This book is a story of women who feel like objects or of women fighting for their rights. It will give you many perspectives, but it boils down to one: what’s right and what’s wrong. A team of police forces wants to catch a serial killer murdering the citizens. Inspector Rithika Murthy is the Thalaivi, the badass queen of justice and empathy. But her new case makes her question the judicial system of her country. A system that she worships and goes by religiously, a system that she believes puts law and order in place. But when that system is broken by a criminal who goes around the country murdering non-convicted criminals like a demon, she starts questioning the books she has learned over the years to protect the righteousness in society. Is it okay to take the judicial system into our hands when justice is delayed and denied? Inspector Rithika Murthy, along with her sub-inspector Muthuswamy and her supportive parents, go on this journey of finding the murderer as they unravel the answers of judicial righteousness. Whose side do you think Rithika will take? The corrupt police and CBI teams or the criminals working for the right thing in the wrong manner?