The church was dressed in shadows.
Candles flickered against stone walls, their flames bending with every breath of cold air that slipped through the ancient arches. Rows of faces watched in silence-some veiled in awe, others sharpened with suspicion. It was less a wedding than a spectacle, less a union than a negotiation carved into flesh and sealed with blood.
Isha's gown shimmered like liquid moonlight, delicate lace weaving across her skin as if trying to soften the storm beneath. But nothing softened the weight in her chest. Her father's hand had pushed her into this vow; the same hand that held the city in fear. She was not a bride. She was a pawn dressed in white.
Across from her, Umar stood in a suit cut from shadows themselves. His presence filled the room like a warning-still, unyielding, and dangerous to touch. His jaw was carved in steel, his eyes a storm that refused to be contained. When he looked at her, it was not with tenderness but with claim, as though the vows were already chains he intended to tighten.
The priest spoke, his voice echoing in the vaulted space, words about union and eternity that felt like mockery.
Isha's throat was dry. She should say no. She should scream, run, claw her way out of this cage. Yet her lips parted, trembling. "I do."
The words tasted like betrayal. To herself. To the girl she used to be.
Umar's eyes never left her. When his turn came, his voice cut through the silence like a blade. "I do."
No hesitation. No mercy. A vow that sounded less like a promise and more like a sentence.
The rings slid into place, cold metal against warm skin. Hands touched-briefly. A shock ran through Isha's body, heat colliding with fear. She tried to pull back, but Umar's fingers lingered, just long enough for her to feel the weight of his claim.
"By the power vested in me," the priest declared, "I pronounce you husband and wife."
The crowd rose in applause, hollow and rehearsed. Behind every smile lurked greed, politics, the hunger for power.
But in the midst of it, in the fragile space between two breaths, Isha looked into Umar's eyes and saw something that rattled her to her bones.
Not just cruelty. Not just coldness.
But hunger.
The kind that devoured.
And in that moment, as his lips brushed hers in the kiss that sealed their vow, she realized what no one else in that room understood.
This was not the beginning of a marriage.
It was the start of a war.