The rain in the valley didn’t fall; it hung there, like a cold, gray shroud clinging to the uneven stones of the ancestral estate. Inside the house, the air smelled of stale incense and the metallic scent of unpolished silver. Zainab sat in a corner of the living room; her world was a tapestry of textures and echoes. She recognized the precise creak of the floorboards that announced her father’s arrival: a dull, rhythmic thud that bore the weight of a man who saw his own lineage as a crumbling monument.
She was twenty-one, and in her father Malik’s eyes, she was already a broken glass. To him, her blindness wasn’t a disability; it was a divine insult, a stain on the immaculate reputation of a family that traded in aesthetics and social standing. Her sisters, Aminah and Laila, were the gilded statues in his gallery: glittering eyes and sharp tongues. Zainab was merely the shadow they cast.
The bait didn’t come with a word, but with a smell: the pungent, earthy smell of the streets brought into the barren house.
—Get up, ‘thing’ —her father’s voice was harsh. He never called her by her name. To name something was to acknowledge its soul.
Zainab stood up, running her fingers along the velvet trim of the armchair. She sensed a presence in the room: the smell of wood smoke, cheap tobacco, and the ozone of an impending storm.
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