
Married to Betrayal
Chapter 3
When I woke up, it was to the harsh glare of hospital lights. The air smelled of antiseptic and metal. Machines beeped somewhere near my ear. My mouth was dry. My body felt heavy, strange, foreign.
I looked down. My legs were wrapped in white casts, pinned and still.
For one wild second, I thought I was still dreaming. Then I tried to move my toes—and felt nothing.
That’s when it hit me,the nightmare wasn’t over. It had just begun.
I spent months in the hospital. Surgery after surgery. My parents drained everything they had to pay for doctors from all over the world. I couldn’t walk. I couldn’t dance. I couldn’t breathe without pain.
At first, they didn’t tell me the truth.
They smiled when they came into my room, holding flowers and takeout meals, pretending everything would be fine. My mother would sit by my bed and stroke my hair, her eyes red but her smile steady. My father would pat my hand and say, “The doctors said you’ll dance again, sweetheart. It just takes time.”
I believed them. I needed to.
So I pushed through it—the pain, the needles, the endless therapy sessions that felt like torture. I cried, screamed, but I kept trying. I told myself every stretch, every burn, every tear was one step closer to the stage again. I pictured myself back in the spotlight, spinning across the floor, the audience on their feet. I whispered it like a prayer. You’ll dance again. You’ll dance again.
But hope can only blind you for so long.
One afternoon, everything cracked.
The room was quiet. I was sitting in bed, staring at the gray light on the wall, when I heard voices outside my door. Two nurses. A man’s voice I didn’t know. They spoke softly, but the words slid right through the crack and into me.
“That girl in there,” one of them said. “The dancer. Her legs will never fully recover. She’ll walk, but dance? Never. Poor thing.”
The world stopped.
My heartbeat slowed, then vanished completely, replaced by a sharp ringing in my ears. My hands went cold. For a long moment, I just sat there, staring at nothing, the words echoing over and over inside my head.
Never.
I would walk, but I would never dance again.
I don’t remember crying at first. I remember silence—the kind that pressed down on me until I couldn’t breathe. Then I remember laughing, a soft, broken sound, because it felt unreal. Because if I didn’t laugh, I’d shatter completely.
That night, my parents came in smiling again, telling me how the new doctor had “a wonderful plan.” I nodded and pretended to listen, but I didn’t hear a word. Something inside me had already gone quiet.
After that, I stopped trying.
The nurses came with food, and I turned my face away. The therapists came to stretch my legs, and I stared at the wall. I stopped talking, stopped smiling, stopped hoping.
The room became smaller every day. The walls seemed closer, tighter. The sunlight that once gave me comfort now hurt my eyes.
When they told me to lift my leg, I didn’t move. When they begged me to try, I just lay there.
What was the point?
The body I’d trusted, the body that had carried me through every leap, every turn, every standing ovation—it was gone. It belonged to pain now. To medicine. To pity.
My future wasn’t waiting for me anymore. It was buried somewhere in that crash.
Each day, I felt myself sinking a little deeper. Hope drained out of me, slow and steady, like blood from a wound that wouldn’t close. Until there was nothing left—no light, no fight, no dream.
Only the quiet hum of hospital machines and the hollow sound of my own breathing.
But Zayne… Zayne was there.
He never left my side. He held me when I cried, kissed my forehead, whispered that they caught the woman who did this. That she was in prison. That I was safe now.
And I believed him.
Because Zayne didn’t just promise to make things right—he made it look real. He flew in specialists from all over the world. Orthopedic surgeons from Switzerland, physical therapists from Japan, experimental treatment teams from the U.S. He made calls at all hours, pulled strings, moved mountains.
He was tireless. Always at my bedside, dark circles under his eyes, phone pressed to his ear as he argued with hospitals and arranged flights.
Everyone whispered about him—the devoted husband who would do anything for his broken wife.
And I believed every word.
At night, when the world went quiet, he’d hold my hand and whisper, “Rest, Amira. I’ll fix this. I’ll fix everything.”
I didn’t know then he wasn’t fixing it for me.
He was fixing it for her.
I believed him, so I married him. I thought I was safe. But it was all a lie.
The memory made me gag. I pressed my forehead against the steering wheel, sobbing quietly. My whole world felt like it was collapsing in slow motion.
I wiped my tears roughly. I needed proof. I needed to see it with my own eyes.
I drove home on autopilot. My hands were still shaking when I unlocked the front door. The house was silent. My breathing was loud in my ears.
I went straight to his study.
I searched everything. Drawers. Files. Cabinets. My fingers trembled with every paper I touched. My breath came sharp and fast.
And then I found it.
Tucked under a pile of old receipts.
A photograph.
I pulled it out with trembling fingers. My eyes burned as I stared at it.
It was Sasha.
Smiling. Happy. Her hair gleamed in the sunlight. She was standing on what looked like a beach. The date was right there in the corner.
Recent.
My legs gave out. I dropped to my knees, clutching the photo so hard it crumpled at the edges.
She was never in jail.
The entire thing—every tear Zayne shed, every word of comfort, every kiss, every promise—was all built on this lie.
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