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I didn’t move.

“Where’s the package?” I asked, holding out my hand.

Without looking up, he extended a small matte-black box tied with a thin silver ribbon.

I took it.

Turned it in my hands.

Heavy enough to matter. Light enough to be suspicious.

“Who’s it from?” I asked.

“Matteo Alvarez.”

“Violet’s father,” Ciro added.

He still didn’t look at me.

“Apparently, it’s a Spanish custom,” he said, voice steady but distant. “When they attend a wedding—even one they didn’t plan for—they bring a gift for the bride.”

A quiet, humorless breath slipped out of me.

I glanced down at the box again, my fingers tightening slightly around its edges.

“I displaced his daughter at her own wedding,” I said. “And they still sent a gift.”

I lifted my gaze, studying him now.

“From what I understand, the Spanish and the Italians are already at war,” I said, my voice even but edged. “And if anything, it escalated the moment Vincenzo chose me over Violet—their so-called princess. That marriage was supposed to stabilize things, not fracture them further.”

I let that settle before continuing.

“So you’ll forgive me if I’m not exactly eager to trust a gift from them,” I added, glancing down at the box before looking back at him. “Especially one that came from her father.”

A faint pause.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if there’s a bomb inside.”

That made him look up.

Just enough.

But enough to meet my eyes.

“It’s been scanned,” he said evenly. “It’s not a bomb.”

A beat.

Then—

“I should go.”

A brief pause, like he was choosing his words carefully.

“I’m... not entirely comfortable staying.”

His hand lifted in a vague gesture toward me, then stopped midway, as if even that felt like too much.