Alex debe viajar junto a su hermana June y Nora, la nieta del vicepresidente, formando el "Trío de la Casa Blanca". La atmósfera es de estricto protocolo, algo que choca directamente con la personalidad audaz y competitiva de Alex. El Encuentro con Henry
A between this chapter and the Amazon Prime movie adaptation.
: Early on, the novel establishes the complex dynamics between various characters, including hints at the developing relationship between Alex and Henry.
The opening chapter of Casey McQuiston’s Rojo, Blanco y Sangre Azul —rendered here in its "extra quality" form, implying a textual richness that demands close scrutiny—operates as a masterclass in the deconstruction of a genre. On the surface, it presents itself as a romantic comedy of errors, a clash between the First Son of the United States and the Prince of Wales. However, to dismiss the first chapter as mere fluff is to overlook the intricate socio-political scaffolding upon which the narrative rests. Chapter One does not merely introduce a rivalry; it establishes a treatise on the performance of identity, the burden of dynastic legacy, and the uncomfortable intersection of public service and private desire. Through the dual perspectives of Alex Claremont-Diaz and Prince Henry, the prologue and first chapter set the stage for a conflict that is as much about geopolitics as it is about chemistry.