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Rafael’s first reaction was laughter.

Not subtle laughter expected of a duke standing in one of the imperial residence corridors before noon.

Real laughter that hit him so abruptly he had to put one hand against the wall to steady himself, shoulders shaking once as the sound escaped anyway.

Frederik, who had clearly not expected to walk out of his rooms and imdiately encounter one of his fathers, ca to a stop so abruptly he almost got into the banister.

The mark on his neck was impossible to miss.

Cecil had not been subtle. Of course he had not been subtle. A hidden mark would have implied moderation, sha, or at least the basic instinct to avoid turning private affairs into public declarations. Both Cecil and Frederik were anything but private about their relationship if one knew where to look.

The mark sat just above Frederik’s collar, dark, fresh, and impossible to mistake for anything else. It was so well defined that one noticed it from several paces away and then spent the rest of the day pretending not to have noticed while informing at least three trusted people in confidence.

Rafael laughed again.

Frederik looked at him with the flat, resigned expression of a man who had already accepted that the day was not going to improve.

"Oh, that is vicious," Rafael said, still smiling too broadly to be taken seriously. "That is genuinely vicious. He did not even try to leave you a shred of dignity."

Frederik adjusted his cuffs with unnecessary precision. "He left enough."

Rafael’s brows lifted. "Did he?"

Frederik said nothing.

That silence alone was worth at least five minutes of private enjoynt.

Because if Frederik had wanted to deny, redirect, or bury the situation under sothing elegant and administrative, he would have done so by now. Instead he rely stood there, very upright, very composed, and visibly marked by an oga prince with all the restraint of a victorious general planting a flag.

Rafael folded his arms and looked him over again, taking in the bite, the set of his shoulders, and the careful expression that was trying far too hard to be neutral.

Then his second reaction arrived exactly where it belonged.

"So," Rafael asked, with complete calm, "when is the wedding?"

Frederik blinked once.

It was the only visible crack in his composure, but Rafael had raised him. He did not miss it.

"You cannot be serious."

"I am deeply serious," Rafael said. "Suspiciously serious, in fact. This has moved far beyond a private inconvenience and directly into event planning."

Frederik gave him a long look. "It is not an event."

Rafael’s eyes dropped, very pointedly, to the mark again.

"Frederik, your neck disagrees."

That earned him a silence so dry it could have preserved docunts.

Rafael, naturally, continued.

"I only need a season," he said. "You need not commit to a month if you are not emotionally prepared. Autumn? Winter? Sothing with enough ti for invitations but not enough ti for the palace to invent nonsense?"

Frederik started walking again.

Rafael took that as permission to follow.

It was, after all, one of the privileges of fatherhood that no one ever advertised honestly: the right to beco unbearable the mont your child’s life took an interesting turn.

"It’s terrifyingly strange," Frederik said, giving him a flat look, "how easily you shift from introvert to event planner the mont marriage is involved."

Rafael looked pleased rather than ashad.

"I contain multitudes," he said.

"You contain nace."

"That too."

Frederik let out a dry chuckle. "Cecil would inform Gabriel and Damian. I... let him choose."

Rafael’s smile widened imdiately, bright with the kind of delight that should have warned civilized people to evacuate the corridor.

"So you gave him the ring," he said.

Frederik glanced at him once, and that was answer enough.

Rafael made a soft, triumphant sound under his breath. "Oh, that is excellent."

"It is not a military victory."

"No," Rafael said, still far too pleased, "it is worse. It is personal."

Frederik shook his head, though the movent failed to hide the faint shift at the corner of his mouth.

Rafael noticed that too, of course. He noticed everything when it ca to his children, and especially when one of them looked this annoyingly close to happy.

"How long," he asked, "have you been carrying that ring around like a man quietly preparing his own downfall?"

Frederik was silent for half a second too long.

Rafael stopped walking.

"Oh, no."

Frederik kept going.

Rafael caught up at once, scandalized into fresh energy. "Frederik."

"It was not relevant."

"It is very relevant. It is the most relevant thing you have said this morning."

Frederik exhaled through his nose. "A while."

Rafael stared at him. "A while is not a asurent. A while is what people say when the truth is embarrassing."

Frederik looked ahead with all the composure of a man refusing to assist in his own interrogation. "Then perhaps it is the correct word."

Rafael made a wounded sound. "You had a ring prepared, allowed that prince to corner you into a proper discussion, let him mark you visibly enough for the entire wing to lose productivity, and you are still trying to behave as though this were a manageable administrative update."

"It is manageable."

"Not for ," Rafael said. "For , this is a deeply emotional and logistically significant event."

Frederik gave him a sidelong look. "I am concerned by how quickly you arrived at ’logistically significant.’"

"I am choosing to interpret that as admiration."

"It was concern."

Rafael waved that away. "You let him choose how to tell Gabriel and Damian?"

"Yes."

"That was generous."

"It was practical."

Rafael’s brows lifted. "Practical."

Frederik’s expression stayed even, though sothing quieter settled beneath it. "He’s their son."

That softened Rafael at once, if only by a fraction.

Frederik had understood what that mont belonged to and handed it back to Cecil without trying to control it. Because whatever happened between them, however strong or settled or inevitable it had beco, Cecil was still Damian and Gabriel’s son first in that particular conversation. Their son, standing on the edge of changing his life in a way they would feel long after the first shock wore off.

Rafael looked at Frederik differently then.

"You love him very much," he said.

Frederik’s steps slowed almost imperceptibly.

Then, with that infuriating simplicity he only ever used when sothing mattered enough to stop performing around it, he said, "Yes."

Rafael was quiet for a few paces.

Then, because he could not leave sincerity unprotected for too long without developing a rash, he sighed and said, "This is very inconvenient for . I wanted to be dramatic, and now I have to be touched."

Frederik actually laughed at that, low and briefly.

"There is still ti for drama," he said.

"Oh, excellent. I was worried we might handle this with maturity."

They reached the turn toward the inner wing, where the corridor narrowed slightly and the palace quiet shifted around them. Rafael folded his arms again, already thinking three conversations ahead.

"Cecil telling Gabriel and Damian himself," he mused. "Gabriel will look serene for exactly five seconds, which is how everyone will know he is not serene at all. Damian will go very still in that way that makes furniture feel nervous."

Frederik’s mouth twitched. "Probably."

"And then," Rafael continued, warming to the subject, "they will both attempt to be reasonable, fail in entirely different directions, and by evening half the palace will know while pretending this is still confidential."

"That was going to happen regardless."

"Yes, but now it will happen with emotional structure."

Frederik looked at him. "That does not an anything."

"It ans everything."

Frederik let that pass, which was wise, because Rafael had no intention of defending it.

Then Rafael’s expression sharpened again with sudden interest.

"Did Cecil look pleased?"

Frederik gave him a long, dry look. "What do you think?"

Rafael smiled. "I think he looked unbearable."

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