The sun rose gently over the mansion, spilling light across polished marble floors, gilded mirrors, and the faint scent of roses drifting in from the gardens.
It should have been an ordinary morning.
But nothing felt ordinary.
The memory of last night still clung to the house like smoke after fire — the sound of her whisper, please don't hit me, the violent tremor of her body, the raw sight of scars carved into flesh. None of them had slept. Not really. They had sat awake in their rooms, staring at the ceiling, staring at their own hands, wondering how they had failed to see the truth that had been hidden right in front of them.
And then —
Maya appeared.
She walked into the dining hall as though she were stepping onto an empty stage. Her school uniform crisp, her black gloves pulled neatly over her hands again, her hair brushed into its usual smooth fall.
There was no hesitation in her step. No tremor in her breath. Her face calm, her eyes dark and steady, as if the night before had been nothing but a bad dream.
The family froze.
Mahi's spoon clattered against her plate, her fingers trembling. Fahad's jaw clenched so tightly the muscle jumped in his cheek. Fahan, who had hardly spoken since last night, straightened in his chair, his gaze sharp, searching her face for any sign of fragility. The twins leaned forward unconsciously, silent, waiting.
And Anik.
Anik didn't blink. His eyes followed her every step, the way she moved like a shadow slipping between them all.
Maya sat down quietly in her usual seat. She reached for her glass of water, sipped, and set it down. Then, with perfect composure, she began to eat.
Not a word.
Not a glance.
Not a trace of the storm that had shattered them all only hours ago.
It was as if the girl who had collapsed, who had begged unseen ghosts not to hurt her, who had revealed scars carved into her skin — had never existed.
She was here now. Whole. Untouchable.
And that… terrified them more than the truth itself.
Mahim's voice broke the silence first. Deep. Careful. Almost cautious.
"Maya."
Her eyes lifted slowly to him, dark and unreadable.
"Yes?"
His throat tightened. For a man who had built empires, who had stared down enemies and storms alike, it was absurd how hard it was to find words before his own daughter.
"How are you feeling?"
A pause.
Then, in a voice smooth as glass:
"Fine."
Fine.
The word fell like ice water down their spines.
Fahad leaned forward suddenly, his voice raw with disbelief.
"Fine? You call that fine? Maya, last night you—"
"—had a bad dream."
Her interruption was calm. Clean. Surgical.
She set her spoon down gently, her eyes never leaving Fahad's face.
"I had a bad dream. That is all."
The room went still.
Fahan's hands curled into fists on the table. His voice came low, sharp, like the edge of broken glass.
"Don't do this. Don't lie to us. We saw—"
"You saw nothing."
Her words cut him down instantly.
"You saw a dream you weren't meant to see. That's all it was."
Her tone was firm, final, carrying the weight of someone who had spent years building walls too high to be scaled.
Mahi's eyes filled with tears. She shook her head desperately.
"No, Maya, it wasn't just a dream… those scars—"
Maya's hand, gloved again, lifted slightly. The gesture was small, but it silenced her mother immediately.
Her gaze turned cold, detached.
"Do not speak of them. Do not look at them. They mean nothing."
The room trembled with the finality in her voice.
The twins shifted uncomfortably in their chairs, their usual humor nowhere to be found. Fahad's chest heaved, his temper fighting to break free, but even he couldn't force himself to push further.
And through it all, Anik watched.
Every movement. Every word.
His jaw tightened, his thoughts burning like fire. She was pretending, yes — but beneath the mask, he saw it.
She was fine.
But she wasn't.
And that contradiction only pulled him deeper into the gravity of her silence.
Breakfast passed like a funeral.
No one dared speak again after Maya's words. They ate quietly, mechanically, each one stealing glances at her when they thought she wouldn't notice.
But she always noticed.
She always had.
When she finally stood, placing her napkin neatly on the table, her voice was calm.
"I'll be late for school."
Mahi half-rose, panic in her eyes.
"You don't have to go today, sweetheart, you can rest—"
"I said," Maya's eyes flicked briefly to her, "I'll be late for school."
And with that, she walked out.
Her steps echoed down the marble hall, fading like a vanishing heartbeat.
The family sat frozen in her wake, suffocating in the silence she left behind.
In the car, the air between Maya and Anik was thick, heavy, suffused with the unspoken.
She opened her diary. Began sketching. Her hand moved in sharp, deliberate strokes, as if each line were carving away the memory of last night.
Anik leaned back in his seat, watching her through the corner of his eye.
"You're pretending."
Her pencil didn't pause.
"I'm living."
"By pretending."
"By surviving."
The words dropped like stones between them.
Anik's jaw clenched, his mind turning faster than he could contain. He wanted to ask. He wanted to demand. He wanted to break through that wall of silence she carried like armor.
But one look at her face — that calm, unflinching mask — and he knew.
If he pushed, he would lose her.
So he stayed silent.
And watched her draw.
Back at the mansion, the storm had not left.
Mahim stood at the window again, staring out at the long stretch of road. His voice was low, filled with iron.
"She's hiding. She wants us to believe nothing happened."
Mahi wiped her tears, shaking her head.
"She doesn't trust us. Not yet. She thinks if she shows weakness, we'll treat her differently."
Fahad slammed his hand against the table.
"She is different now! How do we sit here and pretend like nothing happened? How do we eat and laugh when she's walking around with scars like that?"
Fahan's voice came sharp, cold.
"Because that's exactly what she wants. She wants us to pretend. To play along with her game."
Farhan, quiet until now, whispered hoarsely.
"No… not a game. It's survival. She learned to act like nothing happened because that's the only way she could live through it."
His words silenced the room.
For the first time, his rage had turned into clarity.
Mahim's fists tightened at his sides. His voice was grave.
"Whoever hurt her thought they erased her. But they failed. She survived."
"And now?" Fahad's voice broke, his eyes burning.
"Now she walks around this house like nothing matters. Like we don't matter."
"No," Mahim corrected, his tone hard as steel.
"She walks around this house reminding us she is stronger than all of us. And that scares us."
The words settled like thunder, and no one argued.
That evening, Maya returned from school the same way she had left — calm, silent, untouched.
She ate dinner quietly. Listened to nothing. Spoke to no one.
And then she disappeared into her room, closing the door softly behind her.
Inside, she sat by the window, diary in her lap. Her hand hovered above the paper, but no lines came.
Her reflection stared back at her in the glass — the gloves, the mask, the silence.
She whispered softly, to no one.
"If I pretend long enough, maybe they'll forget. Mayb..... ."
But her reflection didn't answer.
And in the darkness outside, the storm clouds gathered again.
It was only the silence.