is stopped at one spot. We see another truck parked ahead, likely a government truck that will move forward from here, possibly toward Bangladesh. Dhruv is deeply troubled, thinking to himself that he assumed this was all happening within India, but now the connection extends abroad—this is a massive international human trafficking incident. In his mind, Dhruv wonders how he alone can stop this. Just then, four or five people get out of the truck ahead and approach. Suddenly, we see another truck speeding from behind Dhruv’s truck. As it gets closer, the driver opens the door and jumps out, and the truck crashes directly into four of the five people, injuring them. The truck stops after hitting their truck. Dhruv and the tea stall owner quickly get out. The tea stall owner, extremely distressed, says, “Who could have done this? How will our work be completed now?” Just then, we see Dhruv pull out a gun hidden in his pants, shoot the one person who survived, and then shoot the injured ones, killing them. In a rage, he grabs the tea stall owner by the hair from behind, yanking his head back. We see the driver who jumped out, wearing a mask, approaching Dhruv. Four other people who were on the speeding truck get down. The tea stall owner, in distress, says to Dhruv, “You betrayed me!” Dhruv replies, “You should get used to betrayal.” Just then, we see the masked driver remove his mask, revealing Rudra. The tea stall owner is shocked to see Rudra, believing Dhruv had killed him, but he’s alive. Rudra approaches the tea stall owner and says, “Are only your men everywhere? Can’t we have ours too?” Then we see Dhruv hand the tea stall owner over to Rudra and pull out a knife from his pants—the same knife with the Baphomet symbol. He starts slashing the bodies of the dead men on the ground with it and then discards the knife. He takes out a lighter from his pocket, also marked with the Baphomet symbol, has his men pour diesel on the truck, and sets it ablaze with the lighter, leaving it there to burn. He discards the lighter too, ensuring the government and Aadi (Kaliyug) and his connections see this as a mistake. After this, Dhruv starts attacking the tea stall owner, kicking him in the stomach until blood comes out of his mouth, beating him half to death. Then, using the same knife, he kills him and discards him there.
Together, they get into the tea stall owner’s truck with the girls and head back toward India.Rudra and Dhruv are now in the same truck, with their companions on top of it, heading back toward Mumbai. Here, we see that the act Dhruv put on in front of the tea stall owner—shooting Rudra and announcing his death—was all a ruse to bring the tea stall owner under their control. Now together, Dhruv says, “What’s next? This network is connected abroad.” Rudra says, “The end of Kaliyug is coming. I’ll completely destroy him.” Dhruv says, “I’ll bring that beast back to Mumbai and punish him in the middle of the intersection, even if the government throws me in jail for it.” The truck keeps moving forward.The story shifts back to the past, when the girls’ deaths happened at Navdeep Chowk. Before Dhruv’s death, he meets Rudra, who was standing at the crime scene. Dhruv was alone then, having already
sent his colleagues to Navdeep Chowk. He went there like a stranger to investigate the incident. There, he follows Rudra, who goes to his house, which is a little far from the crime scene. Dhruv follows him, and Rudra reaches his house. We see Rudra secretly investigating something at his home. Then he notices in a mirror that Dhruv is standing behind him. Dhruv says, “I told you, didn’t I? You’ll get caught someday. It’s not so dark today.” Rudra says, “You think these are small deaths, but they’re all part of a much bigger conspiracy. You came here later; before you, corrupt people like Raja ruined everything.” Dhruv says, “But I’m new, and I know you know way too much. By the way, what’s your name?” Then Rudra tells Dhruv his name for the first time, “My name is Rudra, and for years, I’ve been hunting the main culprit behind these killings. I go to every place where a death happens to see who their people are and identify them, because this web is far bigger than we can imagine.” Dhruv says, “What do you know about all this?” Rudra tells Dhruv, “These aren’t ordinary killings; they’re all human trafficking cases, spread across every state. The minister, Durjan Singh, and other big names are involved, so I’m doing this secretly. If you want my help, I’ll help you, trusting you, but you won’t tell anyone else. I don’t trust others.” Dhruv says, “I didn’t know Raja was involved. Then why was he killed?” Rudra says, “He must have made some mistake, so they killed him.” Rudra says, “Listen, the tea stall owner I saw at yesterday’s killing was also at Navdeep Chowk today. So, Dhruv, pretend to join their gang in front of him, and if needed, shoot me. We’ll wipe them out together.” Hearing this, Dhruv goes back to Navdeep Chowk in his car, where he actually sees the tea stall owner. Then Rudra starts following him. Later, Dhruv pretends to be part of the tea stall owner’s group and shoots at Rudra. To convince the tea stall owner he’s with them, Dhruv says he’ll kill Rudra. By doing this, he kills one of their men, burns the body, and spreads the news that Rudra is dead, making the tea stall owner trust Dhruv.
