Anders XBC

Anders XBC Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Anders XBC, News & Media Website, 17 Hutchinson Street, Little Compton, RI.

11/30/2025

Her Father Married Her Off to a Beggar Because She Was Born Blind – What Happened Next Left Everyone Speechless
Zainab had never seen the world, but she could feel its cruelty with every breath she took. She was born blind into a family that valued beauty above all else.
Her two sisters were admired for their captivating eyes and elegant figures, while Zainab was treated like a burden—a shameful secret kept behind closed doors. Her mother died when she was only five, and from then on, her father changed. He became bitter, resentful, and cruel, especially toward her. He never called her by her name; he called her “that thing.” He didn’t want her at the family dinner table or anywhere near when visitors came. He believed she was cursed. And when Zainab turned 21, he made a decision that would destroy what was left of her already broken heart.
One morning, her father entered her small room where Zainab sat quietly, her fingers gliding over the braille pages of an old, worn-out book, and dropped a folded piece of fabric in her lap.
“You’re getting married tomorrow,” he said flatly.
Zainab froze. The words didn’t make sense. Getting married? To whom?
“He’s a beggar from the mosque,” her father continued. “You’re blind, he’s poor. A good match for you.”
It felt like the blood drained from her face. She wanted to scream, but no sound came out. She had no choice. Her father never gave her choices.
The next day, she was married in a small, rushed ceremony. Of course, she never saw his face, and no one dared describe him to her. Her father shoved her toward the man and told her to take his arm. She obeyed, like a ghost in her own body. Everyone laughed behind their hands, whispering, “The blind girl and the beggar.” After the ceremony, her father handed her a small bag of clothes and pushed her toward the man again.
“She’s your problem now,” he said and walked away without looking back.
The beggar, whose name was Yusha, led her silently down the road. He didn’t say a word for a long time. They reached a small broken-down hut on the edge of the village. It smelled of damp earth and smoke.
“It’s not much,” Yusha said gently. “But you’ll be safe here.”
She sat on the old mat inside, holding back tears. This was her life now. A blind girl married to a beggar in a hut made of mud and hope.
But something strange happened that first night.
Yusha made tea with gentle hands. He gave her his own coat and slept near the door, like a guard dog protecting his queen. He spoke to her like he truly cared—asking what stories she liked, what dreams she had, what food made her smile. No one had ever asked her anything like that before.
Days turned into weeks. Yusha would walk her to the river every morning, describing the sun, the birds, the trees with such poetry that Zainab began to feel like she could see them through his words. He sang to her as she washed clothes and told her stories of stars and faraway lands at night. She laughed for the first time in years. Her heart began to open. And in that strange little hut, something unexpected happened—Zainab fell in love.
One afternoon, as she reached for his hand, she asked, “Were you always a beggar?”
He hesitated. Then said softly, “I wasn’t always like this.” But he never said more. And Zainab didn’t press him.
Until one day.
She went to the market alone to buy vegetables. Yusha had given her careful directions, and she memorized every step. But halfway through her journey, someone grabbed her arm violently.
“Blind rat!” a voice spat. It was her sister. Amina. “Still alive? Still playing wife to that beggar?”
Zainab felt tears welling up, but she stood tall.
“I’m happy,” she said.
Amina laughed cruelly. “You don’t even know what he looks like. He’s trash. Just like you.”
And then she whispered something that broke her heart. Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

