A Silent Bride Was Sent As A Decoy—Then The Groom Saw Her Face-tantan

Alisa Rossi learned early that silence could make cruel people feel safe.

They said things in front of her that they would never say in front of someone who could shout back.

They made decisions over her head, across dinner tables, in hallways, behind cracked doors, as if her lack of voice meant she had no mind listening.

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The truth was that Alisa heard everything.

She had heard the way her father, Marco Rossi, spoke about debts when he thought the house was asleep.

She had heard her mother, Beatrice, tell guests that Alisa was delicate, shy, difficult, not quite right.

She had heard her older sister, Isabella, laugh on the phone late at night, promising men things in a soft voice and then forgetting the promises by morning.

Alisa had not been born silent.

When she was five, a fever burned through her body so violently that her parents later described it like a storm they survived.

But Alisa was the one who carried the wreckage.

Her voice never returned.

By the time she was twenty-two, she had learned to speak with her hands, with paper, with the tiny changes in her face that only kind people bothered to read.

There were not many kind people in the Rossi house.

Isabella was the daughter people noticed first.

She walked into rooms as if light had been arranged for her personally.

She wore silk dresses to charity dinners, smiled for photographs, and let older women call her a perfect bride while men watched her from across polished tables.

Alisa lived around the edges of that attention.

She folded napkins before guests arrived.

She slipped out of rooms when conversations turned sharp.

She kept her hands low when she signed because Beatrice said it made people uncomfortable.

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