She was twenty-one, and in the eyes of her father, Malik, she was a broken vessel. To him, her blindness was not a disability; it was a divine insult, a smudge on the pristine reputation of a family that traded in aesthetics and social standing. Her sisters, Aminah and Laila, were the gilded statues in his gallery—all flashing eyes and sharpened tongues. Zainab was merely the shadow they cast.
The hook came not with a word, but with a scent: the pungent, earthy odor of the streets brought into the sterile house.