11/30/2025

“My sister threw a plate at my 3-year-old — and what my mother said afterward made me reveal the family secret they thought I would never speak aloud…”
It happened on a Sunday evening that was supposed to be peaceful. My mother’s house smelled like roasted chicken and buttery mashed potatoes, and everyone was gathered at the table chatting. As usual, my sister Caroline was holding court — bragging about her upcoming European trip and the “romantic surprise” her fiancé had planned. Everyone hung on her every word.
I sat quietly beside my three-year-old daughter, Emma, helping her eat. She had been angelic all evening, swinging her legs beneath the chair, smiling shyly, trying to join conversations no one bothered to include her in.
And then everything unraveled.
Caroline’s plate was almost untouched — roasted carrots, green beans, the works. Emma, curious and craving attention, reached out her tiny hand and gently picked up a single carrot slice.
Before I could react, Caroline’s voice exploded across the table.
“What do you think you’re doing?”
Every person went still. Emma froze, her small hand shaking as the carrot fell onto her lap.
“She’s three, Caroline,” I said gently. “She didn’t mean anything by it.”
But Caroline wasn’t hearing me. She shot up so fast her chair screeched, grabbed her plate with both hands — and slammed it onto the floor.
The plate shattered, food flying everywhere.
“There!” she shouted. “If she wants it so badly, let her eat it off the floor!”
Emma burst into terrified sobs, trembling as she clung to me. My own pulse hammered in my ears — fury, disbelief, heartbreak all tangled together.
I looked to my mother, expecting outrage… or at least a reprimand.
Instead, she glanced down at me with that familiar cold expression, her lips twisting into a thin smile.
“Some children,” she said calmly, “need to be taught their place.”
And that was it.
Something inside me snapped — but not in the way they expected. I didn’t scream. I didn’t cry. I simply felt a cold, razor-sharp clarity settle over me.
I stood up slowly, holding Emma tight against my shoulder. I looked straight at my mother… then at Caroline, whose smug confidence faltered for the first time.
And in the stillness of that room, I asked quietly:
“Do you know why I’ve never asked either of you for money — not once — not even when I was pregnant, alone, and struggling?”
The room went utterly still.
Forks paused mid-air.
Caroline’s smile vanished.
They had no idea what was coming next. Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

11/29/2025

That day changed my life 😳. Early in the morning, I stepped into the yard just to clean some fruit boxes, when suddenly a faint movement caught my eye. I moved closer, thinking it was a mouse or an insect. But when I pushed the grass aside, I froze. A few tiny, hairless creatures stared at me, squeezed tightly together. I think I even forgot to breathe 🫣.
They were so helpless that something tore inside me. I couldn’t understand what they were, how they appeared there, or why they were alone. I waited a bit, hoping their mother would return, but the silence lasted too long. So, I decided to bring them home.
I warmed them, fed them, and checked from time to time if their breathing became stronger 🫠. But every day, as their eyes slowly opened, a strange feeling grew inside me. It was as if something about them wasn’t normal. Their gaze sometimes seemed… too intelligent.
And the day I finally understood what was truly hidden inside them — everything changed 😨.
👉 I placed the continuation and the real secret in the link in the comments. Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

11/29/2025

Teen Thief Taunts the Judge, Thinking He’s Untouchable — Until His Own Mother Stood Up and Shocked the Court 😱😱 The courtroom murmured as 17-year-old Ryan Cooper strolled in like he owned the place. Sneakers squeaked on polished floors, hoodie slouched, smirk plastered on his face. This wasn’t the look of a boy facing serious sentencing for burglaries around his Ohio neighborhood. It was the look of someone who thought he was invincible.
Judge Alan Whitmore, a veteran on the bench with sharp eyes and steel-gray hair, studied the teen closely. Over the years he’d seen hardened criminals, frightened first-timers, and even genuine remorse. But Ryan? He oozed arrogance. Three arrests in a single year—shoplifting, breaking into cars, and even a home invasion. The case against him was rock-solid. Still, here he stood, grinning like none of it mattered. “Do you have anything to say before sentencing?” the judge asked.
Ryan leaned toward the mic, sarcasm dripping from every word: “Yeah, Your Honor. Doesn’t matter what you do. I’ll be back here next month anyway. Juvenile detention? Please. It’s like summer camp with locks.” Gasps rippled through the room. Even his own lawyer stared down at the table in embarrassment.
Judge Whitmore’s expression hardened. “Mr. Cooper, you think your age makes you untouchable. You think the law is a game. But you’re standing on the very edge of a cliff.” Ryan smirked wider. “Cliffs don’t scare me.”
Then came the sound that silenced everything—a chair scraping against the floor. All eyes turned as Ryan’s mother, Karen, rose shakily to her feet. For months she had sat quietly, hoping her son might finally show some remorse. But after hearing him mock the system in front of everyone, something inside her snapped. “Enough, Ryan!” she cried, her voice trembling yet fierce. “You will not stand there and act like this is a joke. Not anymore.”
The entire courtroom froze. For the first time, Ryan’s cocky grin wavered. Even Judge Whitmore leaned back, watching closely. 👉 Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

