In Mumbai's slums, a gifted mechanic named Kiran hides a secret: inside him sleeps a fragment of the ancient Divine Wheel.
This fragment lets him "hear" the soul of machines — but it also draws dark forces. The cursed villain Vayu detects the Wheel's energy in Kiran's sister Priya and kidnaps her, planning to sacrifice her to unlock his full curse power.
To save Priya, Kiran sets out on an impossible journey. During the pursuit, the Divine Wheel fragment awakens for the first time — golden light bursts from his hands, power surging through his veins.
Guided by a temple priestess, Kiran learns to master his new strength. He fights, he breaks through, he grows. From the slums to Vayu's underground lair, from a crushed nobody to an awakener who can shatter cursed barriers with one punch.
One episode to awaken. Three episodes to turn the tables.
In the final battle, Kiran defeats Vayu with the full power of the Divine Wheel. But just as he is about to strike the killing blow, the spirit of Vayu's mother — a soul trapped by darkness for years — appears in the golden light. Her tears and soft words awaken the last shred of humanity inside Vayu.
Vayu falls to his knees, weeping. He redeems himself and frees every captive soul.
Priya returns to Kiran's side. And the Divine Wheel fragment quietly merges into his heart, waiting for the next call.
In the depths of a dark grotto, a colossal Buddha statue had stood in silent contemplation for a thousand years. Beneath its downcast eyelids, a gaze of compassion seemed to watch over the mortal world. Every evening at dusk, a young monk would make his solitary pilgrimage to the statue. He would light a single stick of incense and kneel in silence. He prayed for no rewards, asked for no future; he simply came to whisper his worldly confusions and inner turmoil to the stone figure.