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This is India's monsoon season.
Looking specifically at the state in question:
https://en.climate-data.org/asia/india/maharashtra-747/
It looks like this is the rainiest month of the year for Maharashtra.
EDIT: Apparently this year was also exceptionally rainy in western Maharashtra:
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/mumbai/mumbai-surpasses-average-july-rainfall-quota-by-nearly-50/articleshow/111937292.cms
That's over 4.6 feet of rain, and that's in less than the first three weeks of the month:
EDIT2: That being said, it also says that she has psychiatric problems, but again, if my husband had, in fact, just tried to kill me via exposure, I imagine that I'd also be pretty mentally messed-up, so...shrugs I expect that the police have their work cut out for them.
EDIT3: You're also being too conservative on food, I think. Most people these days have a lot more fat on them than in the past.
A pound of fat has about 3,500 calories. An adult female needs about 1,600 calories a day to maintain weight, so a bit under half a pound of fat a day. And once the fat is gone, your body can also burn through muscle and such.
I've personally fasted for over a week for the hell of it. I was chatting with my aunt a while back and learned that she'd done over two weeks for the hell of it. You don't casually do something that puts you on the brink of death.
There's a Scottish guy who fasted for over a year (well, under medical supervision and took vitamin pills), though he was obese going into the thing.
40 days without food is, for a woman, maybe under 20 pounds of fat, and the body can dig into the muscle after that. I'm pretty sure that the typical person -- man or woman -- in the US could do 40 days without food, no sweat.
We're used to eating daily, but humans can go for a damn long time without food if they need to do so.
The article also says that the woman here was emaciated coming out of this.
EDIT4: I also think that you're conservative on water. Water is, for anyone in a reasonably normal condition of health, way more urgent than food, no disagreement there. And you start to get problems from dehydration. I agree that if that if you cut someone off from any source of water for 40 days, they are going to be dead at the end of it -- for her to have done 40 days, she'd have to had access to rainfall or condensation or digging a hole for water or something. But I've looked in the past, and the rule-of-thumb I've read was a week, and there are definitely cases of people who went for over a week without water, like shipwreck survivors. You are going to be seeing a lot of problems, though, at that point -- I would very much not try pushing those limits.
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20201016-why-we-cant-survive-without-water