Ilana POV:
The West Wing corridor was silent and still, the air heavy with a scent I couldn't quite place. It was powerful, masculine, and utterly dominant-like the air after a lightning strike, mixed with old leather, and the sharp, clean scent of pine in the dead of winter. It was an Alpha's scent, and it made the fine hairs on my arms stand on end. Moonlight paced nervously in my mind, her instincts screaming at her to be submissive.
I tried to push through the overwhelming scent, to find the familiar, comforting smell of Cole's forest rain, but this other scent was a tidal wave, drowning out everything else. I foolishly assumed it was just the scent of the Blackwood family, the collective aura of the top floor, not realizing it belonged to one person. To him.
I walked the length of the hallway, my eyes scanning the identical doors. They were all closed, all unmarked. How was I supposed to find him?
Then I saw it. At the very end of the hall, there was one door that was different. It was a set of massive double doors, made of a dark, almost black wood, with no number or nameplate.
*This must be it,* I thought. *A study, or a lounge they share.* It made sense that the most important room would be at the end. Cole had to be in there.
My hand rose to knock, but I hesitated. The door was slightly ajar, a thin black line in the dim light of the hallway.
A thrill of mischief ran through me. This was supposed to be a surprise, after all. What was more surprising than just walking in?
I pressed my ear to the crack. Silence.
Holding my breath, I gave the heavy door a gentle push. It swung inward without a sound. I slipped inside, pulling it closed behind me, leaving it just a breath away from latching shut.
The room was dark, the only light filtering through the edges of thick, drawn velvet curtains. As my eyes adjusted, the sheer scale of the space became clear. It was a library, or an office. Bookshelves stretched from floor to ceiling on one wall, filled with leather-bound volumes. A desk the size of my entire bed dominated the center of the room, and several deep leather armchairs were arranged around a cold, stone fireplace.
The powerful Alpha scent was a physical presence in here, so thick I could almost taste it on my tongue.
"Cole?" I whispered, but my voice was swallowed by the oppressive silence.
He wasn't here. Disappointment pricked at me. I placed the paper bag with the cinnamon roll on a small side table and let my curiosity take over. I wandered deeper into the room, my fingers trailing over the cool, polished wood of the desk. Everything was meticulously organized, almost clinically neat. It radiated an aura of cold control, a stark contrast to Cole's warm, easygoing nature.
My gaze was drawn to the fireplace. Above the mantel, a pair of ancient, crossed battle-axes were mounted on the wall. But it was what sat on the mantel itself that captured my attention. There was only one object there: a single, ornate silver photo frame.
I felt an unexplainable pull, a need to see what picture was so important it was given this place of honor. I stepped closer, my reflection a ghostly image in the polished stone of the hearth.
The frame held a faded photograph of a handsome, stern-faced man and a woman with a gentle, loving smile. I recognized them from the official pack portraits in the great hall. They were the previous Alpha and Luna. Ryker and Cole's parents.
The woman's warm eyes and soft smile were so much like Cole's. Looking at her, I felt a strange sense of connection, a feeling of peeking into a secret, sacred part of the family's history. It felt intimate, and in that moment, I felt closer to Cole than ever.
On impulse, I reached out and picked up the frame. It was heavier than I expected, the silver cool and solid against my skin. It felt imbued with history, with love and with loss. I used the pad of my thumb to gently wipe a speck of dust from the glass, my eyes tracing the faces of the two people who had created the boy I loved.
I was so lost in the moment, so wrapped up in this tangible piece of the past, that I didn't notice the shadows in the corner of the room shift. I didn't register the faintest creak of a leather chair.
I didn't hear the soft, almost imperceptible click as the door I'd left ajar was pushed fully open.
I didn't hear the silent footfalls on the thick rug behind me.
I just stared at the photograph, a soft smile on my face. "They look so happy together," I murmured to myself.
A voice, as cold and sharp as breaking ice, spoke directly behind me, and every muscle in my body seized.
"What are you doing in my office?"