NYRA
The contract was four pages long.
I had asked for a copy the night before and been told, politely and with absolute finality, that the document would be read aloud at the signing in the presence of both parties and the Covenant witness. Not before. As though I might find something in it that would change my mind, and changing my mind was not something the schedule could accommodate.
I had spent the night reading everything else I could find instead.
The Keep had a library on the second floor not a decorative one, but a working one, shelves floor to ceiling with histories and law texts and territorial records. No one had thought to lock it. I did not sleep, which was not unusual for me in new places, and I had four hours before morning and a room I did not feel safe enough to rest in, so I went and I read.
By the time the sun came up over the mountains, I knew more about the Fenwick bloodline and the Covenant than I had known when I arrived, which was already more than most humans ever learned. I went back to my chamber and dressed and let Lena braid my hair and said nothing about any of it.
The signing room was smaller than the great hall, which I had expected. What I had not expected was how many people were in it.
Orion stood at the head of the table with Caius at his left and two wolves I did not recognize at his right. The Covenant witness sat at the far end a woman, older, dressed in grey, with the particular stillness of someone who had been doing this for so long that nothing in any ceremony could surprise her anymore. There were four more wolves along the walls. Not guards in the formal sense. Witnesses. Pack witnesses, which in wolf law carried the same weight as a written signature.
My escort of six soldiers had been sent home at dawn. It was just Lena and me. I noted the imbalance and said nothing about it.
Orion did not look at me when I entered.
The Covenant woman rose and read the terms without preamble. Her voice was flat and precise, which I appreciated. No ceremony around the clinical reality of what this was.
The terms were as follows: the marriage was binding under both Wolf and Covenant law. Neither party was required to perform affection. Neither party had a claim to the other's private arrangements, decisions, or counsel. Nyra Thorne would be accorded the title of queen in all formal settings and would be expected to fulfill that role at public functions and diplomatic events. She would reside at the Blackstone Keep for the duration. When a child was conceived and born and weaned, the arrangement would be formally dissolved. At that point, she was free to return to the Thorne Kingdom or to settle elsewhere as she chose. The child would remain with the Fenwick line.
I had known that the last part was coming. I had known it logically, in the way you know something before you have to hear it said out loud in a room full of people who are watching your face.
It landed differently than I expected.
The Covenant woman set the document on the table and uncapped the signing pen and looked at me.
"Before I sign," I said.
The room went very still. Orion looked up from the paper for the first time since I had walked in.
"I want an addendum," I said. "Written and sealed by the Covenant witness before either of us puts our name to this. I want full access to every document the Covenant holds relating to this curse its origins, its conditions, and every counter-curse attempted. In writing. Tonight."
No one spoke.
Caius looked at Orion. The pack of witnesses along the walls did not move. The Covenant woman's expression did not change, but something behind her eyes did a sharpening, brief and quickly covered, like someone who had not expected to be seen.
Orion held my gaze across the table. I did not look away. I had learned by now that looking away from him first was a language I did not speak.
"That is not standard," the Covenant woman said.
"I know," I said. "Add it anyway."
Another silence. Longer this time.
Then Orion said, "Add it."
His voice was flat. Giving nothing. But he said it, and the Covenant woman picked up her pen without further argument, and I watched her write the addendum in the careful hand of someone accustomed to the weight of what they put to paper.
She slid the document back to me.
I read the addendum twice. Then I signed where I was told to sign. My hand was steady. Orion signed across from me, and when the Covenant witness pressed her seal into the wax, I was already looking at the door rather than the paper.
That was the marriage.
Everyone filed out. Lena touched my arm briefly on her way past just her fingers at my elbow, there and gone, saying everything she could not say in front of a room full of wolves.
I gathered myself to follow her and then Orion spoke.
"The east wing is yours. The West is mine. You are not required in the west wing for any reason."
I turned. He was still at the table, not looking at me, straightening the signed pages into a neat stack like I was already a settled matter.
"And the library?" I said.
He looked up. Something in his expression told me he had not expected that to be my first question.
"What about it?"
"I was in it last night. I want to know if that falls under the west wing or the east wing."
A pause. "It falls under neither. It is a shared space."
"Good," I said. "Then I'll be in it often."
I left before he could respond, and I walked back to the east wing with Lena and I did not let myself think about the child clause until I was alone.
But that evening, when Lena slept and the Keep was quiet, I went back to the library. Not for history this time. I went back because the night before I had found something on the bottom shelf that I had not had time to read properly a thin volume, handwritten, with no title on the spine.
I had opened it to a page in the middle and read three lines before I heard footsteps and put it back.
Those three lines had been sitting in my head for fourteen hours.
I found the shelf. Found the gap. Ran my fingers along the spines.
The book was gone.
I stood in the empty library and thought about those three lines, and I thought about the contract I had signed that morning, and I thought about the very deliberate way the Covenant woman had paused barely, almost nothing, but I had been watching before she read the terms aloud.
The pause had come just before the section about the child.
As if she were choosing which words to use. As if the words in the spoken version and the words in the written version were not quite the same.
As if there was something in the terms of this marriage that no one had told me.
I closed the library door behind me and walked back to my room in the dark, and for the first time since I had agreed to this, I was not sure what I had actually signed.