Mist clung to the Zagorje hills like damp wool, moonlight turning the castle roofs to cold silver; inside Veliki Tabor, a spinning wheel's faint creak cut through the chill. Marija's palms trembled on the wooden spokes—by dawn a cruel count demanded gold, or her life. The air smelled of tallow and fear, and every shadow seemed to listen.
Orphan of the Loom
Marija grew up with the steady rhythm of the loom as her only companion. Winters had a way of pressing the world close—fields gone flat under frost, breath like small, white ghosts—and in those seasons the village spoke softly of things that could not be explained. Her father had been a weaver known for patient hands; when he died in a winter that seemed to freeze even memory, Marija inherited his wheel and a silence that felt like a language.
Dragica, her stepmother, kept a hard house. The woman moved through the cottage with a needle-sharp impatience, assigning Marija tasks as if she were a spindle without a name. Yet when the moon slid silver across the wheel, the threads Marija drew from flax took on a strange life—the fiber catching lamp-light and holding it like a captive sun. People who saw the cloth whispered, part wonder, part fear, and called the girl’s hands both miraculous and cursed.
A traveling merchant, smelling smoke and new-milled grain, once lingered and lifted a shawl from Marija’s basket. He swallowed, eyes bright with avarice and awe. “By the saints,” he said, “this gleams as if the dawn is woven into it.” Word travels faster than truth in small places, and the rumor of golden thread found its way up the ridge to the stone towers where men like Count Matija kept accounts of both coin and cruelty.
The Count’s Demand
Count Matija arrived in a cloak that swallowed the twilight, his horse stamping impatient circles in the lane. His gaze was thin and exact; he treated kindness as a cost and desire as a right. Dragica welcomed him with the practiced lip-smile of someone who reads hunger and tries to turn it into profit.
“You have a girl who spins gold?” Matija asked, not bothering with pretense.
Marija felt the question like a blow. They did not ask her—they announced her fate. A compliment from Dragica turned to command, and the next night, the count’s men took her up to Veliki Tabor in silence that felt like a noose. The castle smelled of damp stone and iron; torches made the walls grainy, like the inside of an old tooth. She was placed in a stark chamber with only a spinning wheel and a heap of flax.
“You will spin this into gold by dawn,” Matija said, voice even and cruel. “Fail, and you will not see another sunrise.”
The door shut. The silence that followed was a living thing.
The Impossible Task
Marija sat with cold in her bones and a hollow like hunger under her ribs. She had never considered herself magical—only that, sometimes, thread answered her fingers. The flax looked dull and dead beneath the torchlight. She laid her hands upon the wood and breathed as if the wheel might answer.
“Please,” she whispered to the grain of the spokes.
A voice slid from the corner where no shadow should have held a shape—velvet and unexpected. “Why do you weep, beautiful one?”
She started. A man stood there, as though the air itself had unfolded into him. He wore garments threaded with something like night-light, and his eyes were green as deep forest pools. He stepped forward with a grace that made the torches lean.
“Who are you?” Marija asked.
“A friend,” he said, and his voice did not lie. “I can help—for a price.”
The Wager
“A price?” Her throat was dry as spun straw.
The man’s mouth curved. “A kiss. One kiss, and the wheel will work as if sung to.”
She had little choice. Fear and hope braided together; she pressed a soft, trembling kiss to his cheek. The air tightened like a pulled string. The wheel began to turn of its own accord; flax descended and gold rose as if dawn itself had been caught and unspooled.
When dawn found the room, it was a cave of blinding treasure. Count Matija’s greed flared like a brand. “More,” he demanded. “Twice as much, tonight.”
The man returned, and where his hand had been light before, he now asked for a promise. “One day,” he said, “you shall be mine.” Marija gave the promise with a heart full of the smallest sort of defiance—a bargain struck to keep a life.
Gold flowed again. The count’s appetite only widened.


















