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Chapter 3: The Whipping

Author: F.Blackwood
last update publish date: 2026-04-28 16:14:02

Brynn woke to shouting.

Her back screamed when she moved. The wounds from last night had barely started to heal, twenty lashes for spilling water. Rodrick's idea of discipline.

She pushed herself up slowly, every muscle protesting. She'd learned to move through pain years ago, learned to function when her body was breaking. This was just another day. Another survival.

She stood and walked to the washing basin, splashing cold water on her face before looking at her reflection. Hollow eyes. Pale skin. Bruises everywhere.

This was what ten years in Greymire looked like. This was what was left.

"Brynn!" Mira burst through the door. "Ashford wolves are at the gates. Again."

Brynn went still. "What?"

"The alpha. He's back, and he's demanding to see Rodrick."

"Why?"

"I don't know. But Rodrick's furious. He's calling it an act of war."

Brynn's chest tightened, that feeling again, the strange pull from three days ago. Like something was coming, something inevitable.

"Stay here," Mira said. "Don't go outside. If this turns into a fight."

"I know. Stay invisible."

Mira hesitated. "Be safe." She left.

Brynn stood there, telling herself to listen, to stay inside, to do what she always did, hide, survive, wait. But her feet were already moving toward the door, toward the courtyard, toward the gates.

She couldn't explain it, couldn't rationalize it. She just needed to see, needed to know what was happening.

She slipped through the compound and stayed in the shadows, making her way to the well. The same place she'd hidden three days ago. She crouched behind the stone and looked through the gap.

The gates were open. Torrhen Ashford stood in the center of the courtyard with six enforcers behind him, armed, ready. Rodrick faced him, flanked by twenty Greymire wolves.

The air was electric. One wrong word and this would explode.

"You have some nerve," Rodrick said, "coming here, making demands."

"I'm not making demands. I'm taking what's mine."

"You have nothing here that's yours."

"Yes. I do."

Torrhen's eyes swept the courtyard, searching. And then they found her, locked on. Even hidden in shadow, he saw her, knew exactly where she was.

Brynn's breath caught. How? How did he keep finding her?

"I'm here for the girl," Torrhen said, still looking at Brynn, not Rodrick.

Rodrick laughed. "What girl?"

"The one at the well. The one you've been beating."

The courtyard went silent. Brynn felt ice flood her veins.

He knew. Somehow, he knew.

"I don't know what you're talking about," Rodrick said.

"Yes. You do." Torrhen finally looked away from Brynn, back to Rodrick. "She's bonded to me. And I'm taking her."

The words hit like a bomb. Bonded. To him.

No. That wasn't possible. Bonds didn't just happen. They were chosen, deliberate. Both parties had to want it. She didn't even know him.

Rodrick's face darkened. "You're lying."

"I'm not."

"Prove it."

Torrhen held out his left arm and rolled up his sleeve. Brynn saw bruises, purple-black fingerprints wrapped around his wrist. Exactly like hers. Exactly where Garran had grabbed her three days ago.

Her heart stopped.

"That's not proof," Rodrick said.

"Then let's test it."

Torrhen pulled a knife and pressed it to his palm, drawing blood. Brynn gasped as pain flared across her own palm, sharp, burning. She looked down. Her hand was unmarked, but the pain was real.

Rodrick saw her reaction, saw her stumble. His eyes narrowed. "Bring her out."

"No," Brynn whispered.

But it was too late. Garran was already moving, grabbing her arm and hauling her out from behind the well. He dragged her into the center of the courtyard. She didn't fight. Fighting only made it worse.

Torrhen's eyes locked on hers, and she saw something she didn't expect, rage. Not at her. At Garran. At Rodrick. At everyone who'd hurt her.

"Let her go," Torrhen said, voice low and deadly.

"No," Rodrick said. "She's mine."

"She was never yours."

"I claimed her pack's territory. That makes her mine by right."

"She's a person. Not property."

Rodrick smiled. "In Greymire, servants are whatever I say they are."

He walked over to Brynn and grabbed her chin, forcing her to look at him. "Tell him. Tell him you belong to me."

She said nothing. His grip tightened. "Say it."

She met his eyes, and for the first time in ten years, she didn't look away. "No."

Rodrick's face went dark. "What did you say?"

"I said no."

His fist came out of nowhere and caught her across the face. She hit the ground, tasted blood.

And somewhere behind her, she heard a snarl, not human, wolf.

She looked up. Torrhen was shifting, bones cracking and reshaping. His wolf was massive, black fur, gold eyes, teeth like daggers.

He moved faster than anything she'd ever seen and slammed into Rodrick, taking him to the ground.

The courtyard erupted, Ashford wolves against Greymire wolves. Steel, claws, blood.

Brynn scrambled back, trying to get out of the way. But Garran was there, grabbing her hair and yanking her up.

