Dr. Sameer, when interrogated, maintained professional distance. He confessed to reformulating stabilizers but insisted his work never left the lab. His alibi—he had been cataloguing raw materials—stood, but his calmness cracked when Rani mentioned Saanjh. He had loved Meera once, he admitted, in the sort of quiet way that makes confessions sound like apologies.
The killer’s lab is a twisted sanctuary. It contrasts the filth of the outside world with the sterile, clinical environment where he practices his dark art. This duality—between the chaotic streets of India and the silent, deadly clean room—creates a tension that keeps the viewer on edge.
The plot escalates when three women from a local dating app go missing. Detective (played by Kalki Venkatesh) discovers that the only connection between the victims is a rare, mesmerizing perfume sample they all wore a week before their disappearance.
The story revolves around a mysterious protagonist obsessed with scents, echoing themes from the famous novel and 2006 film Perfume: The Story of a Murderer . In this modern Hindi adaptation, the narrative focuses on a killer who uses the allure of perfume to trap and murder victims.