The Girl He Wasn't Allowed to Touch.
This is a harrowing, emotionally devastating story about injustice, survival, and a love so pure that society mistakes it for sin.
At the center stands Indrajit, a man whose life ended long before his heart stopped beating.
Twelve years ago, at the age of twenty, Indrajit witnessed the brutal sexual assault and murder of his beloved girlfriend Tandra. Beaten nearly to death, pinned down, and rendered helpless, he was forced to listen as she screamed his name—begging him to save her. He could not. That moment shattered him forever.
To shield the real perpetrators—wealthy, powerful men—the system did what it always does: it lied. Evidence was fabricated. Witnesses were silenced. And Indrajit was framed as both rapist and murderer. Society swallowed the lie without hesitation.
His family, enslaved by honor and social image, disowned him. His father declared him dead. Funeral rites were performed for a son who was still breathing.
Prison became his twelve-year-long apocalypse—an endless cycle of violence, humiliation, and psychological annihilation. Indrajit survived only through rage, guilt, and the echo of a promise he once made to Tandra:
“I will always protect you.”
A promise he believes he failed.
Now thirty-two, Indrajit is released into a world that still sees him as a monster. Emotionally hollow, physically scarred, dependent on sleeping pills, and slowly destroying himself through starvation, he exists like a living corpse—waiting either for death or for one final reckoning.
Fate places him in a decaying apartment complex where he meets his neighbors: Kotha, a teenage schoolgirl glowing with innocence, and her mother Madhurima, a sex worker relentlessly humiliated, ostracized, and dehumanized by society.
The colony’s residents—self-appointed moral guardians—unleash cruelty on both mother and daughter. Gossip, character assassination, and public shaming expose the deep hypocrisy, misogyny, and selective morality that thrive beneath respectability.
In Kotha and Madhurima, Indrajit recognizes a pain he knows too well—the pain of being judged without truth, condemned without mercy, and erased without trial.
In a world where everyone hates and judges Indrajit, Kotha was the only one to care for him. This made her the world to him .
Though numb and broken, something within him stirs.
Over time, Indrajit forms a quiet, profound bond with Kotha. She heals him—she teaches him how to live again through small, human moments: conversation, laughter, curiosity, trust. Through her eyes, Indrajit slowly relearns what it means to breathe, to care, to exist beyond guilt.
He becomes her silent shield in a hostile world.
When society whispers that he is corrupting her…
When rumors accuse him of stealing her innocence…
When fingers point and morals scream—
—he is the only one who never lays a finger on her.
Their connection is deep, intense, and painfully pure—built on shared wounds, unspoken understanding, and unconditional protection. It is a love that dares not define itself, because the world has already decided it is wrong.
Indrajit tries desperately to protect Kotha from the cruelty of the world—knowing all too well what happens when innocence is left unguarded. But in doing so, he becomes the easiest villain to blame.
This is not a story of forbidden desire.
It is a story of forbidden humanity.
A tragic tale where the man labeled a monster is the only one who knows how not to hurt, and the girl he was “never allowed to touch” becomes the reason he remembers how to live—even if it costs him everything.