We return to the present, where Dhruv is driving the truck. He says to Rudra, “I’ll call the minister and tell him everything now, because the minister himself is an enemy of Kaliyug, so he’ll surely help us destroy him.” As Dhruv is about to call the minister, we see Rudra looking troubled, panicked. As Dhruv makes the call, Rudra suddenly hits him hard on the head with the butt of a gun. Blood starts pouring from Dhruv’s head, a lot of it. He is shocked, wondering why Rudra attacked him when he had shared everything with him. Before he can think further, Rudra grabs his head and slams it against the steering wheel again, then hits him with the gun’s butt once more. Just then, we see Dhruv, covered in blood, somehow manage to turn the steering wheel and open the door, jumping out onto the road where there are dense bushes on a steep slope. Before Rudra can do anything, Dhruv jumps, and Rudra speeds off with the truck. Due to the injury to his head, Dhruvis unconscious, but he somehow managed to save himself from death. However, he couldn’t understand why Rudra did this to him.
At the farmhouse, laughter echoed, wine poured, music thumped. High-profile guests mingled behind closed gates.The girls arrived.“Where’s Aadi?” one of the guards asked.Durjan’s men explained everything —including the fire.“The NGO’s gone,” one said.Durjan’s eyes narrowed. “Raga was inside?”They nodded. “The explosion was huge. No one could’ve survived.”
Back on the roadside, it was exactly midnight.Aadi stood next to his car. His shirt was half-buttoned, his phone in hand. His expression was calm —too calm.The minister called again.“So, it’s done? You got him?”Aadi gave a faint smile. “To grow a business, Minister... the first step is to remove the competition.”Durjan’s voice dropped. “Go underground. This is big. Too loud.”Aadi looked ahead into the dark, then whispered,“I don’t hide in the dark, Minister...I am the dark.”The gang from Aadi’s crew leaves the girls at Minister Durjan’s place and walks away.The minister says, “I’ll call you once those girls’ job is done. Then bring them back.”They reply, “Alright, Ministerji.”Without warning, the minister takes those three girls to a party.In the crowd, the girls vanish without a trace.
A little later, the phone rings —Officer Raja calling the minister.The minister, adjusting his kurta, smoking a cigarette at his farmhouse, presses the phone between his ear and shoulder as he talks.“Raja, what’s this? Calling so late at night?”Raja responds, “Minister, what are you doing right now?”The minister replies, “Nothing much. What’s up?”Raja says, “A girl’s dead body was found at the crossing near Raga’s NGO. Minister ji, is this how you deal with girls? Killing them brutally like this? If the media catches wind, it’s going to be a massive problem.”“We’re only a few here, just me and a couple of my men,” Raja adds.Raja snaps, “Why did you kill her? You could have just sent her to me —I would have handled it differently.”The minister sharply replies, “Quiet. Now tell me exactly what happened.”The man on the line says, “That girl was beaten badly, she didn’t even have clothes on. A lighter was found near her.”Raja says, “That lighter definitely belongs to Aadi. My men confirmed it.”The minister picks up his phone and calls Aadi.“Hey Aadi, what the hell have you done? First Raga, now this? At this rate, your life’s going to end up in jail.”Aadi answers calmly, “Chill, Ministerji. She was making too much noise; I couldn’t take it anymore.”The minister hangs up and immediately calls Raja again.“Get this case buried. Dispose of that girl somewhere far, and make sure no one finds out.”Meanwhile, on the other end, Aadi’s arrogance is growing, like nothing can touch him because the minister’s backing him.
A little later, the minister brings the girls back, places his hand roughly on their heads, and says, “No crying. We’ll drop you at your homes now. Understand?”Then the minister calls Durjan’s men.Their car arrives shortly after, and they take the girls with them—intoxicated, lifeless.After a while, sitting in the car with a group of ruthless people, Aadi gets a phone call. Aadi picks up the phone, and one of the men says to him, “What do we do with these girls now? Where do we take them?” Aadi replies, “Kill them all. Because of them, if not today, then tomorrow, we’ll all get caught.” The men say, “Hey Aadi, the minister told us not to kill them.” Aadi says, “Look, the minister has power, but you and your men can go to jail anytime. Understand this, play with these girls, kill them, and throw them away.
