Her two sisters were admired for their lovely eyes and elegant figures, while Zainab was treated like a burden—a shameful secret hidden behind closed doors.
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Her mother died when she was just five years old, and since then, her father changed. He became bitter, resentful, and cruel—especially towards her. He never called her by her name; he referred to her as “that thing.” He didn’t want to see her at the dinner table during family meals or nearby when guests came over. He believed she was cursed.
And when Zainab turned 21, he made a decision that completely shattered the little heart he had left.
One morning, her father entered her small room, where Zainab was sitting silently, running her fingers over the pages of an old braille book. He dropped a folded cloth in her lap.
“You’re getting married tomorrow,” he said emotionlessly.
Zainab 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. You make a good pair.”
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 options.
The next day, she was married in a small, rushed ceremony.
Of course, she never saw the man’s face, and no one dared to describe it to her.
Her father pushed her toward the man and told him to take her arm.
She obeyed like a ghost trapped in her own body.
People laughed quietly, whispering: “The blind girl and the beggar.”
After the ceremony, her father handed her a small bag with a few garments and pushed her back toward the man.
“Now he’s your problem,” he said, and walked away without looking back.
The beggar, whose name was Yusha, guided her silently along the path.
He didn’t say anything for a long while.
They arrived at a small, dilapidated hut on the outskirts of the village.
It smelled of damp earth and smoke.
“It’s not much,” Yusha said softly, “but you’ll be safe here.”
She sat on an old mat inside, holding back tears.
This was now her life: a blind girl married to a beggar, in a hut made of mud and hope.
But something strange happened from the very first night.
Yusha made her tea with gentle hands.
He gave her his own coat and slept by the door, like a guard dog watching over his queen.
He spoke to her as if he truly cared—asking her what stories she liked, what dreams she had, what foods made her smile.
No one had ever asked her that.
Days turned into weeks.
Yusha accompanied her to the river every morning, describing the sun, the birds, the trees—with such poetry that Zainab began to feel she could see through his words.
He sang while she washed clothes, and at night, he told her stories about stars and distant lands.
She laughed for the first time in years.
Her heart began to open.
And in that small, strange hut… the unexpected happened:
Zainab fell in love.
One afternoon, while holding his hand, she asked him:
“Were you always a beggar?”
Yusha hesitated. Then he softly replied:
“I wasn’t always like this.”
But he didn’t say more, and Zainab didn’t press.
Until one day.
She went to the market alone to buy vegetables.
Yusha had given her precise instructions, which she carefully memorized.
But halfway there, someone violently grabbed her arm.
“Blind rat!” spat a voice. It was her sister—Aminah.
“Are you still alive? Still pretending to be the wife of a beggar?”
Zainab felt tears welling up, but she stood firm.
“I’m happy,” she said.
Aminah laughed cruelly.
“You don’t even know what he looks like. He’s trash—just like you.”
And then she whispered something that broke Zainab’s heart:
“He’s not a beggar, Zainab. They lied to you.”
Zainab staggered home, confused.
She waited until nightfall, and when Yusha returned, she asked him again—but this time with firmness:
“Tell me the truth. Who are you really?”
Then Yusha knelt before her, took her hands, and said:
“You weren’t meant to know yet. But I can’t lie to you anymore.”
Her heart raced in her chest.
Yusha took a deep breath.
“I’m not a beggar. I’m the son of the Emir.”
Zainab’s world began to spin as she processed his words.
“I’m the son of the Emir.”
She tried to steady her breathing, struggling to comprehend what she had just heard.
Her mind replayed every shared moment—his kindness, his quiet strength, the richness of his tales that seemed too vivid for a mere beggar.
Now it made sense.
He was never a beggar.
Her father didn’t marry her off to a beggar—he unknowingly married her to a disguised prince.
She pulled her hands away, stepped back, and asked—with a trembling voice:
“Why? Why did you make me believe you were a beggar?”
Yusha stood up, his voice calm but heavy with emotion:
“Because I wanted someone to see me—not my wealth, not my title—just me. The real me.
Someone pure. Someone whose love couldn’t be bought or forced.
You were everything I prayed for, Zainab.”
She sat down, her legs too weak to support her.
Her heart struggled between love and anger.
Why didn’t he tell her sooner?
Why did he let her believe she had been discarded?
Yusha knelt beside her again.
“I never wanted to hurt you,” he said.
“I came to the village disguised because I was tired of suitors who loved the throne but not the man.
I heard about a blind girl rejected by her own father.
I watched you from afar for weeks before proposing to your father, dressed as a beggar.
I knew he would accept—because he wanted to get rid of you.”
Tears rolled down Zainab’s cheeks.
The pain of her father’s rejection mixed with the disbelief that someone would go so far—just to find a heart like hers.
She didn’t know what to say.
So she simply asked:
“And now? What happens now?”
Yusha gently took her hand.
“Now you come with me. To my world. To the palace.”
Her heart leaped.
“But I’m blind… how can I be a princess?”
He smiled.
“You already are, my princess.”
That night, she could hardly sleep.
Her thoughts spun in circles—the cruelty of her father, Yusha’s love, and the uncertainty of what lay ahead.
The next morning, a royal carriage arrived in front of the hut.
Guards dressed in black and gold bowed to Yusha and Zainab as they stepped out.
Zainab clung to Yusha’s arm as the carriage began its journey to the palace.
Upon arrival, a crowd was already waiting for them.
They were surprised to see the lost prince—but even more so to see he came with a blind girl.
Yusha’s mother, the queen, approached, studying Zainab with inquisitive eyes.
But Zainab bowed respectfully.
Yusha stood by her side and declared:
“She is my wife. The woman I chose.
The woman who saw my soul when no one else could.”
The queen was silent for a moment.
Then she stepped forward and embraced Zainab.
“Then she is my daughter,” she said.
Zainab nearly fainted with relief.
Yusha squeezed her hand and whispered:
“I told you, you’re safe now.”
That night, already in her room in the palace, Zainab stood by the window, listening to the sounds of the royal gardens.
Her whole life had changed in a single day.
She was no longer “that thing” locked in a dark room.
She was a wife, a princess, a woman loved not for her beauty, but for her soul.
And although she felt peace in that moment, something dark still lingered in her heart—the shadow of her father’s hatred.
She knew the world would not accept her easily, that the court would murmur and mock her blindness, and enemies would arise within the palace walls.
But for the first time, she didn’t feel small.
She felt powerful.
The next day, she was summoned to court, where nobles and leaders had gathered.
Some scoffed when they saw her enter with Yusha, but she held her head high.
And then the unexpected happened.
Yusha stood before everyone and declared:
“I will not accept the crown until my wife is accepted and honored in this palace.
And if she is not—I will leave with her.”
Gasping and murmurs filled the room.
Zainab felt her heart race as she looked at him.
He had already given everything for her.
“Would you give up the throne for me?” she whispered.
He looked at her with passion in his eyes.
“I already did once. And I would do it again.”
The queen stood up.
“Then let it be known,” she said, “from this day forth, Zainab is not just your wife.
She is Princess Zainab of the Royal House.
Whoever disrespects her disrespects the crown.”
And with those words, the hall fell silent.
Zainab’s heart raced—not with fear, but with determination.
She knew her life would continue to change, but now, it would be on her own terms.
She was no longer a shadow—but a woman who had found her place in the world.
And best of all: for the first time, she didn’t need to be seen for her beauty—only for the love she carried in her heart.