The series starts with Aarya apparently succumbing to a shot by some unknown assailant and then flashes back to the past to trace the incidents that led to the catastrophe. With the foreign mob seeking compensation for their lost loot, the police relentlessly sniffing to find a crack in her empire to take her down, a new threat emerges in the form of Nalini Sahiba, a menacing empress in the drug cartel, dreaded for hunting down her enemies till their deaths lie awaited. To complicate matters much further, the young adults among her wards rebel and revolt when her moves inadvertently wreaks their immediate dreams. Friend doubts, authorities tighten their incessant traps, enemies lurk around and time seems to run short. While moles are planted inside the camps, beliefs are shaken of the nearer allies.
What remains to be seen is whether Aarya can overcome all obstacles and regain control or will she succumb to the strikes both mental and physical! With old allies loosing faith and code of the trade causing startling twists, relations lying dormant need to be forged from the cruel past to elicit safety for the fragile present! This apparent season finale is a must watch for completeness and I stress this to be apparent finale as the climactic moment could well be a closing event but can as well be considered a cliffhanger sequence. Besides the character that Sushmita Sen plays, the only other character with perennial appeal seems Sampat, acted by Viswajeet Pradhan whose natural coarseness always brings a sense of lively thrill to the plot. So, though there are episodes where the plot seems forced, but the underlying theme that avoids indulging in the guilty pleasure of the genre should be enough for this to be critically watched.