”A little later, we see Aadi driving to the police station, talking to Raja. Raja says, “Is this your lighter? You’re acting like the devil’s own devil.” Raja says, “Listen, the minister told me you’re his new man, but you’re doing all this. Don’t throw bodies on the road this time, or do such acts in public. Because of your actions, the minister and all of us will get caught. Get out of here.” Saying this, Aadi stares at Raja as if Raja has mocked him, insulted his honor. Aadi quietly leaves from there.Just then, while Aadi is on the road, his accomplice calls him and says, “What do we do with the girls now? Where do we bury them?” Aadi says, “Bring the girls in the car to the road near our old hideout, I’ll take care of it.” Then we see those men bring the car to the place Aadi mentioned, and Aadi exchanges the car there and tells them to leave. Aadi is also driving away, and we see it's midnight, and he’s brought the car to the police station intersection. We see Aadi stop the car; the intersection is completely empty. He takes out a knife from his car, one he always keeps with him, marked with the symbol of Baphomet. He goes to the back with the knife and starts attacking the already dead girls with it, like a madman, as if he’s taking out all his anger against Raja on their bodies. His car is covered in blood—his seats, his glass, everything is drenched in blood. And then, in that state, he lifts the dead girls one by one, throws all four of them at the intersection, along with his knife, and leaves from there.
At 4 a.m., the scene shifts to the crime scene where three bodies are found in a horrific state. A crowd has gathered there, and the police are present too. This entire incident happened right near Officer Raja’s police station, so now people have questionsabout Raja, wondering how someone could commit such an act right in front of his station while he was there. Raja knows full well that this is all Aadi’s doing, and he is furious. Ignoring the crowd’s murmurs and the reports, he is lost in angry thoughts.He directly calls the minister. The minister, Durjan Singh, was sleeping and picks up the phone, saying, “What’s wrong, Raja? Won’t you let me sleep today?” Raja says, “Minister, what kind of man have you roped in with us? This guy will get us all hanged!” The minister gets out of bed, puts on his glasses, and says, “What happened, Raja?” Raja says, “Your man Aadi left three blood-soaked bodies at the police station intersection, and along with them, he left his knife with that satanic Baphomet symbol, as if he’s not afraid of anything.” Raja says, “Minister, I’m not listening to you anymore. I’ll catch him and break his legs wherever I find him.” The minister says, “Wait, let me talk to him. Stay on hold.” Then he calls Aadi, but there’s no answer from Aadi’s side. The minister reconnects with Raja and says, “Aadi isn’t picking up the phone.” Raja says, “No matter, Minister, I’ll drag that rat out from any corner.” While all this is happening, we see that at this crime scene, far in the distance, Rudra is standing. He has a cap on his head and is wearing glasses.
The minister kept speaking Dhruv about that night five years ago when Aadi vanished after the incident. He recalled how Aadi returned to Mumbai after those five years, completely changed. The minister said, “Even as a leader, I was nothing in front of him. He had gained immense power and connections, somehow. Whenever the police, especially Raja, thought of taking action against him, calls would come from higher-ups. His wealth and connections grew so much that no one could touch him. But I had a hand in turning Aadi to Kaliyug, and because he still had some respect for me, he didn’t harm Raja when I asked him not to. So, we all started working together. But day by day, his behavior grew more bloodthirsty; he was drowning in the intoxication of arrogance.” Dhruv asked, “Minister, where was he during those five years? Do you know anything?” The minister replied, “No, there was no trace of him anywhere. He came back with a new name.
”In the present,
Officer Dhruv stands outside the minister’s house, where a large crowd of people, reporters, and police are still gathered. Just then, Dhruv gets a phone call from the tea stall owner. Dhruv says, “Hello? What’s the matter?” The tea stall owner says, “Dhruv sir, I got an order.” Dhruv says, “What order?” The tea stall owner says, “I got a call to take 50 young girls to Kolkata.” Dhruv, hearing this, is a bit shocked because this is a massive human trafficking issue. Dhruv says, “Wait, I’m coming with you.” He tells the minister, “Minister, I’m leaving, there’s an urgent matter.” The minister says, “What happened, Dhruv? You seem troubled.” Dhruv says, “Our destination isn’t far now, Minister,” and he puts on his glasses and tells his fellow officers to take the bodies for postmortem. Just then, we see trucks parked on Mumbai’s highway, where Dhruv arrives in his car with his colleagues. The tea stall owner is in the driver’s seat of the truck, and Dhruv gets out of his car and sits in the passenger seat next to him. He starts the truck toward Kolkata. On the way, Dhruv and the tea stall owner are talking. Dhruv speaks to him as if trying to extract some truth. Dhruv says, “You must be happy today, tea stall owner.” Dhruv continues, “You got a big order today, probably because of your work style.” The tea stall owner laughs and says, “No, Dhruv sir, this isn’t the first time. I’ve gotten such orders before, and they were even bigger than this one.” Hearing this, Dhruv falls silent. He removes his glasses from his eyes and looks out the window, thinking. He thinks, “This means it’s not the first time; such massive human trafficking has been happening before.
