HER FATHER MARRIED HIS BLIND DAUGHTER TO A “BEGGAR”… BUT THE FIRST NIGHT SHE TOUCHED HIS HAND, EVERYTHING STARTED TO FALL APART. Zainab had never seen the world, but she could feel its cruelty in every breath. She was born blind in a family that worshipped beauty like it was religion. Her two sisters were praised for their striking eyes and graceful figures, while Zainab was treated like a burden, a shameful secret kept behind closed doors. Her mother died when she was five. After that, her father changed. He grew hard. Bitter. Mean in a way that didn’t need to raise his voice to do damage. He never called her by her name. He called her “that thing.” She wasn’t allowed at the table when the family ate. She wasn’t allowed outside when guests came. To him, she was a curse that embarrassed him. And when she turned twenty-one, he made a decision that crushed what little was left of her already broken heart. One morning, he stormed into her small room. Zainab was sitting quietly, her fingers moving across the worn dots of a Braille book, trying to disappear into a story like she always did. Something folded dropped into her lap. A piece of cloth. “You’re getting married tomorrow,” her father said, flat and cold. Zainab froze. The words didn’t fit inside her mind. Married? To who? “It’s a beggar from the mosque,” he continued. “You’re blind. He’s poor. Perfect match.” Her blood drained. She tried to speak, tried to scream, but the sound got stuck somewhere between her throat and her fear. She had no choice. Her father didn’t give choices. The next day, the wedding happened fast, small, like a mistake everyone wanted to hide. She never saw his face, of course. No one described it. Her father shoved her forward, barked at her to take the man’s arm, and she obeyed like a ghost inside her own body. People whispered and laughed like it was entertainment. “The blind girl and the beggar.” After the ceremony, her father tossed her a small bag of clothes and pushed her toward the man one last time. “She’s your problem now,” he said, walking away without looking back. The beggar’s name was Yusha. He guided her gently down the road. He didn’t speak for a long time. Eventually they reached a broken shack at the edge of the village, the air smelling like damp earth and smoke. “It’s not much,” Yusha said quietly. “But you’ll be safe here.” Zainab sat on the old mat inside, biting back tears. This was her life now. A blind girl married off like trash… living in mud and fragile hope. But that first night, something happened that didn’t make sense. Yusha made her tea with hands that were careful… almost tender. He gave her his blanket and slept by the door like a guard dog protecting a queen. Then he did the strangest thing of all: He spoke to her like she mattered. “What stories do you like?” he asked. “What dreams do you have?” “What food makes you smile?” No one had ever asked her those questions. Days turned into weeks. Every morning, Yusha took her to the river and described everything with a kind of poetry that made her feel like she could see through his words. He told her what the sunrise looked like. What birds sounded like when they fought over crumbs. How trees moved when the wind got bored. He sang while they washed clothes. At night he told her stories about stars and faraway lands. And for the first time in years… Zainab laughed. Her heart, locked up for so long, started to open like a door that forgot it was supposed to stay shut. In that strange little shack, the impossible happened. Zainab fell in love. One afternoon, her fingers searching for his hand, she asked softly: “Were you always a beggar?” Yusha went still. Then he answered in a voice so quiet it sounded like a confession. “Not always.” And he said nothing more. She didn’t press. Not then. Until the day she went to the market alone. Yusha gave her careful directions. She memorized every step like a prayer. But halfway there, someone grabbed her arm so hard it hurt. “Blind rat,” a voice spat. Zainab’s stomach turned. She knew that voice. Aminah. Her sister. “You’re still alive?” Aminah mocked. “Still pretending to be the wife of a beggar?” Zainab swallowed her fear, forced her spine straight. “I’m happy,” she said. Aminah laughed, sharp and cruel. “You don’t even know what he is. He’s nothing. Just like you.” Then Aminah leaned in and dropped a whisper that shattered Zainab’s world. “He’s not a beggar, Zainab. You’ve been lied to.” Zainab stumbled home shaking, confusion pounding in her chest like a drum. She waited until night. And when Yusha returned, she didn’t ask softly this time. She held her ground. “Tell me the truth,” she said. “Who are you… really?” Yusha didn’t speak. Then he moved in front of her. He lowered himself, took her hands in his, and she felt them tremble. “You were never supposed to know yet,” he whispered. “But I can’t lie to you anymore.” Her heart hammered. He drew in a breath like he was about to step off a cliff. And then he said the words that made her stop breathing: “Zainab… the reason your father chose me…” …was because he thought it would destroy you. But he had no idea what marrying you to me would actually awaken. Because I didn’t come from the streets. I came from a house with power. And the moment I saw what they did to you… I made a decision.

Yusha’s voice hardens. “He set us up,” he says.

The Imam nods.
“I believe he thought you would die quietly,” he says.
Then he adds, “But he underestimated what love can do.”

You tremble at that word, love.
You never thought you’d be the heroine of any story.
You were born blind, raised in contempt, tossed into the arms of a “beggar.”
And yet here you are, holding the hand of a hunted prince while an imam speaks of overthrowing a corrupt ruler.

You agree to leave before sunrise.

In the dark, you pack what little you have: a spare scarf, your braille book, the simple hairpin Yusha once bought you with coins he pretended came from begging.
Your hands move over each object like you’re saying goodbye to the life you thought you’d die in.
Yusha helps you wrap your book carefully, his touch tender.
“You don’t have to be fearless,” he whispers. “Just don’t let fear decide for you.”

Before dawn, you move quietly through the village with the Imam’s men.
You hear the soft crunch of dirt under sandals and boots, the distant call of a rooster, the hush of sleeping homes.
The world smells like smoke and cold earth.
For the first time, you understand that you’ve been living inside a cage without bars, and someone just opened the door.

They take you to a hidden compound outside town, where women cook and men stand watch.
A healer checks Yusha’s bruises and then examines you with gentle hands.
“Your pulse is fast,” she murmurs.
You laugh shakily. “It’s always fast now,” you admit.