As the first grey light of dawn filtered through the shutters, the boy’s fever broke. The wound had been cleaned, the artery stitched with the delicacy of a lace-maker. Yusha sat in a chair by the hearth, his hands shaking, covered in the blood of his enemy’s son.
The messenger, who had been watching from the corner, stepped forward. He looked at the silver instruments on the table, then at Yusha’s face, now fully revealed in the morning light.
“I remember you,” the messenger said. “I was a boy when the Governor’s daughter died. I saw your portrait in the town square. There was a bounty on your head that stayed for five years.”
Yusha didn’t look up. “Then finish it. Call the guards.”
The messenger looked at the sleeping boy—the heir to a province, saved by the man they had condemned. He looked at Zainab, who stood like a sentinel, her sightless eyes fixed on the messenger as if she could see the very rot in his soul.
“My master is a cruel man,” the messenger said quietly. “If I tell him who you are, he will execute you to save his own pride. He cannot owe his son’s life to a ‘murderer.’”
“Then why stay?” Zainab asked.
“Because the boy,” the messenger gestured to the bed, “is not like his father. He spoke of ‘the angel’ as he drifted off. He has a heart that hasn’t been hardened by the city yet.”
The messenger reached out and took the silver scalpel from the table. He didn’t use it on Yusha. Instead, he walked to the fire and dropped it into the glowing coals.
“The doctor is dead,” the messenger said, looking Yusha in the eye. “He died in the fire years ago. This man is just a beggar who got lucky with a needle. I will tell the Governor we found a wandering monk. We will be gone by noon.”
When the carriage finally pulled away, leaving deep ruts in the mud, the silence that returned to the house was different. It was no longer the silence of peace; it was the silence of a truce.
Malik, Zainab’s father, watched the departure from the doorway of the small shed where he now lived. He had seen the royal crest. He had seen the doctor’s hands. He approached the main house, his gait a pathetic shuffle.
“You could have bargained,” Malik hissed as he reached the porch. “You could have asked for your lands back. For my lands back! You held his son’s life in your hands, and you let him go for free?”
Zainab turned toward her father. She didn’t need to see him to feel the shriveled greed emanating from his pores.
“You still don’t understand, Father,” she said, her voice like a cold bell. “A bargain is what you do when you value things. We value our lives. Today, we bought our silence with a life. That is the only currency that matters.”
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She reached out and took Yusha’s hand. His skin was cold, his spirit exhausted.
“Go back to your shed, Father,” she commanded. “The soup is on the hearth. Eat, and be grateful that the ghosts of this house are merciful.”
That evening, as the sun dipped below the mountains, painting a sunset Zainab would never see but could feel as a fading warmth on her skin, Yusha leaned his head against her shoulder.
“They will come back one day,” he whispered. “The boy will remember. The messenger will talk.”
“Let them come,” Zainab replied, her fingers tracing the scars on his palms—scars from the fire, scars from the years of begging, and the fresh nicks from the night’s surgery. “We have lived in the dark long enough to know how to move through it. If they come for the doctor, they will have to get past the blind girl first.”
In the distance, the river continued its tireless journey, carving a path through the stone, proving that even the softest water can break the hardest mountain if given enough time.
The air in the valley had grown thin with the coming of a brutal winter, ten years after the night of the bloody carriage. The stone house had expanded, adding a small wing that served as a clinic for the untouchables—the lepers, the penniless, and those the city doctors deemed “beyond saving.”