Mary (recurring from S1, now running a safe house for exploited children) is terrified when Hathi Ram arrives. She hands him a torn envelope. Inside: photos of young girls with their eyes blurred out, and a handwritten note: “Yogi Mishra’s ‘Seva Ashram’ — not for God. For men in uniform.”

He steps outside. The lane is filled with anti-CAA and Dalit-rights posters. A new political fire is rising, and Hathi Ram is stuck in the middle.

Hathi Ram checks the phone. It has one outgoing call — to a number saved as “S.” He runs it through Ansari’s database. The number belongs to Sanjeev “Sattu” Mishra , Yogi Mishra’s younger brother and an MLA from a constituency bordering Nepal.

Here’s a story for , continuing the dark, gritty, and politically charged tone of the series. Episode 2: "Mitti Ki Goli" (Bullet of Mud)

Final shot: Hathi Ram looks at the phone, then at the photo of the blurred girls. His hand trembles. Flashback to his father’s beaten face. He whispers: “Ab dikhaunga Paatal lok.” (Now I’ll show them the underworld.)

DCP Meghna Barua (new character, sharp, ambitious) calls a meeting. A prominent Dalit activist, Dr. Sanjay Khare , has been missing for 48 hours. His last location: a luxury farmhouse in South Delhi owned by Yogendra “Yogi” Mishra — a spiritual guru turned political kingmaker, rumored to control three MPs and a drug network from Himachal to Bangladesh.

Hathi Ram is assigned the case — reluctantly — alongside , who is still recovering from a limp (a souvenir from Season 1). Their brief: find Khare in 72 hours before riots erupt.

But the twist: last night, that same number received a text from a blocked ID: “Khare’s CD is fake. But the real one is still in play. Burn everything.”

Flashback. A small, rain-soaked village in Bihar, 1995. A young Hathi Ram Chaudhary (teenager) watches his father, a local constable, get humiliated and stripped of his uniform by an upper-caste landlord. The landlord spits on the uniform. Hathi Ram’s father does nothing. That night, Hathi Ram steals the landlord’s horse and drowns it in a well. His father beats him bloody, whispering: “Gussa rakh, lekin dikhana nahi. Paatal lok aise hi jeeta hai.” (Keep your anger, but don’t show it. The underworld survives like this.)

Hathi Ram and Ansari visit Khare’s last known location — a college campus where he gave a fiery speech: “They call us rats of Paatal Lok. But rats bite back when you burn their holes.” A student whispers to Hathi Ram: “Sir, Khare sir had proof — a CD. Something about a child trafficking ring linked to a temple in Haridwar. The CD is with Mary… from the shelter home.”

Bobby is paid in old currency notes and a promise: “Next election, your community gets a ticket.”

Suddenly, gunshots. A black Scorpio with tinted windows sprays the shelter. Mary is hit in the shoulder. Hathi Ram fires back — kills one shooter. The other escapes, but drops a mobile phone.

Hathi Ram wakes up from the nightmare, drenched in sweat. He’s in a cheap motel in North East Delhi, not home. His phone buzzes — Renu has texted: “Sanskar puch raha tha. Tu kahan hai?” He deletes it. No answer.

In the shadows of Ghazipur landfill, a transgender don named Bobby (introduced in Ep 1) runs a disposal network. She delivers a plastic sack to a BJP corporator’s office. Inside: Dr. Khare’s bloodied glasses and a finger with a ring — the same ring Khare wore in his viral protest videos.