15. Pietro

Pietro

Tucked behind the velvet rope of royal security clearance in the west corridor, I check the silent feeds for anomalies. There’s too much activity near the cellars, and something about it feels wrong. A hint of treachery about to happen.

I speak into the comm. “Double security on Principe and Principessa. Now.”

The comm crackles. “Yes, sir.”

But it all fades when I see her.

Valaria.

Red silk slicing through the shadows. Anger in her eyes like a storm’s about to break. She’s out for blood.

Mine.

“You found me,” I say.

She doesn’t answer right away. Just stops a few feet short. Her chest rises and falls faster than the climb up the ballroom stairs should allow.

I know that look.

Something’s wrong.

“I heard them,” she says quietly. “Two men. Behind the hedge. They’re after Luca, probably Emma too.”

I straighten. “Security’s tight. Who’d you hear?”

“I didn’t see their faces. But I heard what they said.” Her voice cuts like glass now. “They said you’re soft. That you let your guard down because of me. I’m a mark. That you’re compromised.”

The words hang there. Heavy. Hot.

My pulse ticks up.

“Do you believe them?” I ask.

Her chin lifts. “I don’t want to.”

“But you do.”

She looks away.

And that’s worse than if she’d yelled. Worse than if she’d slapped me.

I take a step forward. “Valaria?—”

Her doubt is the wedge they wanted.

She thinks I used her.

And the worst part is?—

I don’t know if I deserve to say otherwise.

She cuts me off. “Tell me the truth. Was any of this real?”

I blink.

“The kiss in the garden? The fire? The night in your bed?” Her voice cracks—just barely. “Or am I your mark? Was it all for leverage?”

“Leverage? For what? Don’t do this,” I growl. “Don’t stand there like I planned this.”

“Did you?”

I close the gap between us, fast and furious.

“Look at me,” I say, low and dangerous. “I’ve burned half my reputation to keep you safe. Lied to my own team. Put myself between you and bullets. I would die for you.”

“But would you lie to me?”

Silence.

I don’t answer.

Because the truth is?—

I already have.

Not about my feelings. Never that. But there are things I haven’t told her. Secrets from earlier in the operation. Surveillance orders. Tapes I was meant to review. Files with her name in the margins, red-flagged by Intelligence.

Things I locked away. Things I was afraid would make her walk.

She sees it on my face.

Her breath shudders out.

“I thought I was falling for you,” she whispers.

“You were,” I say. “You are.”

“No,” she says, stepping back. “No more.”

And this time, she doesn’t stop walking.

Not even when I call her name.

Not even when my chest cracks open like a detonated vault.

Her silence is louder than the gunfire I’ve dodged.

It’s heartbreak.

And for the first time, I don’t know if I can fix it.

She disappears through the double doors of the ballroom.

And for the first time in a decade, I feel like I’ve lost something I won’t get back.

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