epxphniee
Some debts are paid with money.
Others demand blood.
Ulfat Zarwari spent twenty-six years believing she would decide the course of her own life.
Then her father made a deal.
And suddenly, she belonged to Rehman Dakait.
A man feared across Lyari.
A man whose name carried more warnings than introductions.
A man she despised long before she ever met him.
The marriage was never meant to be a romance.
It was an arrangement.
A transaction.
A bargain struck between people far more powerful than either of them.
And if there was one thing Ulfat hated more than Rehman himself, it was being forced into a life she had never chosen.
The feeling was entirely mutual.
Because Rehman Dakait had built his empire on control.
Yet somehow, the one person he could never control was the woman who now carried his name.
What follows is not a love story.
At least not at first.
It is a war.
A relentless battle of pride, resentment, and stubbornness.
A marriage where every conversation feels like a challenge.
Every compromise feels like defeat.
And every victory comes at the cost of another scar.
Neither of them knows how to surrender.
Neither of them knows how to forgive.
And neither of them is willing to be the first one to break.
But hatred is a dangerous thing.
Especially when it is forced to live under the same roof.
Because there are only so many times two people can hurt each other before they begin to understand one another.
Only so many nights spent wishing the other would leave before the thought becomes unbearable.
Somewhere between fury and devotion.
Between destruction and protection.
Between the desperate need to walk away and the terrifying inability to do so.
Something begins to grow.
Something neither of them wants.
After all, the most dangerous debts are never written on paper.
They are written in love, foolish enough to believe they can remain untouched.
Qarz-e-Mohabbat
A debt neither of them intended to owe.