” From this, we understand that Dhruv isn’t a bad person; he has always been good. He has planned to expose all this by staying among them to bring their deeds to an end. Dhruv then says, “Where did you get so many girls so quickly?” The tea stall owner says, “Sir, those NGO people, you know, ask for as many as you want, however you want, they provide that many girls. I even brought three or four extra ones; we’ll need them on the way for you and me.” Dhruv’s eyes are filled with anger, but he controls himself. Having come this far, he doesn’t want to make any wrong decisions that could ruin all his carefully laid plans.As the night turns pitch black while driving, we see the truck driver, the tea stall owner, step out to freshen up by the roadside. Just then, we see Dhruv sending his current location to someone on his phone. The tea stall owner returns, and they exchange a glance, giving a faint smile. The truck is started again.
A little further ahead, we see the highway is eerily deserted, as if this is the only truck moving, surrounded by darkness, with a faint light visible far in the distance. Suddenly, the driver notices something. As they move closer, they see another truck, identical to theirs, standing in the middle of the road. The tea stall owner, who is driving, honks repeatedly, but the other truck ignores it, as if no one is inside. He gets out and goes to talk tothe other truck’s driver. We see the driver slumped over the steering wheel, blood dripping from his head, a knife lodged in his back. Seeing this, the tea stall owner panics and goes to the back of the other truck, opening its door, only to find all the girls missing. The doors remain open, and for the first time, the tea stall owner looks genuinely terrified. He wipes his face with a handkerchief and calls out to Dhruv from near his truck. Dhruv comes down and says, “What happened?” The tea stall owner says, “The other driver is dead, and all the girls are gone.” He is visibly shaken and scared. Dhruv pretends to think, wipes his face, looks down at the ground, and says, “Before something happens to us, we need to get out of here.”
The tea stall owner says, “But who could have done this, sir?” Dhruv says, “Probably someone from a rival trafficking group is behind this.” Saying this, Dhruv quickly gets back into the truck, and they start driving away. Just then, we see the other truck still standing there, and on top of it are five people wearing black masks. They all remove their masks, and one of them is Rudra. This scene is utterly shocking because everyone thought Rudra was dead, and it was believed Dhruv had killed him, as the police had taken Rudra away, and a charred body was later found, assumed to be his. Rudra, now removing his mask and holding it in his hand, reveals his face clearly for the first time, marked with old scars, perhaps still fresh. He says to his companions, “Our work is still incomplete. We have to finish it now,” and he begins to smile faintly.
As the truck keeps moving, the second day has begun, and it’s already evening. The truck has reached its destination. We see it has arrived at Petrapole. Dhruv and the tea stall owner are both exhausted, and the truck is stopped at one spot. We see another truck parked ahead, likely a government truck that will move forward from here, possibly toward Bangladesh. Dhruv is deeply troubled, thinking to himself that he assumed this was all happening within India, but now the connection extends abroad—this is a massive international human trafficking incident. In his mind, Dhruv wonders how he alone can stop this. Just then, four or five people get out of the truck ahead and approach. Suddenly, we see another truck speeding from behind Dhruv’s truck. As it gets closer, the driver opens the door and jumps out, and the truck crashes directly into four of the five people, injuring them. The truck stops after hitting their truck. Dhruv and the tea stall owner quickly get out. The tea stall owner, extremely distressed, says, “Who could have done this? How will our work be completed now?” Just then, we see Dhruv pull out a gun hidden in his pants, shoot the one person who survived, and then shoot the injured ones, killing them. In a rage, he grabs the tea stall owner by the hair from behind, yanking his head back. We see the driver who jumped out, wearing a mask, approaching Dhruv. Four other people who were on the speeding truck get down. The tea stall owner, in distress, says to Dhruv, “You betrayed me!” Dhruv replies, “You should get used to betrayal.” Just then, we see the masked driver remove his mask, revealing Rudra. The tea stall owner is shocked to see Rudra, believing Dhruv had killed him, but he’s alive. Rudra approaches the tea stall owner and says, “Are only your men everywhere? Can’t we have ours too?” Then we see Dhruv hand the tea stall owner over to Rudra and pull out a knife from his pants—the same knife with the Baphomet symbol. He starts slashing the bodies of the dead men on the ground with it and then discards the knife. He takes out a lighter from his pocket, also marked with the Baphomet symbol, has his men pour diesel on the truck, and sets it ablaze with the lighter, leaving it there to burn. He discards the lighter too, ensuring the government and Aadi (Kaliyug) and his connections see this as a mistake. After this, Dhruv starts attacking the tea stall owner, kicking him in the stomach until blood comes out of his mouth, beating him half to death. Then, using the same knife, he kills him and discards him there.
