Synopsis
Banu had married Sadig out of love and was a dignified, modest woman who adapted well to village life. Her husband, Sadig, was a businessman and often traveled to Moscow for long periods. In his absence, Coshgun — who had loved Banu since childhood but had always hidden his feelings — began to feel his suppressed emotions resurface. Coshgun, once silent, started taking bolder steps. Banu didn’t initially understand Coshgun’s feelings for her, but over time she noticed a change in his attention and behavior. At first, Coshgun subtly expressed his love, but soon he crossed moral boundaries and began making indecent proposals. Banu firmly rejected these advances, striving to protect her dignity and honor. But Coshgun couldn’t handle the rejection. Out of vengeance, he used artificial intelligence to create fake and obscene images of Banu, humiliating her in the eyes of the village community. The psychological pressure and stress took a toll on Banu. During her struggle against Coshgun, she suffered a spontaneous miscarriage, losing her one-month-old unborn child. Banu could not forgive the humiliation against her honor nor the injustice of being robbed of her right to be a mother. She couldn’t trust the police or the villagers. There was only one path left for her: revenge. One evening, Banu invited Coshgun over for dinner and prepared a special dish — stuffed grape leaves. But inside the rice, she had hidden tiny, nearly invisible needle fragments. Coshgun ate the dish eagerly and he died. Banu remained silent. No one knew anything. She had taken her revenge in the smartest and quietest way possible, but the wound inside her would never heal.