---
They called her Aylin Demirsoy the princess of the Demirsoy family.
Not because she wore crowns, but because everything in Istanbul bent quietly around her name.
Old money.
A media empire.
Political connections.
A family whose dinners were more dangerous than courtrooms.
Aylin was raised to marry wisely, love later, and obey always.
---
Aylin Demirsoy’s life looked perfect from the outside.
Every morning, the Demirsoy house woke up at exactly seven. The staff moved silently through the marble halls, the television murmured business news, and the smell of fresh tea floated from the kitchen like a ritual.
Her mother, Sema Demirsoy, checked the day’s schedule on her tablet, lips pressed in concentration like a general preparing for war.
Aylin sat at the long dining table, her posture flawless, sipping her tea slowly. She listened more than she spoke. That was how she had been raised
observe, adapt, survive.
Her father, Kemal Demirsoy, barely looked up from his tablet.
“Dinner with the Yalçın family tonight,” he said calmly.
“Their son returned from London.”
Aylin nodded.
This was normal.
This was life.
She wasn’t unhappy just unlived.
---
That evening, the Demirsoy convoy arrived at the Yalçın mansion, a grand house overlooking the Bosphorus, lit with soft golden lights and quiet ambition.
The women greeted each other with rehearsed kisses.
The men shook hands like diplomats ending a small war.
Aylin wore a simple cream dress, elegant but invisible. Her hair was tied neatly, her smile polite — the kind that revealed nothing.
At the dining table, conversation flowed like a business meeting disguised as family warmth.
“London has changed him,” Mrs. Yalçın said proudly.
“Very ambitious. Very focused.”
Aylin finally looked up.
Across the table sat Baran Yalçın tall, well-dressed, confident in the way only men raised to inherit power could be. He smiled at her politely.
“So, Aylin,” he said, “what do you do?”
She almost laughed.
“I work in our media division,” she replied softly.
“Mostly behind the scenes.”
“Of course,” he said. “A Demirsoy doesn’t need to prove anything.”
Her mother smiled.
Her father approved.
Aylin felt… nothing.
No excitement.
No fear.
No curiosity.
Just another chair.
Another name.
Another future being negotiated over lamb and wine.
Later, as dessert was served, Baran leaned slightly closer.
“I hope we’ll see more of each other,” he said gently.
Aylin smiled again.
The perfect smile.
The trained smile.
The smile of a girl who had never been asked what she wanted.
---
That night, back in her room, Aylin stood by the window, looking at the city lights.
Millions of lives below.
Strangers loving, failing, choosing, risking.
And here she was —
safe, wealthy, respected…
…and slowly disappearing inside a life that wasn’t hers.
She whispered to her reflection:
“Is this all there is?”
But Istanbul didn’t answer.
And neither did her future.
Not yet.
Slow.
Elegant.
Life goes on quietly, before the storm.