Malik had once believed power lived in wealth, reputation, and the sharpness of his tongue. Giving Zainab to a man he thought beneath him felt like a convenient erasure of his own perceived flaw. Yet in the quiet of that riverside hut, the two souls he had written off began to rebuild themselves from the inside out. Yusha’s hands learned to heal again; Zainab’s heart learned to exist without apology. Their shared exile became the soil where a different kind of greatness took root.
So when Malik’s carriage creaked to a stop at their gate, it carried not a master returning to claim what was his, but a broken man approaching a life that no longer needed him. Zainab’s words—“The beggar is gone. And the blind girl is dead.”—did not strike like vengeance, but like truth. He had not come to a daughter waiting for approval. He had come to a woman who had already given it to herself.















