ANMELDENI was never supposed to end up here. One moment I was a college student with a normal life. The next, I was standing in a courtroom while a stranger decided my fate with a voice too calm for what he was doing to me. They called it justice. I call it a lie. Now I’m trapped on an island prison surrounded by endless ocean, where no one speaks my language and every mistake costs more than I can afford. In here, survival isn’t about strength. It’s about control. About knowing when to stay silent, when to be seen, and when to let them believe they own you. I learned fast. I learned how to read men who think I’m powerless. I learned how to turn attention into protection. I learned how to trade pieces of myself just to make it through another day. But nothing prepared me for him. The Keeper of the Tower. He watches everything. He knows more than he should. And when his eyes find me, it feels like being chosen and hunted at the same time. He says he wants me. Not as a prisoner. Not as a servant. Something worse. Something I might not survive. I have a plan to escape this place. I’ve mapped every guard, every weakness, every second between freedom and drowning. I just didn’t plan for him. And I definitely didn’t plan for the way my body betrays me when he’s close. If I stay, I lose myself. If I run, I lose the only man who’s ever looked at me like I’m more than something to break. Either way… I don’t leave this island unchanged.
Mehr anzeigenPOV Red
The courtroom smells like old wood, sweat, and something sharp that makes my stomach twist. I stand with my hands clasped together, trying to look innocent while my whole body shakes. I count the faces in the gallery to keep from screaming. Forty-three. I count them again. Not one of them looks at me like they believe I'm innocent.
My roommate Becca is in the fourth row, her hand over her mouth, tears streaming down her face. She's the only one who still believes in me, but her faith can't save me. I learned that six days ago when the bail hearing went to hell.
"Murder in the first degree." The prosecutor's voice cuts through the room. "Premeditated. Calculated." He paints a picture of me I don't recognize—a monster who planned and executed the death of another human being. He talks about evidence, about motive, about how I carefully covered my tracks for months.
My chest feels hollow, like someone reached inside and ripped everything out.
I'm twenty-two. I'm a junior at Tulane studying art history. The worst thing I've ever done was cheat on a freshman art history exam. Now they're saying I killed someone.
My lawyer leans close, his breath hot against my ear. "Keep your face still. Don't show any emotion."
"I'm not feeling anything," I whisper back, though my heart is hammering against my ribs. "I don't understand how this is happening."
He doesn't answer, which tells me everything.
"Rosemary Jensen."
The judge speaks, and the room goes dead silent.
Harlan Knox. Fifty-three years old with silver temples and eyes that don't just look at you—they see right through you. My lawyer couldn't find anything useful in his clean public record, but looking at him now, I see things records don't capture.
I hold his gaze. Looking away feels like admitting guilt, and I didn't do this. His eyes are a pale grey-blue, and I can't tell exactly where he's looking, but I know he's focused only on me. The room blurs around us. There's just his face, mine, and thirty feet of charged air between us.
"The court finds the defendant guilty on all charges."
Becca gasps. My lawyer's hand tightens on my arm. Someone in the gallery cries out.
These sounds are distant, underwater.
My throat closes up. I breathe through my nose and count the wood panels behind Knox's head, telling myself my knees won't buckle because I won't let them.
Knox continues, his voice measured and severe, until he reaches my name again. Something changes in his tone then—a slight shift, a crack in his composure that I can't name yet.
"Rosemary Jensen is hereby sentenced to transportation to the Ile de Couverture penal colony, under joint French and Spanish colonial jurisdiction, for a period of no less than fifteen years."
"No!" Becca's voice cracks across the room. "No, that's wrong. She didn't do this. She couldn't have done this."
"Order in the court." Knox's voice is instantly composed again. "Bailiff, remove that woman if she cannot remain silent."
A murmur ripples through the gallery. Someone shushes her.
I don't turn around.
Fifteen years. The number sits in my chest like a stone, too heavy to comprehend. My lawyer is already whispering about appeals.
"We file tomorrow morning," he says under his breath, his fingers digging into my arm. "This isn't over."
"It feels over," I say, my voice trembling.
"It's not," he insists. "The evidence was circumstantial. We'll get this reversed, Rosie. I swear it."
"Don't swear things you can't guarantee," I say, my voice shaking. "Just file the appeal."
Knox brings the gavel down.
The sound echoes like a closing tomb. As the room erupts into the low roar of forty-three people who got exactly what they expected, Knox doesn't look at the gallery or the clerks. He stays on me.
A clerk leans in, whispering something to him, and the connection snaps. I'm suddenly just a convict again, a body in handcuffs being steered toward a door of no return.
Becca's voice cuts through the chaos, raw and breaking. "Rosie. Rosie, I'm going to fix this. I promise you, I'm going to fix this."
I want to scream that promises mean nothing, but the words won't come out. My throat won't open around them.
I don't look back. I can't.
This is a mistake, I tell myself. Someone will fix this. There are systems for this. Someone will find the truth and I'll go back to my textbooks and my ordinary life.
