shortkey
Introduction
History remembers cities.
It remembers ports and palaces, seals and trade routes, the rise of kingdoms and the fall of dynasties. It remembers men-kings, merchants, warriors-whose names were carved into stone or pressed into clay.
It rarely remembers girls.
This story is not about empires as they were recorded.
It is about a life as it might have been lived.
Set in the shadows of an ancient civilization-one we know through ruins, weights, and undeciphered signs-this novel imagines the world behind the artifacts. A world where order was maintained through balance, where trade ruled more fiercely than kings, and where survival often demanded silence.
At the center of this story is Zaha-a girl born into comfort, raised among spices and ledgers, laughter and learning. She is not a princess. She is not destined for greatness. She is simply alive in a city that believes prosperity is permanence.
Until it isn't.
What follows is not a tale of romance or rescue. It is not a story of easy strength or borrowed heroism. It is a story of what happens when safety is stripped away, when a city turns its back, and when a girl must learn-brutally-how power actually works.
This is a story of loss, captivity, and survival.
Of bodies treated as currency.
Of silence learned as armor.
Of knowledge carried where nothing else is allowed to remain.
It is also a story of endurance.
Because even in places designed to erase women, memory survives. And sometimes, memory becomes resistance.
This is not history as it was written.
This is history as it was lived-by someone history chose to forget.