The day I first arrived at Shivani Villa felt heavier than the combined weight of all the trials I had endured. The house loomed tall and silent, its windows reflecting a gray, overcast sky. My stepmother, Kavita Mehra, had squeezed my arm in the car that morning. “Remember, Ananya,” she whispered sharply, “this marriage is a gift. Do not argue, do not question. Just obey.” I nodded silently, because I had grown accustomed to life not asking my opinion ever since my father passed.

My husband, Rohan Verma, lived alone in the sprawling family estate, confined to a wheelchair after a terrible accident that no one wanted to discuss. On the drive over, servants whispered, speaking of his brilliance as a young entrepreneur and the fiancée who abandoned him when tragedy struck. When I finally met him, he did not greet me warmly. He only gestured toward the doorway and said softly, “You may stay here. Live as you wish. I will not interfere.”

That evening, as the servants left, the house felt cavernous and unwelcoming. I sat near the doorway, unsure of what to do. “I… I can help you get comfortable,” I whispered.

He glanced at me, pale eyes unreadable. “You do not need to,” he murmured. “I know I am a burden.”

“No… that is not it,” I replied, though my voice quivered.

I stepped closer. “Let me help you onto the bed.”

He paused, a flicker of surprise in his gaze, then nodded. I wrapped my arms around his back, attempting to lift him. But as I took a step, my foot slipped on the carpet, and we crashed onto the floor with a heavy thud. Pain shot through me as I scrambled up, but I froze when I felt a subtle movement beneath the blanket.

“…You can still feel that?” I asked, startled.

He lowered his head, a faint, fragile smile forming. “The doctor says I could walk again with physiotherapy. But after everyone left because I could not stand… whether I walk or not, it became meaningless.”

Those words hung in the air, heavier than any silence I had known. That night, I lay awake, the echo of his voice replaying endlessly.

In the following days, I began to change our rhythm of life. Each morning, I pushed him to the balcony. “You do not have to like the light,” I told him. “But the light still likes you.”

He stopped resisting.

“Why do you bother?” he asked one morning, squinting against the sunlight.

“Because no one should be left alone in the dark,” I said softly.