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The Royal Wife

The Price of Royal Dreams and Ruthless Revenge

By Israr khanPublished 5 months ago 4 min read


Jurgon stood in the shadows outside the storehouse, his phone pressed tightly to his ear. On the other end was Queen Rebecca’s voice—low, sharp, and cold like a blade cutting through the early morning air.

“We must act fast. I know my husband. He’s already sending people to search for her. Let’s finish the last damage now. This will be the final kick of a dying horse—and it will ruin her forever.”

Her words were dripping with malice.

“Understood,” Jurgon replied quietly.

“Organize a young man for the assignment. And remember—don’t kill her. Just make sure my son will never marry her. King Zuwu believes in reputation. Once he sees those pictures, she’s finished.”

The plan was cruel—but it was already in motion.

Inside a dim, dark shack, Esther lay bound to a wooden chair. Her arms and legs throbbed painfully where the ropes bit into her flesh. Every slight movement sent fresh waves of agony coursing through her limbs. Her mouth was gagged, turning her desperate pleas into muffled, pitiful sounds.

The door creaked open.

Two men in hoodies stepped inside.

The moment Esther saw them, her body trembled violently. She tried to scream, but one of the men moved swiftly—pressing a cloth soaked in something sickly-sweet over her nose and mouth.

The smell filled her nostrils as she struggled for breath. Her vision blurred. Her body weakened. The world tilted sideways—and then darkness swallowed her.

When Esther awoke, she wasn’t in the shack.

She lay on a bed in a furnished room she had never seen before. Her body felt heavy, like lead. Her eyelids moved sluggishly. Her eyes rolled slowly in their sockets.

A young, shirtless man lay beside her, pretending to be asleep.

A sudden flash of a camera lit up the room. Click. Another click. Someone whispered, “Got it. This will do.”

Esther tried to speak, but her tongue felt numb and heavy. Before she could understand, darkness claimed her again.

She woke next to the roar of an engine and the slam of a car door.

Her body was limp as strong hands dragged her across rough dirt and dumped her beside a roadside, overgrown with dry grass. The midday sun beat down mercilessly on her face.

Jurgon’s cold voice cut through the silence. “Leave her here. By the time she wakes up, it will be too late.”

The sound of the car sped away, leaving only the chirp of cicadas and the burning silence of the roadside.

A fly buzzed near her ear. Her eyelids fluttered. The sunlight stabbed at her eyes. Slowly, faces came into focus—school children in faded uniforms, farm workers with dusty boots.

They stood at a cautious distance, whispering.

“She’s alive,” one of them said. “We thought she was dead.”

Esther tried to push herself up but winced at the pain in her wrists and ankles. Her clothes were stained with dirt and grass, her hair matted, and her lips cracked.

“What happened to you?” someone asked.

She searched her memory—only fragments came back. Two men in hoodies. A cloth pressed to her face. And then… nothing.

The workers told her she had been lying there for hours. The schoolchildren had spotted her and called for help. The police, they said, were on their way to collect what they thought was a corpse.

Esther’s pulse quickened. Why would anyone do this to her?

She was just a tomato seller.

No one had taken her purse. Her money and fruit basket were still there.

And she hadn’t been… violated.

So why abduct her at all?

Meanwhile, at the market, King Zuwu was growing restless.

He had sent trusted young men to scour surrounding villages—Sahr among them—each holding a picture of Esther.

His instructions were clear:

Bring her back alive. Ask anyone—search everywhere.

As Esther brushed the dust from her clothes, her phone suddenly vibrated.

An unfamiliar number.

Hoping it was someone from the market, she answered.

A man’s voice came through—hoarse, mocking.

“Hope you’re awake now. Thank your stars.”

Fear gripped her chest.

“Who are you? What do you want from me?”

“Easy, young lady. Check your phone. I have something for you.”

The line went dead.

Confused, Esther unlocked her phone.

A video notification.

She pressed play.

Her stomach dropped.

It was her.

On a bed.

A young, shirtless man lying beside her.

She looked unconscious—just as she had been.

Her breath caught in her throat.

A text message followed:

“Everyone has seen it. If you don’t want more embarrassment, don’t come back to the market.”

Her hands shook.

No one will believe me, she thought.

No matter what I say, they’ve already made up their minds.

She imagined Mode, his father, the traders…

Their eyes filled with disgust.

The people nearby were staring at her, whispering.

To them, she must look like a woman abandoned after a night of shame.

Tears blurred her vision.

She waved down an Okada rider and told him to take her to her aunt’s house on the outskirts of the city.

She couldn’t face anyone else.

By evening, Zuwu’s search party returned empty-handed.

Mofe, disheartened, was already thinking of leaving for Liberia to continue his search for a royal bride—since his father would never approve of Chief Paul’s daughter.

But Zuwu refused to give up.

His gut told him Esther was still alive.

Back in Monrovia, Queen Rebecca was celebrating.

Her spy reported that Esther’s stall remained empty.

She smiled into her wine glass.

Soon, her son and husband would return.

And the girl who had dared to dream of royalty would be nothing but a forgotten name.

Fan FictionShort Story

About the Creator

Israr khan

I write to bring attention to the voices and faces of the missing, the unheard, and the forgotten. , — raising awareness, sparking hope, and keeping the search alive. Every person has a story. Every story deserves to be told.

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