What begins as domestic labour gradually acquires criminal velocity, transforming into a narcotics distribution network. The setup of crime becomes a tool to reclaim authorship over their lives. Aarya traces a similar arc: Sushmita Sen’s protagonist evolves from a grieving mother to the head of a drug syndicate, compelled by circumstance yet exercising agency in a world of betrayal and violence. Mrs Deshpande literalises this inversion of expectation—a female serial killer whose vigilante justice challenges conventional morality, reminding viewers that gender does not prescribe ethics or violence. Delhi Crime Season 3 though, shifts the crime narrative entirely: the entire crime operates in a narrative dominated by women, including victims, criminals and cops alike. Here, the series interrogates systemic pressures—social, financial, and psychological—that shape women’s choices and, in Meena’s (Huma Qureshi) case, push them into criminality.