"You caused this," he hissed. "You brought them here."

He threw her against the wall. Her back hit stone, and the wounds from last night split open. She screamed, couldn't help it. The pain was too much.

Across the courtyard, Torrhen's wolf howled. He threw Rodrick off, turned, saw Garran standing over Brynn, and charged.

He hit Garran like a battering ram and took him down, tearing into him. Brynn heard Garran screaming, heard flesh tearing, heard the wet sound of death.

Then silence.

Torrhen shifted back, human again, covered in blood that wasn't his. He walked over to Brynn and knelt beside her.

"Can you stand?"

She stared at him. "You killed him."

"Yes."

"Why?"

"Because he hurt you."

"You don't even know me."

"I know enough."

He held out his hand. She looked at it, at the cut on his palm, at the blood that matched the pain in her own hand, at the bond she hadn't asked for, at the choice she'd never thought she'd have.

Stay or go. Greymire or Ashford. Hell or the unknown.

She took his hand.

He pulled her up and held her steady when her legs shook. "Can you walk?"

"I think so."

"Good. We need to leave. Now."

He turned to Rodrick. The Greymire alpha was on his feet, bleeding, furious.

"You just killed one of my enforcers."

"He deserved it."

"You'll pay for this."

"Try it. See what happens."

Rodrick looked at Brynn. "She's Greymire property. I'm not letting her leave."

"She's not property. And I'm not asking permission." Torrhen pulled Brynn closer. "Anyone who tries to stop us dies. That's not a threat. It's a fact."

The Greymire wolves shifted, ready to attack. But Rodrick raised his hand. "Let them go."

"Alpha."

"I said let them go."

The wolves backed down, confused, angry, but obedient.

Rodrick smiled. "You think you've won. But you haven't. That bond? It's not a gift. It's a curse. And when you realize that, you'll bring her back yourself."

"I won't."

"We'll see."

Torrhen didn't respond, just turned and kept Brynn close as they walked toward the gates. His wolves fell in around them, protective, ready.

And they left Greymire.

Brynn didn't look back, couldn't. Because if she looked back, she'd see the only home she'd known for ten years, the place where she'd suffered, the place where she'd survived, the place she never thought she'd escape.

And if she looked back, she might lose her nerve, might turn around, might go back to what she knew.

So she kept her eyes forward, on Torrhen's back, on the wolves surrounding her, on the forest ahead.

On freedom.

They rode for an hour before Torrhen stopped and pulled Brynn off the horse, setting her down gently.

"Let me see your back."

"It's fine."

"It's not fine. I felt it, the whip, last night."

She went still. "You felt that?"

"All of it."

He moved behind her and lifted her shirt carefully. She heard him inhale sharply. "This is bad."

"I've had worse."

"That doesn't make it better."

He called over one of his wolves. "Ride ahead. Tell Cerys we're coming, tell her to prepare the healing rooms." The wolf nodded and rode off.

Torrhen turned back to Brynn. "What's your name?"

"Brynn."

"Brynn what?"

She hesitated. "Ashwood."

His eyes widened. "You're an Ashwood."

"I was. Before Rodrick destroyed my pack."

"How old were you?"

"Twelve."

"And he kept you as a servant."

"Yes."

Torrhen's jaw tightened. "How long?"

"Ten years."

He looked away, like he couldn't bear to look at her. "I should've come sooner."

"You didn't know."

"I felt the bond three days ago. I should've come then."

"Why didn't you?"

"Because I was a coward."

She almost laughed. "You just killed a man with your bare hands and walked out of Greymire with me. You're not a coward."

"I am. Because I left you there, even knowing you were hurting, even feeling it. I left you."

"But you came back."

"Not soon enough."

She reached out and touched his hand. He looked at her.

"Thank you," she said quietly.

"For what?"

"For coming at all."

He stared at her, like he couldn't understand how she could thank him after everything, after all of it.

"You're safe now," he said finally.

"Am I?"

"Yes."

"How do you know?"

"Because I won't let anyone hurt you again."

She wanted to believe him, wanted to trust that this wasn't just another trap, another cage. But trust was a luxury she couldn't afford. Not yet. Maybe not ever.

"We should keep moving," she said.

He nodded and helped her back onto the horse. And they rode toward Ashford, toward whatever came next, toward a future she couldn't see, couldn't predict, couldn't control.

But for the first time in ten years, she wasn't in Greymire. Wasn't under Rodrick's control. Wasn't alone.

And that had to be enough. For now.

Back in Greymire, Rodrick stood in the courtyard, staring at Garran's body, at the blood, at the proof that Torrhen Ashford had just declared war.

He smiled.

"Let him think he's won," Rodrick said to his beta. "Let him think she's safe."

"And then?"

"And then we remind him what happens when someone takes what's mine."

He walked away, already planning, already plotting.

Because this wasn't over.

It had only just begun.

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