11/29/2025

When I stepped into the courtroom wearing my uniform, my father smirked and my mother sighed in disappointment. But then the judge looked up, went pale, and whispered, “No… it can’t be her.” The room fell silent. And in that moment, everyone finally realized who I truly was....
The courtroom fell silent the moment I walked in. My father chuckled under his breath, a dry, rustling sound of dismissal. My mother sighed, whispering to him, “The uniform.” That familiar gesture that said I had once again embarrassed the family. They were suing me, claiming the house my grandfather left me on grounds of "abandonment."
It had been twelve years since I left home. The last time I saw them, my mother had texted: "We raised a daughter, not a soldier."
Now, they sat there, staring at me in the uniform that was, to them, a symbol of my failure.
The judge entered, an older man with kind eyes. He began. “Mr. and Mrs. Carter, you’re claiming your daughter abandoned her rights to the property.”
My father straightened, his voice full of confidence. “Yes, Your Honor. She abandoned that house to go chase fantasies. We’ve paid the upkeep, the insurance, everything.”
It was a lie.
The judge turned to me, his gaze lingering for a moment on the medals on my chest. “Ms. Carter, do you have a statement?”
“Yes, Your Honor,” I said evenly. I opened my folder. “I have receipts for every property tax payment since 2013, and invoices for a new roof I paid for two years ago.”
My father’s face flushed. “That’s not the point! You left!”
The judge held up a hand, silencing my father. Then he looked at the file in front of him, and then back up at me. His face went pale. He took off his glasses, polishing them slowly. The room was utterly silent.
He cleared his throat, but when he spoke, his voice was a stunned whisper.
“No… it can’t be her.”
My parents looked at each other, confused. The judge put his glasses back on, staring directly at them, his eyes now filled with a profound respect.
“Mr. and Mrs. Carter,” he said, his voice now carrying a gravity that wasn't there before. “Are you absolutely certain you wish to proceed with this petition?”
And in that moment, for the first time, my parents looked at me not with disappointment, but with a dawning, terrifying confusion...Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

11/29/2025

I watched my daughter-in-law toss my granddaughter’s baby blanket into the bin. I rescued it, and when i spread it on the bed i felt something firm stitched into the fabric. I carefully opened the seam—and what lay inside stopped my heart.
I saw my daughter-in-law, Ashley, throwing my granddaughter Isabella's baby blanket into the trash. She didn't just toss it; she shoved it inside with a strange violence, as if she hated the very fabric. I didn't think twice. I ran toward the dumpster and rescued it.
It wasn’t just a blanket; it was the one I had knitted for Isabella myself, every stitch a piece of my love. My husband had died, and then my only son, Matthew, was gone too, after an "accident" down the stairs three years ago. This blanket was one of the last, most sacred memories I had left. Why was she throwing it away?
I took it home, my heart heavy. I spread it out on my bed, smoothing the fabric. And then I felt it, right in the center of the blanket: a hard lump, rectangular, something alien hidden between the layers of cotton.
My heart started beating faster. I flipped the blanket over and found an opening, an almost invisible line of perfect stitches made with thread the same color as the fabric. Someone had opened the blanket, put something inside, and sewn it back up so carefully that it was almost impossible to notice. This was not an accident. This was a buried secret.
My hands were shaking as I grabbed my scissors and began to cut, thread by thread. I felt like I was opening something forbidden. I put my fingers inside and felt something cold, metallic. I took it out carefully, and when I had it in my hands, the air escaped my lungs.
It was a cell phone, small and black, perhaps four or five years old. I found an old charger and plugged it in. The screen flickered. Ten minutes later, it lit up completely. No password.
My trembling finger tapped the photo gallery. The first picture was of Ashley in an elegant restaurant, smiling, but she wasn't alone. A strange man was beside her, his arm wrapped intimately around her shoulders. The photo had a date: it had been taken four years ago, when Matthew was still alive, when Ashley was still my son's wife.
My heart stopped...Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

