LOGINREDParis was a performance, and I'd never auditioned for this role.The island had been brutal theater - one act, one stage, survival the only script. This? This was grand opera. A thousand moving parts. A chorus of whispers in languages I barely understood. An audience watching with eyes that cost more than my entire former life, polished and utterly indifferent to whether I lived or died.My role: the beautiful, silent companion at Enrique Cruz's side.I played it like I played everything - with precision that would make a surgeon jealous. My smile stayed fixed, a perfect curve I'd practiced in the mirror until my face ached. My posture screamed elegant composure even when my muscles wanted to scream something else entirely. I calculated every gesture. Measured every word. Survival had taught me that lesson years ago, carved it into my bones with a dull knife: your mask better be fucking flawless, or you're dead.The city's social geography was nothing like anything I'd navigated b
The afternoon light in the suite was soft and golden, filtering through the heavy velvet curtains and casting long shadows across the plush carpet. A gown lay on the bed, a pool of deep emerald silk that seemed to drink the light. The maid who had brought it had been dismissed with a quiet word, leaving the two of us alone in the opulent stillness of the room."Turn around," he said. His voice was not a request. It was a quiet command that vibrated through the still air.I rose from the dressing table and faced him. My reflection in the mirror was a stranger, pale and composed. His eyes held mine as he lifted the dress, the silk whispering against the fabric as he moved. He came to stand behind me again, and I felt the cool, heavy weight of the silk as he settled it over my shoulders. It was a living thing, cool and smooth against my skin, a second skin that was both a comfort and a constraint.He began to fasten the gown, his fingers methodical and deliberate at the hooks and eyes th
RED POVThe city was a physical assault on the senses. After nearly two years of an island defined by the rhythmic shush of waves and the scent of salt and hibiscus, Paris was a symphony of chaos. The air was a thick, moving tapestry of exhaust fumes, roasting chestnuts, and the faint, sweet perfume of a woman who passed too close. The sound was a cacophony of car horns, distant sirens, and the murmur of a thousand conversations in a dozen languages. It was overwhelming, a deluge of sensory information that my cataloguing instinct could not immediately process.The car moved through the streets, a bubble of quiet leather and tinted glass in the river of humanity. I watched the people on the pavements, a river of anonymous faces flowing in every direction. They moved with the specific indifference of a city that does not know your name or your conviction or your history. They did not see me. They did not see the prisoner in the back of the expensive car. They saw only a car, a fleeting
POV REDThe morning of the departure was sharp and clean, the sky a cloudless, brilliant blue that seemed to promise something new. The air was cool, carrying the scent of salt and the distant, floral perfume of the island's hibiscus. There were no goodbyes. There was no ceremony. There was only the quiet, efficient process of departure, the silent transfer of luggage from the house to the launch, the short, choppy ride across the water to the waiting ship. I moved through it all with a detached calm, my body a vessel for my will, my mind a fortress of strategic calculations.I stood at the rail of the ship, the cool metal a firm, steady presence beneath my hands. The island was a receding jewel, a vibrant splash of green against the deep, blue water. I watched it get smaller, the coastline shrinking, the details blurring into a single, indistinct shape. I was not free. I was going to Paris in a gilded version of the same cage. I knew this with complete clarity, the truth of it a cold
The final night on the island carried the valedictory weight of a closing chapter. The air was still, the house holding its breath in the quiet hours before departure. The packing was done, the decisions made, the course set. There was nothing left to do but wait for the dawn. I sat in the main room later than I usually did, the only light the soft, golden glow of a single lamp. The sound of the sea was a constant, a rhythmic shush that had been the soundtrack to my captivity, a sound I had both cursed and come to depend on.He found me there, his footsteps silent on the cool tile. He did not ask me to go to bed. He did not speak. He simply crossed the room and sat in the chair opposite me, his presence a familiar weight that I had learned to navigate. The silence between us was not empty. It was filled with the unspoken history of this place, the memory of every confrontation, every quiet moment, every strategic move and unexpected gesture."You used to play the cello," he said, his
REDThe final day on the island began not with light, but with sound. The rhythmic shush of the waves against the eastern shore was a constant, a heartbeat I had learned to ignore and now found myself straining to hear. The air was different, holding a pre-storm stillness, a suspension of breath. The suitcases were gone, already loaded onto the launch that would ferry us to the mainland. The house felt hollowed out, its purpose served, its current occupants merely ghosts passing through.I moved through the morning routines with a detached precision, but my body was not the one performing the tasks. My mind was elsewhere, walking the paths of the island, conducting a different kind of mapping than I had done before. This was not a survey of exits and rotations and strategic assets. This was an accounting of textures, of sensory memories, of the specific weight of a place that had been my entire world for nearly two years.I found myself in the yard, the grass worn smooth in the center
POV: REDThe island held its breath, waiting for the storm that the end of the week promised. The air was still, the sea a flat, unmoving sheet of glass. For me, the world had narrowed to the single, sharp point of the future: Paris. It was a destination that had become an obsession, a puzzle I had
POV: REDThe morning light was the same as it always was, a pale, indifferent gray that seeped through the heavy curtains. But something was different. The air in the room was charged, thick with the unspoken events of the night before. I was awake before he was, a silent observer in the quiet spac
POV: REDThe three days of preparation felt like a lifetime. Each night, I had practiced my new strategy in the dark, a silent war fought with careful breathing and the deliberate placement of my hands. Each day, I moved through the house with a new purpose, my mind a clean, sharp tool honed for a d
POV: REDThe three days were a crucible. Each night, I practiced my new strategy in the dark, a silent war fought with the rhythm of my own breathing and the careful placement of my hands. Each day, I moved through the house with a new purpose, my mind a clean, sharp tool honed for a different kin







