Razia Khan Sultana, a 21 year old girl lived a life of luxury. The only child after the death of her mother, Fathima Sultana. Her father, Raziq Khan loved her with all his heart and spent lavishly on her, giving her everything she ever asked for. But the unexpected awaited her. Her father was diagnosed with the last stage of cancer. His final wish was to see his daughter married to a happy, loving and comfortable home, to get her married to his friend, Mubashir Sheikh's son... Hashim Sheikh, a 23 year old man and the heir to the Sheikh And Sons company worth millions. His mother, Fathima Sheikh, showers him with all the love and affection as he was their only son. His father, Mubashir Sheikh drops a bomb saying that Hashim had to marry his best friend's daughter. Wanting to save his father's repution, he agreed... But will their loveless relationship go any further than what they already have??... Will they break their barriers and let their fate decide to let them love??....
❝ She has always dreamed of having that perfect 'home' but then found 'him' instead ❞
A home is something that she has always dreamt of, where she'd be cherished and loved. Life has been pretty difficult after she has lost her parents at the age of 11. She was a very ambitious girl with lots of dreams and fashion designing was one of them but getting married to a guy who's not her best friend, was a big no to her. And yet she found herself signing the wedding papers at 21 years to the last man she'd possibly ever like.
He was the son of a politician, wanting to be a politician ultimately. After facing a trauma of losing someone so close to him, he became closed off and cold hearted. His only plan in life for his future was to be a politician like his father and nothing else. Getting married was never a part of his plans. And yet he found himself getting married at 25 years to the last woman he'd possibly look at..
He is, Abrar Shah.
She is, Haya(t) Ali.
And this is their story.
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Book One in the "Let Go Series"
Word Count: 59,214
Ratings: The book is intended for mature audiences. But there's no explicit description. Fade to black only.
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