That night, we reach the first village. It is small, a scattering of wooden huts pressed against the forest edge. Smoke curls from chimneys. Dogs bark as we approach. Villagers gather in the square, their eyes wide, wary. Soldiers have been here; they can smell fear like wolves smell blood.
The rebels linger at the edge, weapons sheathed but ready. The freed huddle close, whispers trembling. All eyes turn to me. Marta’s satchel is heavy in my hands, heavier than steel. My heart hammers. My throat burns. But I step forward.
“My name is Vera,” I say, voice carrying across the square. “I carry the words of Marta, truth they tried to silence. The Crown chains us all, but chains break. Tonight, you will hear it.”
Gasps ripple through the crowd. Some cross themselves, some whisper prayers. I open the satchel, pull free the worn pages, and begin to read. My voice shakes at first, but steadies. Marta’s truth fills the air, louder than fear. Her words are fire. Her words are freedom.
The villagers listen. Some weep. Some clutch their children close. Some whisper her name as though she were a saint and savior. When I finish, silence stretches. Then an old woman steps forward, her voice trembling. “We will follow. We will feed your march. Marta’s truth lives.”
Hope flares. The rebels cheer. The freed weep with relief. For a heartbeat, the valley feels alive again.
***
But not all believe. As night falls, whispers creep like frost. Some villagers slip away into the dark. Soldiers will hear. Declan will hear. I lie awake with Abigail curled against me, Marta’s pages pressed to my chest, fear gnawing. Hope is fragile. It burns bright, but it burns fast.
Lucian sits apart, his eyes fixed on the horizon. He does not cheer. He does not sing. But when I meet his gaze, I see the faintest flicker—of belief, or of fear, I cannot tell.
***
Morning breaks over the village with smoke and whispers. The rebels eat bread and broth gifted by the villagers, their faces softened for the first time in weeks. Children run through the square with scraps of cloth tied as banners. Hope tastes like warm air in our lungs, like the weight of chains lifting, if only a little.
But beneath it, I hear the cracks. Too many eyes watch us with fear. Too many voices whisper when they think we cannot hear. Hope burns, but fear lingers.
***
By midday, the scouts return. Their news is grim: Soldiers march from the west. Not a legion, but enough. Their horns will reach the village by nightfall. The council gathers in the square, villagers watching from doorways. Elira grips her breaching axe, her jaw set. “We fight. We defend what we’ve freed.”
Rourke spits into the snow. “Fight here, and we bury them in their own homes. The Crown wants us to bleed in front of those we try to sway. Better to vanish, take their whispers with us.”
The rebels murmur. The freed weep, clutching their children. The villagers clutch each other, eyes darting between us like prey cornered by wolves. All turn, as always, to Lucian.
He stands silent at the edge of the square, the weight of every eye heavy on him. Shadows drag across his face. When he speaks, his voice is low, steady. “We leave. We cannot defend stone with blood. We carry Marta’s truth, not graves.”
The decision cuts sharp, but the rebels nod. The freed cling to the choice as survival. The villagers watch with unreadable eyes.
***
That night, we prepare to depart. Fires are doused. Packs are shouldered. The freed whisper prayers of thanks. The villagers bring food and blankets to the edge of the square, pressing them into our hands. Some bow. Some kiss Marta’spages as though they were scripture. But others stand back, their faces hard, their whispers sharper.
I feel the trap before it springs.
When the rebels gather at the edge of the forest, horns blare in the distance. The sound is too close, too sudden. Soldiers march through the trees, lights flaring. The villagers scatter into their homes. Some cry. Some cheer.
Betrayal cuts deeper than cold.
***
The rebels scramble, weapons drawn, shouts rising. Lucian roars, his sword flashing, cutting a path through the first wave. Elira cleaves a soldier’s shield in two, bellowing defiance. Rourke fires until his rifle jams, then smashes it against a helm. I drag the freed toward the trees, Marta’s satchel heavy in my grip. Chains clatter in my ears, though none are here. Declan’s laughter rides the horns.
“Run!” Lucian bellows, his voice echoing through the square. “To the trees!”
The rebels surge, dragging the freed with them. Blood splashes snow, screams shatter the night. Soldiers press hard, their discipline cold and relentless. Villagers watch from doorways, some weeping, some whispering, some smiling.
I shove Abigail ahead of me, her doll bouncing against her back. My lungs burn, my legs shake, but I do not stop. Behind me, Lucian fights like a storm, his sword a wall of steel and rage. His roar shakes the square, louder than horns, louder than laughter.
We break into the forest, the trees swallowing us whole. Arrows hiss through branches, lights flare in the dark, but the rebels drag the freed onward, stumbling, bleeding, alive.
***