prince would have either thrown her out of the room or kissed her to shut her up.

He didn’t do stuff like this.

He never did.

He was the Prince of Darkness, and people weren’t supposed to get under his skin.

But Fawn...

The way she could see so easily past his mask—-

The way she could destroy his defenses without malice—-

Fawn reminded him of her.

Georgie.

“I don’t have any first love,” he heard himself say harshly.

She asked shakily, “But you might have?”

His lips twisted. “She died before I could find out if I had it in me to love her.”

The scrub fell from her limp fingers. “I’m sorry,” she whispered.

“I killed her.” The prince’s tone was dispassionate.

And somehow, that hurt even more.

“Prince, you don’t have—-”

“Her name was Georgie.”

So cold. His voice was so cold, and God, it hurt. She hurt. For him.

“She was a childhood friend, and she was the only girl who saw the good in me.”

Fawn’s heart started to crack. The prince was talking like no one else could see him the same way, and it wasn’t true.

“Knowing what my biological parents suffered – knowing that they died to get me out safe, it made me want to do good. And those first years with my foster parents, I tried...I goddamn tried my very best to do what I could to...help.” His lips twisted. “I was an idealistic fool back then. I thought genuinely wanting to make the world a better place was enough. But I was wrong. You can’t help when most people around you are just waiting for you to stumble and prove to them that you’re what they expected.”

The prince inhaled sharply. “But Georgie was...different. She believed in me, she was in love with me, and because of that I was just a little bit nicer.” The prince’s voice became tight. “I thought I was being kind by letting her closer, but instead I ended up endangering her life because of it.”

His eyes met hers.

“They kidnapped Georgie and took turns raping and beating her, all so they could get to me.”

“Oh, prince.” She bit her lip hard, not wanting to cry because she didn’t want the prince to think she pitied him. “It wasn’t your fault—-”

But the prince didn’t seem to hear her. “They were hoping that I’d trade myself for her.”

The emptiness in his voice tore at her, and Fawn raised her eyes to the water raining down on them, hoping it would help her keep the tears back.

“They needed to kill me because of a fucking stupid vendetta against my parents, even though they had been dead for years. It didn’t have anything to do with me at all, and yet – I wasn’t the one who suffered. It was Georgie.”

Fawn could no longer bear it, and she shook her head desperately, whispering, “You don’t have to say anymore. Please, prince—-”

“But we’re just getting to the good part, parthena mou.” His smile was a knife to the heart, because it didn’t feel right, seeing the prince less than his usual cocky self.

I’m sorry, prince.

If only she had asked about something else.

If only she could absorb his pain in her.

If only.

“Georgie was rescued, and when I visited her in the hospital, she implored me not to blame myself for what happened to her.”

And again, his lips curved in a smile that made her heart bleed.

I’m sorry, prince.

“She’s quite the idiot, isn’t she?” The prince let out a hollow laugh, and the empty sound finished it for her, the cracks in her heart turning into fissures.

I’m sorry, prince.

“She’s not an idiot, p-prince.”

And the tears started to fall.

“On t-the contrary, I think s-she’s a genius, to h-have seen the truth about you.”

The prince wiped the tears that tracked down her cheeks. “You’re only saying that because you’re an idiot, too.”

She choked back a teary laugh. “Birds of the same feather, right?”

“I don’t think so. If you two could have met, she’d hate your guts.”

“W-what?”

“She hates all girls who want me.” And again, a smile that didn’t reach his eyes, a smile that told her he wished he was the one who had died instead—-

I’m sorry, prince.

Fawn threw herself at the prince. “I’m sorry.” That they were naked, that she was still another man’s girlfriend and this man was more imperfect than anyone else—-

None of it mattered.

All that mattered was to make the prince stop hurting.

“I’m s-sorry, prince.” She hugged the prince as tightly as she could. “I’m so sorry for making you talk about this.”

“Idiot.” But the prince’s tone was ragged, and he inhaled deeply, the scent of her hair cleansing him like it was a gift from heaven.

“I’m sorry.” She tried to stop herself from crying, but she couldn’t. “When I asked you about your first love, I r-really expected you to tell me something like your first love w-was a porn star or the widow n-next door because you seemed like that kind of m-man.”

Ah.

His arms went around Fawn—-

His virgin.

His angel.

His idiot.

She cried harder as his arms around her tightened.

“You really are an idiot,” he muttered against her hair. “How can you cry this hard for someone who’s been bullying you?”

“I don’t know!” Her words came out a wail, and despite everything he couldn’t stop the smile from touching his lips at the sound of it.

“Should I even continue with the rest of my story?” He was only partly teasing, but he was surprised when she nodded vigorously against his chest.

Raising her head so she could look into his eyes, Fawn said tremulously, “Only because I think you need to finish it.”

Ah.

He pinched her cheeks.

“Ow!”

“It’s annoying when you’re being perceptive.” He pinched her cheeks harder.

“P-p-pwince,” she yelped incoherently.

“I like it better when you’re an idiot.”

“It w-wurts.”

“Sorry, but this is the only way I can finish the story.”

“Wully!”

“I know.”

She glared at him.

He smiled at her—-

A moment before breaking both their hearts.

“One of Georgie’s rapists got her pregnant.”

Ah.

God.

God.

God.

The prince’s fingers retreated from her cheeks, but Fawn almost wanted to pull them back, almost wanted to be a coward and hide

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