Because I understand—because I used to be just like you: an abandoned person who no longer believed I deserved love.

My stepmother forced me to marry a disabled man. On our wedding night, I helped him onto the bed… and the fall that followed changed both our lives.

My marriage was arranged like a transaction.

My stepmother said:
“That family is rich. Just be obedient and think of your life as changed.”

I stayed silent, didn’t argue. Maybe because ever since my father died, I had grown used to having no choice.

My groom was Aarav—a man rumored to be disabled, sitting in a wheelchair all day. People said he was once a famous young master in Delhi, but after a car accident, his legs became completely paralyzed, his fiancée left him, and he began living alone in a cold suburban villa.

And I—Meera, a poor girl from Jaipur—became “the wife of a disabled man.”

The wedding was quiet.
No fireworks, no music, no blessings.
Just me in my old borrowed sari, standing beside a silent man, surrounded by pitying and judgmental eyes.

When the car took me to my husband’s home, my stepmother had only one thing to whisper:
“Keep your mouth shut. Don’t anger his family.”

Then she turned away as if she’d just delivered a parcel.

The villa I arrived at was beautiful, but cold.

Few servants, a quiet air.

He—my newlywed husband—only nodded slightly and said in a dull voice:
“From now on, you can stay here. Do whatever you want. I won’t interfere.”

He didn’t call me his wife, didn’t look at me for more than a moment.

We lived in the same house, but as strangers.

He spent his days reading in his study; I slept in the next room at night.

Sometimes the sound of wheels rolling over wooden floors echoed regularly—it became the rhythm of the house.

I thought:
“My life is over. A convenient marriage, a husband who can’t walk.”

On our wedding night, the servants had all gone home.

He sat beside the bed while I fumbled with the blanket. Everything was painfully quiet.

I was trembling, not knowing what to say. He noticed and whispered:
“You don’t have to pity me. I know I’m a burden.”

I shook my head quickly:
“No… that’s not it…”

Then, for some reason, I stepped forward and bent down:
“Let me help you onto the bed.”

He paused, eyes slightly widening, then nodded.

I wrapped my arms around his back, trying to lift him onto my back. But he was heavier than I expected.

Just a few steps in, my foot slipped on the edge of the carpet and we both crashed onto the wooden floor.

A loud thud.
It hurt.

I scrambled up to apologize, but then froze.

Under the thin blanket, I felt… something move.

He looked at me too—his eyes suddenly different.

We both stayed silent for a moment.

I stuttered:
“…You can still feel that?”

He lowered his head and gave a faint smile—sad and helpless at the same time:
“The doctor said with physiotherapy, I might walk again. But I don’t want to anymore. When people leave you just because you can’t stand, whether you walk again or not… stops mattering.”

His voice was soft and cracked, dissolving in the air.

My throat tightened—not out of pity, but because I saw his heart was more wounded than his legs.

That night, I lay awake outside, tossing and turning.

His sentence kept echoing:
“There’s no point trying anymore.”

In the days that followed, I changed.

Every morning, I pushed him on his wheelchair to the balcony to watch the sunrise, even though he frowned:
“I don’t like the light.”

I smiled:
“But the light still likes you. So stop hiding.”

He stopped arguing.

Every day I took him to the garden.
I told silly stories—about neighbors, about how my stepmother once locked me in the kitchen, about the borrowed wedding sari.

He listened, sometimes even smiled faintly.
It was the first smile I’d seen in days.

I taught him to stand too.
At first, just a few seconds. Then a few steps.

He fell, I held him.
It hurt, I massaged his legs.

He asked:
“Aren’t you afraid of me?”

I answered:
“No. I’m only afraid you’ll give up.”

At some point, his eyes stopped being cold.

And the fear I had on our wedding day slowly faded.

One night, he said:
“The day of the accident, she told me: ‘I can’t stay with a cripple.’ Then she left. I tried to walk for half a year. The more I tried, the more worthless I felt.”

I stayed silent, then gently asked:
“If someone stayed… would you try again?”

He looked at me:
“Maybe.”

That answer broke my heart—
not out of pity, but because it touched something deep.

Because I realized I had once been like him too: abandoned, convinced I didn’t deserve love.

One day, my stepmother came to the villa.
Same tone:
“Hope you’re happy now. Don’t forget to send your mother some money. Selling you wasn’t a waste after all.”

Before I could react, Aarav appeared.
He quietly placed a check on the table:
“Thank you for bringing her to me.
But from now on, you have no claim over her.”

My stepmother froze, face turning pale.
And I… tears rolled down my cheeks.

For the first time in my life, someone stood up for me—not out of duty, not for gain, but simply for me.

That night, I sat beside his bed and whispered,
“Thank you.”

He smiled:
“I didn’t do it because you owe me.
I did it because I owe myself—for leaving you alone for so long.”

As time passed, he walked a few steps, then more.

Every morning, he still used a cane.
I still held his hand as we walked slowly through the garden.

One day he asked:
“If I walk normally again, will you leave?”

I smiled:
“If you still need someone who makes terrible coffee, I’ll stay.”

He laughed—a warm laugh that melted Delhi’s morning fog.

Then one morning, I woke up and didn’t see him.

Panicked, I ran to the garden—and froze.

He was walking.
No cane.
No support.
Slow but steady.

The sunlight fell on his shoulders, glowing like the tears on my face.

He came to me, took my hand:
“You helped me get my legs back.
But what you truly healed was my heart.”

I hugged him tightly, crying.

And I realized—
that the night we fell, it wasn’t just our bodies hitting the floor…
but our hearts finally touching for the first time.

Now the cold villa is filled with laughter.
Every morning, he walks to the balcony alone and pours me a cup of masala chai.

I once teased:
“Do you remember our wedding night?”

He smiled:
“Of course. That day, you carried me.
And today, it’s my turn to carry you—for half a peaceful lifetime.”

I leaned my head on his shoulder and whispered with a soft smile:

In the end, you don’t need strong legs to move forward in life—
just a heart strong enough to walk toward each other.