The city of Oakhaven didn't smell like the earth back home; it smelled like wet concrete, expensive gasoline, and secrets.
Elara Thorne shivered, her thin, floral sundress clinging to her skin like a second layer of ice. She had spent her last few dollars on a bus ticket to the city, desperate to find her runaway sister, Mia, before their grandfather's herbal shop was foreclosed.
The address Mia had texted led her here-to the Blackwood Grand, a hotel so opulent it felt like a fortress for the gods of industry.
Drenched and trembling, Elara pushed open the heavy glass doors of a VIP balcony on the 48th floor. She had bypassed security in the chaos of a gala downstairs, her heart hammering a frantic rhythm against her ribs.
"Mia? Please tell me you're here," she whispered, stepping into the dim, sprawling suite.
The door clicked shut behind her, locking with a heavy, electronic thud that echoed in the silence. The suite was a masterpiece of shadow and steel, lit only by the silver glow of the moon filtering through the rain-streaked windows. The air was thick and still, carrying the intoxicating scent of expensive sandalwood, aged whiskey, and something more primal-something masculine.
"You're late," a voice rasped from the darkness.
It was a deep, dangerous sound-like velvet dragged over gravel. Elara froze, her breath catching in her throat. That wasn't Mia.
A tall silhouette detached itself from a leather armchair. He moved with the predatory grace of a panther, his presence expanding to fill every corner of the room until Elara felt she was suffocating.
As he stepped into a sliver of moonlight, she saw him: a man built of sharp angles and raw power. His white dress shirt was unbuttoned at the collar, sleeves rolled up to reveal forearms corded with muscle.
"I... I think there's been a mistake," Elara stammered, her voice trembling. "I'm looking for Suite 802... I must have taken the wrong elevator..."
In two strides, he was in her space. Before she could bolt, a large, warm hand clamped around her waist, pulling her flush against a hard, custom-tailored chest. Elara gasped, her small hands landing instinctively on his shoulders. The silk of his shirt was cool, but the skin beneath was radiating a heat that made her damp skin sizzle.
"Save the excuses," he murmured. His voice dropped to a low, intimate vibration that she felt in the very center of her bones. "My grandmother has been singing your praises for weeks. I suppose you're the 'pure, traditional' girl she promised would 'fix' my cold heart?"
"No! You don't understand-"
Elara looked up, and for a heartbeat, time stopped. She was staring into the eyes of Killian Blackwood, the "Ice King." Up close, he was beautiful in a way that hurt to look at-heavy brows, a nose as straight as a blade, and eyes like molten silver that seemed to look right through her soul.
"I understand that you're soaked to the bone," Killian growled, his gaze dropping to her lips, which were parted in shock.
His grip tightened, his fingers splaying across the small of her back, pinning her so close she could feel the steady, heavy thud of his heart.
"And I understand that you're trembling. Tell me, little flower... are you shivering from the cold, or is it because of me?"
"I'm not... I'm not her," she whispered, though her body was betraying her. The electricity sparking between them was so intense it felt like the air was being sucked out of the room. She should have fought harder, but the way he looked at her, with a mix of disdain and sudden, undeniable hunger made her pulse leap.
"Then stop talking," he commanded, his thumb brushing over her lower lip. The touch was light, but it sent a shockwave of heat straight to her core.
He leaned down, his face inches from hers. "If you're going to be my bride, you might as well learn how I taste."
Before she could utter another word of protest, his mouth crashed down onto hers.
It wasn't the gentle kiss Elara had imagined her first would be. It was a claim. It was dark, demanding, and tasted of fine Scotch and forbidden desire. His tongue flicked against her lip, asking for entry, and when she let out a soft moan of surprise, he took it, deepening the kiss until Elara's head spun. Her fingers curled into the silk of his shirt, anchoring herself as the world tilted on its axis.
For a long, shimmering moment, there was no city, no farm, and no debt. There was only the heat of his body and the way his hands felt as they slid down to pull her even tighter against him.
Suddenly, a flash of lightning illuminated the room, and the reality of the situation came crashing back. Elara found a spark of strength and shoved against his granite chest.
"Stop!" she gasped, breaking the contact.
She scrambled backward, her face flushed and her eyes wide with a mix of fear and a longing she didn't want to admit to. Killian stood there, his hair slightly mussed, his eyes dark with a sudden, confused intensity. He looked like a man who had just seen a ghost.
Without a word, Elara turned and bolted out the suite door, her heart thundering as she disappeared into the gold-leafed hallway, leaving the scent of lavender and rain behind.
Killian stood in the silence, his breath heavy. He reached down to the floor where she had tripped. There, glinting in the moonlight, was a small, vintage wooden locket.
He picked it up, flicking it open. Inside was a tiny, pressed lavender flower and a hand-written note: For Elara-always remember your roots.
A cold, dark smirk touched his lips. He didn't know who she was, but he knew he had just tasted something he could never forget.
"Elara," he whispered, the name a low, possessive growl. "Run all you want. I've already caught you... Princess."