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PROLOGUE

ISLA

Eight Years Old

ONLY TWENTY MINUTES AFTER the headlights pulled up to my family’s estate in the dead of night, the chaos began.

Papá’s explosive voice was barking in Spanish. His heavy fist slammed against a solid, wood surface. Sardonic, sinister chuckling came from someone else that I didn’t know, but whom I’d heard before on previous nights just like this one. More voices I didn’t know, but that I’d also heard before.

Feet pounding on the marble floors, echoing through the halls of the cavernous house.

The shatter of glass.

More shouting.

The quick, sharp slide of metal scraping metal.

I was only eight years old, and I was already well-acquainted with the sound of someone chambering a bullet in a gun.

I was convinced that eventually the chaos that often erupted in the middle of the night in my home would end with a shoot-out. And I didn’t want to be there when those unknown people murdered my father.

I leaped out of bed as silently as possible and scampered toward the window.

If I were brave or heroic, I might have had the presence of mind to venture down the hall to wake up my younger brother and sisters and make them escape with me. But they always slept through those moments of chaos, and despite not knowing exactly who the people were, I knew they weren’t there to come after my siblings or me. They also weren’t there to come after Mamá, and she knew to simply stay in her room and wait. This was how we’d lived and survived for as long as I could remember.

I wasn’t brave. I wasn’t heroic. I was just scared. And I just needed the person who’d been like a security blanket for my entire life.

His family’s summer estate flanked ours on the western side, and he was only ten years old. Even I knew he couldn’t do anything about the chaos in my home. It wasn’t about what he could or couldn’t do. It was about how he made me feel.

How he always made me feel.

Safe.

On some level, my heart and soul knew that I was safe with him no matter what.

After scaling down the wrought iron trellis just below my window, I took off through an expanse of dew-dampened grass with only the silver moon lighting my way. I blindly sifted through the ivy to locate the loose portion of the fence that had been overlooked by the gardeners and lawn maintenance staff, and then pushed the plank aside just enough to squeeze my slender frame through to the other side.

The Sterling Estate had an equally expansive lawn, and I reached the similar trellis on the side of their house. By the time I reached the window, he had already pushed it open because he always knew. Something in him was connected to something in me, and he always knew.

“Isla,” Malachi whispered, halfway hanging out the window, arms reaching toward me. “Grab my hands.”

One hand by one hand, I released the trellis and gripped his arms just above his elbows. He was pretty strong for only a boy, but I’ve always been pretty small for my age, and he pulled me up with ease while my bare feet pushed against the cold, iron bars. We landed in a heap of gangly arms and legs on the floor of his dark bedroom, but he was quick to stand and help me up. I darted immediately to his bed and climbed under the covers, wrapping them tightly around me.

Rather than slipping into the sheets and blankets with me, Malachi tucked them more securely around me and then lay down. He draped his arm and knee over the cocoon of cotton and goose down encasing me, holding me in place and fortifying the fluffy fortress of bedding. Only the top of my head was exposed, and he settled his chin against my hair.

“It’s okay, Isla. You’re safe here.”

Malachi’s family is from the small island nation of Corwick, nestled between England and Ireland, and his accent is a warm, soft, subtle combination of both neighboring countries. It’s so warm and soft that it was one of the first things that elicited that peculiar and unprecedented sense of safety. The other thing was his eyes. Eyes the color of steel, but that held the same warmth of his voice.

Also, his family isn’t justfromCorwick. They arethefamily of Corwick. The royal family. His parents are the king and queen, which means Malachi and his older brother, Philipp, are princes. When Malachi came of age, he officially became the Duke of Corwick, but he’s still a prince. And just like in every fairy tale I’ve heard in my life, he’d always been there to save me from the terrors that lurk in the dark on my family’s side of the fence.

He’dalwaysbeen there.

Until hewasn’t.

“They had guns, Malachi,” I whispered against the blankets.“I heard them.”

“But nobody fired them. I would have heard it,” he countered, still quiet. “And now you’re here, and nobody can hurt you with me around. I can protect you, Isla. I’ll protect you for as long as I live.”He tightened his full-body hold on me and moved his mouth close to my ear. “And one day, I’ll take you to Corwick, and we’ll live in my palace, high on a stony bluff overlooking the ocean, and no bad people will ever be able to reach you.”