YOU MARRIED A “BEGGAR” BECAUSE YOU WERE BORN BLIND… THEN HE SAID ONE NAME AND YOUR WHOLE LIFE CHANGED
A woman steps forward.
You recognize her voice from the safe house, one of the cooks.
“I was the palace nurse,” she says. “I saw the poison. I saw the cover-up.”
Another voice speaks: “I signed the land transfers under threat.”
And another: “I buried the governor’s real medical report.”
The air changes.
It becomes heavy with truth, and truth is a kind of gravity that even powerful men can’t escape.
Your father’s voice cracks, suddenly desperate.
“I didn’t know!” he blurts. “I was just… I was told…”
You turn toward him, shaking.
“You sold me,” you whisper. “You threw me away.”
Your voice hardens. “Whether you knew or not, you did it.”
The officers arrive.
You hear the metallic click of restraints.
Ibrahim swears, furious, but his confidence is leaking now.
When they drag him out, he hisses, “This isn’t over.”
Yusha’s hand tightens around yours.
“It is for you,” he says quietly. “I promise.”
Your father tries to follow them, scrambling.
“Zainab,” he cries, voice thick with panic, “forgive me! I was desperate!”
You stand with Yusha’s support, your legs trembling.
You face the sound of your father’s voice like you’re facing a storm.
“You taught me I was nothing,” you say.
“But you were wrong.”
You inhale slowly, and it feels like your first real breath. “I forgive myself for believing you.”
Your father goes silent.
Then the Imam’s men escort him out too, not arrested, but removed, like the past being carried away.
The door closes, and the sound is not loud, but it feels final.
In the days that follow, everything changes.
The court recognizes Yusha’s identity after records and witnesses confirm it.
Ibrahim’s network begins to collapse as people finally speak, emboldened by the fact that the hunted prince is no longer hiding.
The village whispers shift into something else: awe, shame, respect.
And through it all, you sit beside Yusha in rooms you never imagined, listening to men in suits talk about justice like it’s a new invention.
One afternoon, Yusha takes you to a garden inside the palace grounds.
You can’t see the fountains, but you hear them, and the sound is bright like laughter.
He describes the flowers with the same poetry he used by the river, but now his voice is lighter.
“This rose is red,” he says. “Not like blood. Like a promise.”
You smile, because you realize his words have always been your sight.
“Are you afraid?” you ask him.
He pauses. “Yes,” he admits. “Because power is a beast.”
Then he squeezes your hand. “But I’m more afraid of losing you.”
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