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Chapter 8 - The Quiet Funeral of a Girl

The two weeks disappeared like they were stolen.

One moment, I was staring at myself in the mirror, wearing that gold dress at the engagement party, and the next, I was sitting in the backseat of a car in white lace, driving to my own wedding like I was being taken to my own funeral.

Because that's what it felt like.

Not a celebration. Not a beginning.

A quiet death — of everything I was, everything I wanted to be, everything I would never get to live.

"Smile more," my mother hissed as we arrived at the venue. "You look like someone died."

"Maybe someone did," I muttered.

She didn't ask what I meant. I don't think she wanted to know.

She was too busy adjusting my veil, smoothing down my sleeves, whispering blessings I couldn't even hear. Her eyes were tired, her smile tight. There was something fragile in the way she looked at me, like maybe, for a split second, she realized what she was doing.

Then she turned away and joined the others.

The wedding was loud.

Music, shouting, dancing — the same cycle, again and again.

Relatives I hadn't seen in years pulled me into hugs I didn't want. They called me lucky. Said Noah was a good man. Said I'd be taken care of. Said this was the best day of my life.

But all I could hear was the blood in my ears.

I stood beside him like a doll, answering questions, reciting what I'd been told to memorize, nodding when I was supposed to. The ceremony felt like a blur. My voice sounded like it belonged to someone else.

I didn't cry. I didn't even blink.

I just waited for it to be over.

The car ride to my "new home" was silent.

Noah tried to make small talk. He asked how I was feeling. He called me his wife like it was some sweet word, like I was supposed to be proud of it.

"You're mine now," he said, reaching over to hold my hand.

I didn't pull away.

I just looked out the window and said nothing.

"You'll get used to it," he added. "It's normal to be nervous. First nights are always intense. But I promise I'll be good to you, Layla. You're my wife now. That means something."

It meant nothing to me.

Except maybe that I was trapped.

The house was big, cold, and empty.

I could hear the echo of our footsteps as we walked inside. He showed me around like I was supposed to care about the granite countertops or the leather couch or the king-sized bed in the master bedroom.

All I could think was: I don't belong here. I don't belong to him.

"We're gonna build something beautiful here," he said, standing behind me as I looked at my reflection in the hallway mirror. "You'll learn to love me. You'll see."

I wanted to scream.

Instead, I nodded.

That night, I sat on the edge of the bed and felt like I was 10 years old again. Afraid of the dark. Afraid of the silence. Afraid of the world I had no control over.

He spoke softly, almost kindly. Told me I looked beautiful. Told me he was glad he waited for me to grow up. Told me I was his now.

When I didn't respond, he sighed and said something I'll never forget:

"You're my wife, Layla. That means I have rights over you."

I froze.

I nodded.

Because I didn't know what else to do.

I felt nothing.

I left my body that night — not literally, but in the way a person does when they've run out of ways to protect themselves. I went somewhere quiet in my head. Somewhere far away.

He fell asleep beside me like nothing had happened. Like I was just a thing he'd unpacked and used for the first time.

And I laid there in the dark, curled on my side, holding my breath so I wouldn't cry too loud.

And then the fear crept in. A new kind of fear.

What if I got pregnant?

What if it was a girl?

What if I had to raise a daughter in this world, in this life — just to watch her end up exactly like me?

I didn't want a daughter. I couldn't have a daughter. Not if this was all I had to give her.

I didn't want her to grow up learning how to shrink herself.

Didn't want her to look into my eyes and see resignation.

Didn't want her to carry my name like a curse.

I don't know how long I stayed awake, staring at the ceiling.

But eventually, the night passed.

And so did something in me.

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