11/28/2025

😯😲The guard mockingly stopped a "poor-looking" girl with an expensive laptop, convinced that she had taken it. But all of his self-confidence shatter the moment her father entered the school.
I was standing at the entrance to the school when it all started.
In front of me, a skinny girl with a worn-out backpack stood as if something fragile was inside.
The guard looked up at the checkpoint. His gaze glides over her hoodie, ripped jeans, flapped sneakers... and got stuck on the backpack.
— Hold up. What do you have there? — he requested.
When she opened the zipper and flashed the silver laptop case under the lamps, his face stiffened.
— ArcTech Pro? — he dragged the words into length. — From where?
— I... I won him. In the contest, she whispered.
But he stopped listening.
— A girl like you? — he sneezed in contempt and pulled out the laptop without permission. — This looks taken. Take a seat. I am calling the cops
Words hit like a slap in the face. The murmuring of the students, the cell phone cameras held up — everything became a sticky lump of humiliation.
She wrote a message with trembling fingers, sent only two lines:
"Daddy... please, come. In a moment. “
😨😵A few minutes later, a man walked into the school that the security guard wanted to see the least in his life...Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

11/28/2025

My 8-year-old spent five hours baking cupcakes for our family dinner. My mother tossed them into the trash, and my sister laughed, “Try again when you’re older.” I didn’t laugh. I stood up… and what I said next left the entire table silent.....
My 8-year-old daughter, Chloe, spent all morning baking cupcakes for our family dinner. She’d failed three batches, but finally made one perfect one. She frosted them with intense focus, so proud she could barely stand still.
When we arrived, Chloe carefully peeled back the foil. The cupcakes looked a little lopsided, but they smelled of vanilla, sugar, and something hopeful.
Her cousin wrinkled her nose. "Are they gluten-free?"
My sister, Monica, smirked. "Mom says I'm not doing gluten this week."
My mother nodded, her smile a little too bright. "Sweetheart, it's lovely that you tried. But we have so much food already. Let's just set these aside for now, all right?" She lifted the tray and carried it toward the kitchen before I could answer.
A few minutes later, I went to the kitchen and saw them. The trash can lid was half-open. I saw the frosting first—white smears against the black liner. Crushed paper cups.
Chloe was standing in the doorway. Her eyes went straight to the trash, then to me. She didn't speak. Didn't cry. She just froze, her face a mask of quiet devastation.
When I returned to the table, she was sitting perfectly still. My sister was talking loudly about the importance of holding children to "higher standards." I looked straight at her.
"Monica," I said lightly, "you sure you don't want to try one of Chloe's cupcakes before they're all gone?"
She gave a tight laugh. "I think I've had enough sugar for the year. She'll get better when she's older."
The laugh that followed was thin. And that’s when it hit me. The unspoken lie was the family's real dessert. Chloe's hands were trembling under the table. Her eyes weren't dry.
In that moment, something in me shifted. I picked up my wine glass, my voice coming out steady. Too steady.
"I'd like to make a toast," I said.
Every fork froze. Every voice stopped.
"To the last time you see us again."
Silence. My mother broke it first, her voice sharp. "Jody, stop this nonsense. We have standards in this family."
I met her gaze, and for the first time in my life, I felt no fear. I smiled, a calm, chilling smile.
"You're right, Mom. You do have standards. And you're about to find out just how expensive those standards are to maintain on your own."
I took Chloe's small hand, and we walked out. The front door closed behind us, not with a slam, but with a soft click.
It was time for them to start paying the price for their own "standards.".... Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