Together, they get into the tea stall owner’s truck with the girls and head back toward India.Rudra and Dhruv are now in the same truck, with their companions on top of it, heading back toward Mumbai. Here, we see that the act Dhruv put on in front of the tea stall owner—shooting Rudra and announcing his death—was all a ruse to bring the tea stall owner under their control. Now together, Dhruv says, “What’s next? This network is connected abroad.” Rudra says, “The end of Kaliyug is coming. I’ll completely destroy him.” Dhruv says, “I’ll bring that beast back to Mumbai and punish him in the middle of the intersection, even if the government throws me in jail for it.” The truck keeps moving forward.The story shifts back to the past, when the girls’ deaths happened at Navdeep Chowk. Before Dhruv’s death, he meets Rudra, who was standing at the crime scene. Dhruv was alone then, having already
sent his colleagues to Navdeep Chowk. He went there like a stranger to investigate the incident. There, he follows Rudra, who goes to his house, which is a little far from the crime scene. Dhruv follows him, and Rudra reaches his house. We see Rudra secretly investigating something at his home. Then he notices in a mirror that Dhruv is standing behind him. Dhruv says, “I told you, didn’t I? You’ll get caught someday. It’s not so dark today.” Rudra says, “You think these are small deaths, but they’re all part of a much bigger conspiracy. You came here later; before you, corrupt people like Raja ruined everything.” Dhruv says, “But I’m new, and I know you know way too much. By the way, what’s your name?” Then Rudra tells Dhruv his name for the first time, “My name is Rudra, and for years, I’ve been hunting the main culprit behind these killings. I go to every place where a death happens to see who their people are and identify them, because this web is far bigger than we can imagine.” Dhruv says, “What do you know about all this?” Rudra tells Dhruv, “These aren’t ordinary killings; they’re all human trafficking cases, spread across every state. The minister, Durjan Singh, and other big names are involved, so I’m doing this secretly. If you want my help, I’ll help you, trusting you, but you won’t tell anyone else. I don’t trust others.” Dhruv says, “I didn’t know Raja was involved. Then why was he killed?” Rudra says, “He must have made some mistake, so they killed him.” Rudra says, “Listen, the tea stall owner I saw at yesterday’s killing was also at Navdeep Chowk today. So, Dhruv, pretend to join their gang in front of him, and if needed, shoot me. We’ll wipe them out together.” Hearing this, Dhruv goes back to Navdeep Chowk in his car, where he actually sees the tea stall owner. Then Rudra starts following him. Later, Dhruv pretends to be part of the tea stall owner’s group and shoots at Rudra. To convince the tea stall owner he’s with them, Dhruv says he’ll kill Rudra. By doing this, he kills one of their men, burns the body, and spreads the news that Rudra is dead, making the tea stall owner trust Dhruv.
We return to the present, where Dhruv is driving the truck. He says to Rudra, “I’ll call the minister and tell him everything now, because the minister himself is an enemy of Kaliyug, so he’ll surely help us destroy him.” As Dhruv is about to call the minister, we see Rudra looking troubled, panicked. As Dhruv makes the call, Rudra suddenly hits him hard on the head with the butt of a gun. Blood starts pouring from Dhruv’s head, a lot of it. He is shocked, wondering why Rudra attacked him when he had shared everything with him. Before he can think further, Rudra grabs his head and slams it against the steering wheel again, then hits him with the gun’s butt once more. Just then, we see Dhruv, covered in blood, somehow manage to turn the steering wheel and open the door, jumping out onto the road where there are dense bushes on a steep slope. Before Rudra can do anything, Dhruv jumps, and Rudra speeds off with the truck. Due to the injury to his head, Dhruvis unconscious, but he somehow managed to save himself from death. However, he couldn’t understand why Rudra did this to him.