ISABELLA
Sometimes it feels as if my entire life has been nothing but a series of instructions.
Stand up straight! Sit like a lady. Chew more quietly! Don’t curse. Get better grades. Don’t wear that, it’s not proper. Don’t talk so loudly. Don’t talk so much.
Most of it has been in regards to the mysterious future husband I’ll have one day. I’m told that he won’t like a girl who is too wild, too bold, too brash, too smart. He won’t want a wife who dresses immodestly, makes demands, or asks too many questions. Definitely not a wife who argues, or has her own opinions, or her own ideas.
In fact, from what I can tell, I’m supposed to be a beautiful, silent broodmare for some man who will improve my father’s fortunes. No one has ever asked me what I want or how I feel about it. It’s been very clearly communicated to me, in fact, that it doesn’t matter. My job is to stay as beautiful and pure as possible—both of which are things that aren’t really accomplishments, so far as I can tell. My thick black hair, deeply tan skin, mahogany brown eyes, full lips, and slender figure are all gifts from my parents. My sister looks very much the same, only a little shorter than I am. As for the other—
I’ve been kept so sheltered from other men that I don’t think I could have done anything about it if I wanted to. There are a few young and handsome guards andmanyhandsome soldiers working for my father, but none of them would dare even look at me for too long. My father would kill them on the spot if he thought they’d so much as flirted with me, and they all know it.
My younger sister Elena doesn’t seem to mind as much that we’re rarely allowed to leave the sprawling grounds of our family mansion, which is surrounded by high walls and security guards to keep our enemies out. My father has more than a few enemies—primarily the Gonzalez family cartel, and all our lives we’ve been told that the walls are to keep us safe. We only leave with one or both of our parents and armed guards, but I privately think the walls are as much to keep us in as to keep others out.
Our house is a gilded cage, and I am its most prized bird.
Now my wings have been clipped even more. Today’s instruction wasdo not leave your room, Isabella, not for anything.Normally I like being in my room. It’s a beautiful space, with a carved four-poster bed made from native zapote wood, a matching desk, a wardrobe and vanity, thick woven and tasseled rugs on the floor, and an arched grey-blue stone fireplace. My desk is covered in books, both language books from my tutor and my own reading material. Most days, I’m more than happy to curl up in the leather armchair under a soft woven blanket or sit out on my balcony in the sun and read.
Today, though, I find it irritating—mostly because I’ve been ordered to stay inside. My whole life, I’ve been the dutiful and obedient eldest daughter, minding my manners, learning all the lessons about charm and elegance that my mother and tutors have had to teach, and avoiding all the things I’ve been told to avoid. Elena has been subject to a lot of the same rules, but they don’t matter nearly as much. I’m the oldest, and it’ll be on me to make the best marriage—a union that will strengthen our family and bring my father more wealth, and in turn, means a better marriage for my little sister as well.
A sharp, small knock comes at the door, startling me out of my thoughts, and I fly towards it. I’m hoping it’s my mother or father or a guard coming to tell me that I can go downstairs, but instead, it’s Elena, standing there with a small, mischievous smile on her face.
My sister is every bit as beautiful. She has a sweeter, rounder face than I do, her hair usually kept braided back around her head, her dark eyes full of sweetness and the tiniest bit of mischief. She’s not only my sister, but my best friend—our whole lives we’ve lived in this house, privately tutored, kept tucked away from the outside world, and so we’re each other’s closest and only confidante. We never leave this place alone, only occasionally on outings with our mother or to Mass with the whole family.
“Let’s go out to the garden,” Elena says, grabbing my hand. “The flowers are just starting to bloom. It’s beautiful out there.”
“I’m not supposed to leave my room,” I tell her flatly. “Papá said—”
“As if you care.” Elena wrinkles her nose. “I know you’ve been sitting here all morning thinking of how to sneak out. José just went to make another round. We can get out there if we’re quick.”
It’s impossible to say no to my sister. Three years younger than me, she’s shy with others but lively and outgoing when it’s just the two of us, as if I’m the only person she can truly be herself with. The thing that hurts the most, that I dread the most when I think of the looming marriage that I know my father is planning for me, isn’t the idea of being married off to someone I don’t know and might even hate; it’s having to leave my sister.
I’ll be able to visit home, of course, and Elena will visit me. There will be dinners, holidays, gatherings, festivals, and celebrations of all kinds for me to see her at. But I won’t see her every day, as I’m used to, and just the thought makes my chest ache with loneliness.
With that thought in mind, it’s even more impossible to tell her no. I let her drag me out of the room and down the tiled hall, the warmth of the day shining through the windows as we hurry towards the back entrance that leads out into the gardens, looking around for any guards that might catch us.
This house is a beautiful prison.
It’s not the first time I’ve thought that, although it feels ungrateful every time I do. I have everything I could ever want—beautiful clothes, the best food, the most skilled tutors, all the books I can read, and the most gorgeous mansion to live in. One day I’ll be married to someone who will give me all of those same things. I’ll spend my entire life in unimaginable luxury, all because of the family I was born into.
I can’t help wishing, though, that I could tastefreedom. Real, unfettered freedom. That I could have a chance to discover who Isabella Santiago is outside of my family. It feels spoiled, considering everything I already have, but I can’t ever fully shake that desire.
Even as impossible as it is.
Elena drags me all the way out of the high arched glass doors that lead out into the garden and into the riot of greenery, color and warmth. The path is terracotta stone, winding through the shrubs and flowers to a huge fountain with a rearing horse spilling water from its open mouth, and past that, more flowers and bushes and climbing vines. Farther down, there’s a greenhouse, and Elena skips down the path ahead of me, her rounded face shining as she turns it up to the warm sun above us.
In March, mornings and evenings are still cold in the desert, but midday can be beautiful. Not too hot yet, but pleasant, I breathe in the scent of flowers and bask in the sunshine, feeling the tiniest hint of rebellious freedom. It’s not being away from the compound, but it’s a tiny rebellion, all the same, being out here in the gardens instead of locked away in my room like my father wants.
“Come on!” Elena calls. “There are new plants in the greenhouse, and butterflies. I want to see.”
I follow her, shivering as a cool breeze passes through the garden, only to come up short when I hear a deep voice behind me.
“You’re supposed to be in your room, Miss Isabella.”
I flinch, turning around slowly. Standing on the path behind me, a few feet away, is José, the guard assigned to keep an eye on the floor where my bedroom is. He’s wearing black cargo pants and a tight black t-shirt that does nothing to hide the broad muscles of his chest or straining biceps. His black hair is buzzed short, his strong jaw clenched with irritation as he stares me down. There’s a gun on his hip, and an assault rifle slung across his back, but they don’t scare me. No one here would dare lay a hand on me.
I am, for all intents and purposes, a princess.
Acartelprincess.