One Tuesday, emboldened by her new autonomy, Zainab took a basket to the village edge to gather greens. She knew the path—forty paces to the large stone, a sharp left at the scent of the tannery, then straight until the air cooled by the creek.
“Look at this,” a voice hissed. It was a voice like broken glass. “The beggar’s queen out for a stroll.”
Zainab froze. “Aminah?”
Her sister stepped into her personal space, the scent of expensive rosewater cloying and suffocating. “You look pathetic, Zainab. Truly. To think you’ve traded a mansion for a mud hut and a man who smells of the gutter.”
“I am happy,” Zainab said, her voice trembling but certain. “He treats me as if I am made of gold. Something our father never understood.”