LOGINThe gate opened, and Brynn Ashwood walked out of Greymire into the light. She had imagined this moment a thousand times over three hundred sixty-five days, lying on cold stone in the dark. She had thought she knew what it would feel like. She was wrong. Nothing had prepared her for the simple, staggering fact of walking forward and not being stopped. No hand on her arm. No voice calling her back. No wall rising up to keep her. Just open ground, and a road, and the whole wide world she'd been promised and had almost stopped believing in. Lena's hand was locked in hers, and the girl made a small broken sound as they crossed the threshold, the sound of someone who'd given up on this exact thing and gotten it anyway. Brynn squeezed her fingers and did not let go. The council escort fell in around them, and behind them Greymire's gate ground slowly shut, sealing away the year, the cold floor, the whip, the blood, Mira's grave, Rodrick's smiling cruelty. Brynn did not look back. She had
Three hundred sixty-five scratches on the wall. Brynn carved the last one in the gray before dawn, and her hand did not shake at all. Three hundred sixty-five. A full year. The wall was complete, every brutal day of it accounted for, climbing the cold stone beside the corner where she'd slept for a year on the floor. She pressed her palm flat against the whole of it one final time, the way you touch a grave, or a scar, or a thing you survived that you'll carry forever. Then she stood, and she did not look at the wall again. Today the debt was paid. Today the gate opened outward. Today she walked free. The compound stirred around her in the pale light, and she felt the difference in it like a change in the weather. The council elders were already awake, already moving with their unhurried authority, and the whole of Greymire bent around them, careful, watched, restrained. Rodrick could not touch her today. Could not invent a crime, could not stage a punishment, could not lay one f
Three hundred sixty-four scratches on the wall. One day to go. Brynn carved the line and then sat back and looked at the whole wall, the entire year of it, three hundred sixty-four marks climbing the stone beside the corner where she'd slept on cold ground for a year. Tomorrow she'd carve the last one. Three hundred sixty-five. And then she'd never carve another, because tomorrow the debt was paid and the gate opened outward and she walked free. One day. After everything, it came down to one day. The council's presence had transformed the compound. With three elders watching, Rodrick's cruelty had nowhere to operate. The guards left the servants alone. The fighting pits stayed empty. For the first time in a year, Brynn moved through Greymire without flinching at every shadow, because the shadows had teeth pulled. It was a strange, almost dizzying freedom, a preview of the larger one coming tomorrow. She spent her last full day saying goodbye. To the servants first. The ones who'
Three hundred sixty-three scratches on the wall. Two days to go. Brynn carved the line and noticed her hand was steady for the first time in weeks. Two days. The number had finally stopped being a threat and started being a promise. Whatever came after the gate, the year itself, the three hundred sixty-three days of it, was almost paid in full. The council came that morning. She felt the shift in the compound before she understood it. The guards stood straighter. The mercenaries melted out of sight. Rodrick himself emerged from his quarters in clean clothes, all his cruelty folded carefully away behind a host's smile. And through the gates rode three wolves Brynn had never seen, older, unhurried, carrying themselves with an authority that made even Rodrick's enforcers step back. Council representatives. Here to oversee the final days of the blood debt and confirm her release. Exactly as the original ruling had promised, a year ago, in another life. Brynn understood instantly what
Three hundred sixty-two scratches on the wall. Three days to go. Brynn carved the line in the gray before dawn and pressed her palm flat against the whole year of them, all three hundred sixty-two, the wall she'd filled one brutal day at a time. Three days. She could hold three days in her hand. After everything, it seemed impossible that it came down to something so small. The hall confrontation had changed something in the compound. Rodrick had tried his cruelest trap and lost, and word of it had spread among the servants the way everything spread in Greymire, quietly, through glances and half sentences. The bonded one had walked into Rodrick's box and walked both of them out. And in the eyes of the broken people who'd given up years ago, Brynn saw something she hadn't seen since Mira died. Not hope, exactly. Greymire didn't allow hope. But something adjacent to it. The memory of what standing up looked like. She found Lena at the woodpile that afternoon, and for once the girl sp
Three hundred sixty scratches on the wall. Five days to go. Brynn carved the line and stared at it for a long time in the dark. Five days. She could count them on one hand. After three hundred sixty, the number felt almost unreal, a thing she'd stopped truly believing in somewhere around the middle months and now had to relearn how to trust. But trust was dangerous now. Because Rodrick knew too. He knew his year was nearly spent, knew the council deadline was bearing down, knew that in five days the leverage he'd used to torment Torrhen Ashford for a year would simply walk out his gate, untouchable, and there was nothing he could legally do to stop it. A man like Rodrick did not lose gracefully. Brynn had lived in his house for a year. She knew that better than anyone. And she knew, with cold certainty, that the last five days would be the most dangerous of all, because a cornered Rodrick would be looking for one thing above everything else. An excuse. A reason. A violation he coul
Forty scratches on the wall beside her corner. Brynn ran her thumb down the rows of them in the dark before she slept, the way some wolves counted prayers. Three hundred twenty-five days to go. The number used to feel impossible. Now it just felt like weather. Something to be endured one day at a
Three weeks in Greymire. Brynn marked each day with a scratch on the wall beside her corner. Twenty-one lines. Three hundred forty-four to go. The routine was brutal. Wake before dawn. Work until midnight. Sleep on stone. Repeat. Rodrick made sure she was given the worst assignments. Scrubbing b
The first morning, a guard kicked her awake before dawn. "Kitchen duty. Now." Brynn stood up. Her cheek still throbbed from Rodrick's backhand. The corner she'd slept in was as cold as she remembered. She wrapped her arms around herself and followed the guard out. The kitchen was already chaos
Brynn didn't sleep.She lay beside Torrhen on the narrow bed, listening to his breathing, feeling the bond hum between them.He'd said he loved her. She'd said it back.And tomorrow, the council might tear them apart anyway.She could feel his worry through the bond. He wasn't sleeping either. Just







