Abhay Season 2 - Episode 8 menu
Abhay Season 2 - Episode 8

Abhay Season 2 - Episode 8 Page

What is remarkable about Khemu’s performance here is the silence. There is no screaming monologue, no wild shooting spree. When Abhay realizes Bhairavi has killed the one person he loves off-screen (to protect the child), Khemu simply stops. His eyes go dead. It is the look of a man who has turned off his humanity like a light switch.

Warning: Major spoilers ahead for Abhay Season 2, Episode 8.

Episode 8 picks up in real-time. Abhay stands in a freezing warehouse, the monsoon rain drilling against the tin roof. Across from him, Bhairavi isn't hiding anymore. He is sitting calmly, sipping tea, holding a detonator linked to a bomb strapped to Abhay’s partner, Sonali (Nidhi Singh). Kunal Khemu has spent two seasons playing Abhay as a man on the edge of a nervous breakdown. In Episode 8, he finally falls off.

The ensuing interrogation is brutal. Abhay doesn't torture Bhairavi with tools; he tortures him with logic, dismantling his philosophy of "cleaning the world's trash" by pointing out that Bhairavi is the biggest monster in the room. The episode cleverly introduces a third party: the high command (Vijay Raaz, in a chilling cameo). They want Bhairavi alive. He is a trophy—a serial killer caught by the system. But Abhay wants him dead. The police station becomes a battlefield of bureaucracy. Abhay Season 2 - Episode 8

Streaming now on ZEE5.

This breaks Abhay more than the murder itself. He realizes he is a man defined by vengeance, but his victim—the love of his life—was defined by love. He cannot avenge someone who died willingly. The climax is not a gunfight. Abhay sits in his car, holding the detonator Bhairavi dropped. He has two choices: turn the killer in (justice) or blow up the car (revenge). The camera holds on his finger for 30 agonizing seconds.

Did he kill the killer? Did he kill himself? The show refuses to tell you. Abhay Season 2, Episode 8 is not a happy finale. It is a thesis statement on trauma. Kunal Khemu proves he is one of the most underrated actors in the streaming space, carrying the weight of a broken system on his shoulders. What is remarkable about Khemu’s performance here is

In a shocking subversion of the "anti-hero" trope, Abhay doesn't press the button. He drags Bhairavi back to the station, booking him alive. But as the credits roll, we see Abhay walk into the lockup, remove his gun from the evidence locker, and close the door behind him. The screen cuts to black just as a single gunshot echoes.

In a masterful sequence, Abhay fakes a prisoner transfer. He drives Bhairavi into the very forest where the killer dumped his first body. The cinematography here is stunning—mud, mist, and the red of brake lights. Abhay hands Bhairavi a shovel. "Dig," he says. "Not for a body. For your grave." Just when you think you know how this ends, Episode 8 throws a curveball. Bhairavi laughs. He reveals he didn't just kidnap Sonali; he recorded a video of her choosing to sacrifice herself to save Abhay’s son. The killer didn't take her life; she gave it.

If you want neat bows and heroes riding into the sunset, watch something else. If you want to see a man turn into the very monster he hunts, only to realize the monster has nowhere left to go—this is essential viewing. His eyes go dead

ZEE5’s gritty crime thriller Abhay has never been a show that holds your hand. Season 2, which has been a masterclass in psychological cat-and-mouse, comes to a close with Episode 8. Titled simply “The Reckoning,” this finale does not offer redemption. It offers closure—the sharp, bloody, unsatisfying kind that feels terrifyingly real.

Director Ken Ghosh and lead actor Kunal Khemu (playing the volatile DSP Abhay Pratap Singh) deliver a 42-minute episode that feels less like a TV drama and more like a pressure cooker left on the stove for too long. Spoiler: it explodes. For the last seven episodes, we have watched Abhay hunt down the enigmatic killer “Bhairavi” (Aasif Khan), a prosthetic-obsessed vigilante who turns his victims into macabre works of art. Last episode ended with a gut-punch: Bhairavi didn’t kill Abhay’s son—he turned him into a witness to his own mother’s fate.

This is where Abhay Season 2 excels. It asks a question most crime shows ignore: What if catching the killer isn't enough?