11/28/2025

Conjoined twins Abby and Erin Delaney, who had only a 2% chance of survival at birth, recently reached an impressive milestone: both have graduated from kindergarten. Born prematurely at 30 weeks on July 24, 2016, they faced a very complex medical situation from the start. Their mother discovered at 11 weeks of pregnancy that her daughters were craniopagus, joined at the skull. This rare condition made the twins extremely vulnerable to serious complications. The girls shared a skull, skin, and a vital blood vessel, the “superior sagittal sinus,” which drains blood from the brain. On June 6, 2017, they underwent an 11-hour separation surgery at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. Although the operation carried many risks, it was a success. After the surgery, Abby and Erin spent five months in the hospital recovering. Today, despite slower progress than their peers, they have successfully graduated from kindergarten, a testament to their courage and that of their parents. Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

11/27/2025

Immediately after the funeral of our 15-year-old daughter, my husband was persuading me to get rid of her belongings, but while cleaning the room I found a strange note: "Mom, look under the bed and you will understand everything." Looking under the bed I saw something terrible... 😱😱
Immediately after the funeral of our only daughter, who had barely turned 15 years old, as if life had stopped.
I remember standing at the grave, barely on my feet.
The people around said something, sympathized, but I almost heard nothing. There was only her white coffin.
After the funeral, my husband kept repeating:
- You have to throw away all her things. It's just a memory. She will torment us while we keep it at home.
I couldn't figure out how he could say that. It's not just things - it's her smell, her touches, dresses, toys. I resisted as hard as I could, but after a month, I gave up. I decided to clean up her room, where I hadn't been in for almost a month.
When I opened the door, I felt that everything was left there as before. There was a light scent of her perfumes in the air, an open notebook on the table.
I grabbed each item in my hands separately - dress, hair bands, favorite book. I cried, hugging them to my chest, as if it could bring her back even for a moment.
But suddenly a small folded paper fell out of a textbook. My heart is pounding.
I unfolded it - and recognized my daughter's handwriting.
The leaf read: "Mommy, if you are reading this, quickly look under the bed and you will understand everything."
I re-read it a few times, my hands were trembling. It's all shrinking in the chest. What could she mean?
Gathering my strength, I dropped down on my knees and looked under the bed... and what I saw there shocked me. 😱😱 Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

11/27/2025

Jennifer Lopez, 54,, is showing off her new boyfriend… and you better sit down, because you might recognize him! Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

11/27/2025

Back home after the delivery, I began changing the baby’s clothes. Suddenly, I was stunned by what I saw, unable to comprehend this unexpected moment.
When we returned home after the birth, the house was filled with excitement and joy. 🎉 Everyone was eager to meet our little girl, and the atmosphere was full of laughter, cuddles, and little coos. The nursery was perfectly prepared, every detail carefully thought out—from pastel blankets to the small stuffed animals lining the crib. 🧸💖
We spent the first few hours savoring every moment, watching her tiny fingers curl around ours, admiring her smallness and fragility. My heart overflowed with love and pride. 💕 My husband couldn’t stop smiling, whispering sweet words to our baby, and I couldn’t believe how perfect everything seemed. Every second with her was magical; every little sound she made, every yawn, made our hearts beat faster. 😍
But after the guests left, the house grew quiet. 🏡 The gentle hum of the evening felt almost unreal. I picked up our baby to change her clothes, wanting her to be comfortable for the night. And that’s when it happened—the moment I will never forget. 😨
As I opened the diaper bag and chose her new outfit, something seemed… strange. I looked down, and my hands froze. My eyes widened in disbelief.
👉👉👉 What I saw shocked me. Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇

Address

17 Hutchinson Street
Little Compton, RI
03045

Telephone

+19102014111

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Anders XBC posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share