A Courtesan in Crete
They call it the CIGS. She calls it survival.
Marisa arrived at the villa with a contract, a price tag, and a promise to herself: she would endure. She did not expect to find something worth enduring for.
The Connoisseurs' International Gathering Showcase is not a competition. It is a marketplace where women are the currency, their bodies the product, their performances the entertainment. For the wealthy patrons who gather on a private Greek island, the CIGS is the ultimate luxury-a chance to witness, to judge, to acquire. For the women who are displayed, it is a transaction with no exit.
Marisa has learned to file her own destruction. She has learned to smile, to perform, to be the product the market demands. But when she meets Jamila-a woman with her own reasons for being there, her own calculations, her own fierce and unbroken spirit-the walls she has built begin to crack.
As the showcase reaches its brutal climax, Marisa discovers that the greatest threat is not the patrons, not the system, not even the woman who betrayed her. It is the truth she has been running from all along: that the only thing more dangerous than losing yourself is finding someone who makes you want to be found.
A Courtesan in Crete is a literary novel about survival, intimacy, and the high price of freedom. For readers of The Handmaid's Tale and Elena Knows, it asks what remains of us when everything has been taken-and who we become when we fight to get it back.