Description
India, 1922: Perveen Mistry is the only female lawyer in Bombay, a city where child mortality is high, birth control is unavailable and very few women have ever seen a doctor.
Perveen is attending a lavish fundraiser for a new women*s hospital specializing in maternal health issues when she witnesses an accident. The grandson of an influential Gujarati businessman catches fire〞but a servant, his young ayah, Sunanda, rushes to save him, selflessly putting herself in harm*s way. Later, Perveen learns that Sunanda, who*s still ailing from her burns, has been arrested on trumped-up charges made by a man who doesn*t seem to exist.
Perveen cannot stand by while Sunanda languishes in jail with no hope of justice. She takes Sunanda as a client, even inviting her to live at the Mistry home in Bombay*s Dadar Parsi colony. But the joint family household is already full of tension. Perveen*s father worries about their law firm taking so much personal responsibility for a client, and her brother and sister-in-law are struggling to cope with their new baby. Perveen herself is going through personal turmoil as she navigates a taboo relationship with a handsome former civil service officer.
When the hospital*s chief donor dies suddenly, Miriam Penkar, a Jewish-Indian obstetrician, and Sunanda become suspects. Perveen*s original case spirals into a complex investigation taking her into the Gujarati strongholds of Kalbadevi and Ghatkopar, and up the coast to Juhu Beach, where a decadent nawab lives with his Australian trophy wife. Then a second fire erupts, and Perveen realizes how much is at stake. Has someone powerful framed Sunanda to cover up another crime? Will Perveen be able to prove Sunanda*s innocence without endangering her own family?






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