“You’re going to die alone, Elellanar,” the doctor hissed, his breath smelling of cheap whiskey, as he slammed the ledger shut and stalked out of the parlor.

I stared at the polished mahogany chair that had become my prison for fourteen years, the scent of pine and oil mingling with the dust that never seemed to settle.

My father’s voice, low and steady, cut through the tension.

“You will not be left to rot, my child. I have found a solution.”

I felt a cold draft brush the back of my neck as the heavy curtains fluttered, the faint clatter of the forge in the distance growing louder.

“You will marry Josiah,” he declared, his eyes never leaving my face.

I laughed, a short, bitter sound that echoed off the walls.

“Father, you’re insane. He’s a slave.”

He lifted a single finger, a silent command that had once commanded armies of men.

“He is the strongest I own. He will care for you.”


The next morning the iron door of the forge groaned open. Josiah stood there, a mountain of muscle, his skin darkened by soot, his eyes hidden beneath a brimmed hat.

He bowed his head slightly, the weight of his shoulders creaking the ancient floorboards.

“Good morning, Miss Whitmore,” he said, voice surprisingly soft, “May I help you with anything?”

I felt the cool metal of the chair against my skin, the faint ache in my spine, and for the first time in years I saw him not as a brute, but as a man.

“Can you read?” I asked, my voice trembling like a candle flame.

His brow furrowed, a flash of fear crossing his features.

“Yes,” he whispered, “I taught myself in secret.”

“What do you read?” I pressed, curiosity outweighing the shame that clung to my cheeks.

“Anything I can find,” he replied, a faint smile breaking through the soot. “Shakespeare, newspapers, the Bible.”

“Your favorite play?” I ventured, daring to hope.

“The Tempest,” he said, eyes brightening. “Prospero calls Caliban a monster… yet Caliban is the one truly enslaved.”

His words struck a chord deep within me, resonating with the whispered gossip that had branded me defective.

“Do you think I’m a monster?” I asked, half‑laughing, half‑crying.

He knelt, his massive hands hovering over the polished wood, then gently rested them on my knees.

“No, Miss. You are a queen trapped in a cage of wood.”

We talked for hours, the forge’s heat seeping through the walls, the scent of molten iron mingling with the faint perfume of my mother’s lavender sachet.

He spoke of Ariel’s freedom, of the longing to breathe without chains, and I felt a spark of rebellion ignite in my heart.

“Anyone who can’t see beyond a wheelchair is a fool,” he said, his voice low.

For the first time, I felt seen—not pitied, not tolerated, but truly seen.

The Arrangement

In April, my father signed a paper that was never meant for the eyes of the town.

Josiah moved into the small room beside my own, the thin wall humming with the distant clang of hammer on anvil.

He helped me dress each morning, asking permission before adjusting my shawl, his fingers surprisingly gentle on my skin.

“May I?” he would ask, and I would nod, feeling the faint brush of his palm on my arm.

He carried me to the garden when the sun was too harsh, his strong arms supporting my weight as if I were featherlight.

He rearranged my books, alphabetizing them by author, a quiet act of care that made my heart flutter.

In the evenings, he sat on the floor beside my chair and read to me.

“Shall I begin with Keats?” he asked.

“Yes,” I whispered, the words catching in my throat.

His voice rolled over the verses, each syllable a balm to the ache in my bones.

“He dwells in the hush of the night, the soul of a man who cannot see the sunrise,” he read, his eyes never leaving the page.

When he finished, he would close the book and look at me, his gaze steady.

“Do you wish to learn to work the forge?” he asked one afternoon, the heat of the furnace painting his face copper.

I hesitated, the fear of failure tightening my chest.

“I cannot stand,” I whispered.

He smiled, a small, crooked grin.

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