Amsterdam, 1654. Newly widowed at twenty-five, Catrin flees her small village, desperate for a fresh start. She finds work as a housekeeper for a wealthy merchant family—and accidentally discovers her own extraordinary gift. When Rembrandt himself recognizes her talent, Catrin dares to dream of a life defined not by loss, but by art.
But secrets don’t stay buried. When a figure from her past threatens her fragile new beginning, she escapes to Delft, where her designs on blue-and-white pottery spark a revolution that will make Delftware famous across Europe.
Still, tragedy shadows her steps, forcing Catrin to choose between survival and the independence she’s fought so hard to claim. In a gilded age of art and ambition, how much will freedom cost?