I tell myself this as the courtroom door clicks shut behind me.
The hallway hits me with fluorescent light that makes my eyes ache. Guards flank me on both sides. The air out here is different—no wood, no dread, just concrete and recycled nothing, and somehow that's worse.
I don't think about the evidence.
I think of Knox's eyes. The way they lingered a beat past the gavel. The way his voice changed when he said my name, just slightly, just enough.
I don't have a name for what I saw there.
I will.
POV: RedThe Paris night pressed itself against the floor-to-ceiling windows like something alive, a black velvet throat studded with a thousand cheap diamonds. I stood there for a long moment after we got back from dinner, watching the city breathe below us, before I turned to look at him.Cruz hadn't said a word since the restaurant.That wasn't unusual. My husband collected silences the way other men collected enemies, hoarded them, weaponized them. But this one felt different. Heavier. There was a texture to it I couldn't place, something underneath the careful blankness of his face that made my skin prickle.I sat on the edge of the bed, the silk of my robe cool against my thighs, and watched him stand by the window with his hands in his pockets like he was carved out of the same dark glass."You're quiet," I said."I'm always quiet.""Not like this."He didn't answer that. Just kept staring out at the lights, his jaw tight enough to cut glass.I let the silence stretch because t
RED'S POVThe bathroom silence had teeth now. Not the temporary reprieve of a locked door, but the suffocating quiet that follows when you've dodged a bullet and felt it graze your skin. I sat on the edge of the tub, fingers tracing the cool porcelain like it could anchor me to something real, something solid. The mirror showed a ghost. Pale skin. Dead eyes. I looked like I'd been carved from ice and left to melt in slow motion.Thursday was gone. Evaporated. The contact point? Compromised. Sebastián Reyes had seen the woman, and that bastard never forgot a face. His brain was a steel trap wrapped in expensive cologne and quiet menace. That channel was sealed now, locked down by Ricki's ever-vigilant right hand. The documents I needed, the proof that could buy my freedom, sat behind a wall I couldn't breach anymore. My lifeline had been cut, and the weight of it pressed against my ribs like a fist.I stood and moved to the window. Didn't look out at the manicured grounds, just studied
The Parisian air was crisp, carrying the scent of rain and roasted chestnuts. Rosemary walked with a purpose that was not her usual measured stroll. This was not a walk for pleasure or for the sake of appearances. This was an execution. For three weeks, she had built this moment, piece by painstaking piece. She had mapped the surveillance patterns, noting the specific window in Sebastián's routine that opened on Thursday afternoons, a ten-minute gap when his attention was diverted by a scheduled delivery to the service entrance of the hotel. She had a contact waiting at a café near the Gare du Nord, a route planned through back streets and narrow alleys, a destination that was not freedom, but a step toward it.She was three streets from the hotel when she allowed herself a small, sharp breath of victory. The city was a blur of gray stone and moving bodies, a river she was navigating with practiced ease. She was calculating her next turn, the angle of the sidewalk, the flow of pedestr
POV: RedThe Louvre stank of money and wet wool. Bodies pressed against bodies in the Grand Gallery, tourists jostling for position in front of paintings they'd forget by dinner. I kept my pace steady, deliberate. My gloved hand skimmed the velvet rope separating us peasants from the masterpieces. I used to love this place. Back when I was stupid enough to believe in beauty for beauty's sake. Now I saw it for what it was: another stage. Another performance space where secrets changed hands under the guise of culture.Céleste walked beside me, playing her role to perfection. The wide-eyed island girl, overwhelmed by European grandeur. She'd practiced this act until it was second nature."The colors, Madame Rosemary." Her voice carried that perfect note of wonder, loud enough for anyone nearby to hear. "They are so much more vibrant than in the books.""They are."I split my attention between her performance and my own racing pulse. The baby sat quiet today, a heavy weight low in my b
POV RickI do my best thinking at this window.It's a habit I picked up in my first year here, standing before the facility wakes up, when the yard is still bruised grey and the water beyond the northern wall is flat and colorless and the whole island sits in that specific pre-dawn quiet that belon
POV RedThe communal bathing facility runs on a schedule dictated by supervision gaps rather than cleanliness. Three times a week, ten minutes each, under the sting of cold water and the same caustic lye soap used to scrub the stone floors.I enter on a Thursday morning with five other women. Two o
POV RedI'm considering how to engineer that when I notice Tomás Arrieta. He's a younger guard, dark-haired, with a posture that tries to be authoritative but only lands about sixty percent of the time. He's appearing in my section of the yard with a frequency that has nothing to do with his rotati
POV RedThe iron gate doesn't echo; it lands. It's a heavy, metallic period at the end of a sentence I didn't get to write. I file the sound away and walk.Inside, the fortress is a masterclass in inescapable geometry. Salt-crusted stone walls, three feet thick, curve inward at the top like they're






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