Her father married his daughter, blind from birth, to a beggar, and what happened next shocked many. Zainab had never seen the world, but she felt its cruelty with every breath. She was born blind into a family that valued beauty above all else. Her two sisters were admired for their striking eyes and graceful figures, while Zainab was treated as a burden: a shameful secret hidden behind closed doors. Her mother died when she was only five, and from then on, her father changed. He became bitter, resentful, and cruel, especially to her. He never called her by her name. He called her “that thing.” He didn’t want her at the table during family meals, or outside when guests arrived. He believed she was cursed, and when she turned twenty-one, he made a decision that would shatter what little remained of her already broken heart. One morning, he entered her small room, where she sat silently, running her fingers over the worn pages of a braille book, and dropped a folded piece of cloth onto her lap. “You’re getting married tomorrow,” he said flatly. She froze. The words made no sense. Married? To whom? “He’s a beggar from the mosque,” ​​her father continued. “You’re blind. He’s poor. A perfect match.” She felt the blood drain from her face. She wanted to scream, but no sound came out. She had no choice. Her father never gave her any. The next day, she was married in a rushed, modest ceremony. She never saw his face, of course, and no one described it to her. Her father pushed her toward the man and told her to take his arm. She obeyed like a ghost in her own body. People chuckled. “The blind girl and the beggar.” After the ceremony, her father handed her a small bag with some clothes and pushed her toward the man once more. “Now she’s your problem,” he said, walking away without looking back. The beggar, whose name was Yusha, silently led her down the road. He didn’t speak for a long time. They arrived at a small, dilapidated hut on the outskirts of the village. It smelled of damp earth and smoke. “It’s nothing special,” Yusha said gently. “But you’ll be safe here.” She sat down on the old mat inside, fighting back tears. This was her life now: a blind girl married to a beggar, living in a mud hut and clinging to fragile hope. But something strange happened that first night. Yusha made her tea with careful, gentle hands. He gave her his own blanket and slept by the door, like a guard dog protecting its queen. He spoke to her as if he cared: asking her what stories she liked, what dreams she had, what foods made her smile. No one had ever asked her those questions before. The days turned into weeks. Every morning, Yusha walked her to the river, describing the sun, the birds, the trees with such poetry that she began to feel she could see them through his words.He sang to her while she did the laundry and told her stories about stars and faraway lands at night. She laughed for the first time in years. Her heart began to slowly open. And in that strange little hut, something unexpected happened: Zainab fell in love. One afternoon, as she reached out to take his hand, she asked gently, “Were you always a beggar?” He hesitated. Then he said softly, “Not always.” But he said nothing more. And she didn’t press him. Until one day. She went to the market alone to buy vegetables. Yusha had given her careful instructions, and she memorized every step. But halfway there, someone grabbed her arm violently. “Blind rat!” a voice spat. It was her sister, Aminah. “Are you still alive? Are you still playing the beggar’s wife?” Zainab felt tears welling up, but she stood tall. “I’m happy,” she said. Aminah laughed cruelly. “You don’t even know what he is. He’s worthless. Just like you.” Then he whispered something that shattered her. “He’s not a beggar, Zainab. You were lied to.” Zainab stumbled home, confused and shaken. She waited until nightfall, and when Yusha returned, she asked again, this time firmly. “Tell me the truth. Who are you really?” That’s when he knelt before her, took her hands, and said, “You were never supposed to know yet. But I can’t lie to you anymore.” Her heart was pounding. What happens next changes everything. Like this comment, then check out the link.

“It’s not much,” Yusha said. Her voice was a revelation: low, melodic, and without the harsh accents she expected from men. “But the roof will hold, and the walls won’t fight back. You’ll be safe here, Zainab.”

The sound of his name, uttered with such quiet gravity, struck her harder than any blow. She collapsed onto a thin mat, her senses hypersensitive to the surrounding space. She heard him move: the clinking of a tin cup, the rustling of dry grass, the striking of a match.

That night, he didn’t touch her. He threw a heavy, wool-scented blanket over her shoulders and retreated to the doorway.

“Why?” she whispered into the darkness.

“Why what?”

Why are they taking me? They have nothing. Now they have nothing, except for a woman who can’t even see the bread she eats.

She heard him stir against the doorframe. “Perhaps,” she said softly, “having nothing is easier when you have someone to share the silence with.”

The following weeks were a slow awakening. At her father’s house, Zainab had lived in a state of sensory deprivation, obligated to be still, silent, invisible. Yusha did the opposite. She became her eyes, but not through mere description. She painted the world in her mind with the precision of a master.

“The sun isn’t just yellow today, Zainab,” he said as they sat by the river. “It’s the color of a peach just before it bruises. It’s heavy. It’s the feeling of a hot coin in the palm of your hand.”

He taught her the language of the wind: the difference between the whisper of the poplars and the dry rattle of the eucalyptus. He brought her wild herbs, guiding her fingers over the serrated leaves of the mint and the velvety skin of the sage. For the first time in her life, the darkness was not a prison; it was a canvas.

She found herself listening to the rhythm of his return each night. She found herself reaching out to touch the rough fabric of his robe, her fingers pausing on the steady beat of his heart. She was falling in love with a ghost, a man defined by his poverty and his kindness.

But shadows always lengthen before they disappear.

One Tuesday, emboldened by her newfound independence, Zainab carried a basket to the outskirts of the village to pick vegetables. She knew the way: forty steps to the large stone, a sharp left turn when she caught the scent of the tannery, and then straight ahead until the air cooled by the stream.

“Look at this,” a voice whispered. It was a voice like broken glass. “The queen of the beggars went for a walk.”

Zainab froze. “Aminah?”

Her sister invaded her personal space; the scent of expensive rosewater was cloying and suffocating. “You look pathetic, Zainab. Really. To think you’ve traded a mansion for a mud hut and a man who smells like a sewer.”

“I’m happy,” Zainab said, her voice trembling but confident. “He treats me like I’m made of gold. Something our father never understood.”

Aminah laughed, a high-pitched, sharp laugh that startled a nearby crow. “Gold? Oh, you poor, naive blind fool. Do you think he’s a beggar because he’s poor? Do you think this is a tragic romance?”

Aminah leaned closer, his hot breath against Zainab’s ear. “He’s not a beggar, Zainab. He’s penance. He’s the man who lost everything on a bet he couldn’t win. He doesn’t stay with you out of love. He stays with you because he’s hiding. He uses your blindness as a cloak.”

The world fell silent. The sounds of birds, water, wind… all faded away, replaced by a roar in Zainab’s ears. She staggered backward, her cane striking a root, nearly collapsing.

“He’s a liar,” Aminah whispered. “Ask him about the Great Eastern Fire. Ask him why he can’t appear in the city.”

 

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