Abhay S2 Apr 2026

For the first time, Vedant hesitates. That hesitation costs him — Tara escapes, and Abhay subdues Vedant not with violence, but by mirroring Vedant’s own psychological trick: showing him a fabricated video of his daughter, whom he lost custody of, saying "My father is a monster." Vedant breaks.

Diwakar: "He’s not copying you, Abhay. He’s finishing what you started."

The season ends with Abhay reinstated — but changed. He walks out of the police station, past a row of junior officers saluting him, and gets into an auto-rickshaw. Tara watches him go. Her final line: "He's not a hero. He's a warning." abhay s2

Vedant, in a high-security prison, smiles at a blank wall. He whispers, "Phase two begins." The wall flickers — it’s a hidden screen showing a live feed of Abhay’s new address. Someone else is watching. Someone Vedant answers to.

Logline: A year after being suspended for his brutal methods, Abhay is secretly brought back when a killer starts recreating the unsolved murders from his own past — forcing him to hunt a ghost who knows his mind better than he does. The story opens on a rain-soaked night in Chandigarh. A woman is found dead in her locked apartment, posed like a sleeping bride. No forced entry. No DNA. Only a single word carved into the floor beside her: ABHAY . For the first time, Vedant hesitates

Abhay doesn't shoot. Instead, he sits down in front of the screen and tells Vedant the one thing he never told anyone: "I don't want to punish my father. I want to understand why I still love him."

The climax isn’t a shootout. Vedant kidnaps Tara and locks her inside a replica of Abhay’s childhood bedroom — the same room where Abhay witnessed his father kill his mother and then himself. Vedant plays a live feed: "You became a cop to punish your father. But you never could. So you punish everyone else. Kill me, and you prove my point. Spare me, and you admit you’re broken." He’s finishing what you started

Reluctantly, Abhay returns — off the books. He’s teamed with a new, young officer, (new character, played by Radhika Madan), a cyber-psychology prodigy who believes in data, not gut feelings. She despises his methods. He thinks she’s a rookie with a laptop. Together, they trace the killer's digital breadcrumbs to a forgotten case: the Tandoor Twins murder from 2016 — Abhay’s very first unsolved case. The one that made him stop believing in justice.

The killer's identity unravels slowly. It’s (played by Kay Kay Menon) — a disgraced forensic psychiatrist who was once Abhay’s academy instructor. Vedant was secretly the architect behind several of Abhay’s early "instinct-led" arrests, feeding him psychological profiles to make him look like a genius. But when Vedant was imprisoned for illegal human experiments, Abhay refused to testify for him. Now, Vedant is out on a technicality and is murdering to prove a dark thesis: "There’s no difference between a serial killer and a cop — only permission."

Cut to Abhay Pratap Singh (Kunal Khemu), now living in a rented room in Rishikesh, working at a transport company under a fake name. He's hollowed out — no gun, no badge, just PTSD and a busted knee. His old partner, Diwakar (Vineet Kumar), visits him with news: three murders in two weeks, all linked to Abhay’s old case files. The killer is using Abhay’s own interrogation techniques against the victims — psychological torture, timed silences, planted evidence of betrayal.