Days later, a basket appeared at Emily’s door—fruit, mint tea, a handwritten note. “I don’t want to scare you. I want to understand what my father saw in you,” Zain wrote.
Emily stared at the note, her heart torn between fear and curiosity. She kept the basket, but didn’t respond, her silence a fortress. Their encounters grew—nods from afar, brief comments about the weather, glances that held too long.
Zain saw pain in Emily, not the greed his family claimed, and it unsettled him. Her guarded movements, the way she held her teacup with both hands, hinted at a wound he couldn’t name. Each meeting left him questioning his own pursuit, his anger softening into something else.
Emily’s routine felt fragile, Zain’s presence a constant hum beneath her calm. She watered her garden, brewed tea, but her hands shook, sensing him nearby. His visits—brief, deliberate—stirred a mix of fear and defiance in her.
“He won’t stop until he breaks me,” she thought, yet part of her wondered what he truly sought. Zain watched her from a distance, his hotel room filling with notes on her habits. He saw no greed in her quiet life, only a woman carrying a heavy past.
“She’s not the villain they claim,” he murmured, but the will’s terms gnawed at him, demanding answers. In San Francisco, handling legal matters, Zain overheard hotel staff whispering. “She was never touched,” a maid said.
“The nurse who tended Tarek said his body was clean.” The words hit Zain like a jolt, reshaping his doubts about that night. He drove back to Napa, his resolve hardened, needing to confront Emily directly. He arrived at her gate early, his voice firm.
“I need to talk to her,” he told the guard, his eyes unyielding. Emily, against her better judgment, let him in, meeting him in the garden. She held a teacup, her posture rigid, as Zain approached.
“Is it true?” he asked, voice low. “Nothing happened with my father?”
Emily sipped her tea, her eyes steady but guarded. “What difference does it make now?” she said, deflecting with practiced calm.
“A big one,” Zain replied, stepping closer, his gaze piercing. “You’re saying the marriage was consummated?” he pressed, watching for any crack in her facade. She stood, her voice firm.
“Yes, I swear,” she said, locking eyes with him, a flush creeping up her neck. Zain saw the flicker of fear, the slight tremble in her hands. “Prove it,” he challenged, his tone sharp but tinged with doubt.
Emily froze, her breath catching, her silence louder than any answer.

