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married off his daughter

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Zainab reached out, her fingers trembling as they traced the contours of his face. She found the bridge of his nose, the hollows of his cheeks, the wetness of his eyes. He wasn’t the monster her sister had described. He was a man shattered by his own humanity, trying to glue the pieces back together with hers.

“You should have told me,” she said.

“I was afraid that if you knew I was a doctor, you would ask me to fix the one thing I cannot,” he choked out. “I cannot give you your sight, Zainab. I can only give you my life.”

The tension in the room snapped. Zainab pulled him closer, burying her face in the crook of his neck. The hut was small, the walls were thin, and the world outside was cruel, but in the center of the storm, they were no longer ghosts.

Years passed.

The story of the “Blind Girl and the Beggar” became a legend in the village, though the ending changed over time. People noticed that the small hut on the edge of the river had transformed. It was now a house of stone, surrounded by a garden so fragrant it could be navigated by scent alone.

They noticed that the “beggar” was actually a healer whose hands could soothe a fever better than any high-priced surgeon in the city. And they noticed that the blind woman walked with a grace that made her seem as though she saw things others missed.

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