The story of the blind girl and the beggar slowly spread through the valley. Their hut became a stone house surrounded by herbs and gardens. Yusha became known as the healer who asked for no payment.
Zainab guided the clinic with remarkable intuition, sensing sickness before anyone else noticed it.
One autumn afternoon, a carriage stopped outside their home.
Malik stepped out.
Old.
Broken.
Ruined by his own pride.
“Zainab,” he said weakly, using her name for the first time.
She stood calmly in the garden.
“The blind girl is gone,” she replied quietly. “And the beggar is gone too.”
She turned toward the house where Yusha waited.
“But mercy remains.”
She allowed her father to stay in the shed behind the house, offering him food and warmth but nothing more.
The past had lost its power.
Years later, a royal carriage arrived.
The governor’s son—the boy Yusha had once saved—now ruled the province.
He knelt before them.
“I have come to repay a debt,” he said.
He offered Yusha a royal pardon and the chance to lead a new academy of medicine in the capital.
Yusha looked toward Zainab.
“What do you think?” he asked.
Zainab smiled.