“You have graduated in cruelty,” Gabbar says. “Now receive your diploma in consequence.”
Outside, the city lights flicker. On a wall across the street, someone has spray-painted a fresh red handprint.
He recites Kabir’s crimes: six kidnapped students, three dead, two sold. Then he uses a surgical laser—poetic irony—to burn the Seth family crest off Kabir’s chest. Not fatal. Humiliating. Terrifying.
Vikram removes his mask. For the first time, Seth sees his face.
He breaks into Seth’s university during a graduation ceremony. He cuts the power. When the lights come back, Kabir Seth is tied to the dean’s chair, a live microphone taped to his throat. Gabbar stands behind him, speaking in a distorted voice that echoes across the stadium.
The doors burst open. Commissioner Pandey, now sweating under federal investigation, is forced to lead the raid. Seth is arrested not by a vigilante, but by the very system he corrupted—exposed beyond repair. Six months later. Tezpur is different. Not perfect. But different.
“So am I.”
The final confrontation is set at the incomplete “Seth Tower,” a skyscraper built on land stolen from Tara’s village.
“Commissioner,” Seth says calmly. “My son has been attacked. Release the Riot Act. And bring me the head of this… Gabbar.”
Below it, three words: