<p><b>When Mumbai's monsoon rages even the smartest homes harbor deadly secrets.</b></p><p>In the sealed study of his high-tech Juhu mansion tech entrepreneur Anirudh Sharma is found dead from carbon monoxide poisoning—killed by a generator that should have been impossible to start. The only witness? His extraordinarily trained German Shepherd Raja who sits calmly beside the body as if nothing happened.</p><p><b>The crime appears impossible. The solution seems obvious. Both assumptions are catastrophically wrong.</b></p><p>Inspector Meera Joshi thinks she's investigating Mumbai's most sophisticated murder: a brilliant killer who turned cutting-edge animal conditioning into the perfect weapon. The evidence is compelling—Raja can perform forty-seven complex tasks triggered by specific sounds including operating mechanical devices. Expert testimony confirms a dog could theoretically commit this crime.</p><p>But as monsoon waters recede and secrets surface Meera discovers that the most elaborate theories often hide the simplest most brutal truths.</p><p><b>In rain-soaked Mumbai where technology meets tradition and wealth borders poverty the real murder weapon isn't artificial intelligence—it's eight years of casual cruelty finally demanding payment.</b></p>