Mikael Pov.
We both stepped out of the car the moment the guards opened the doors.
The breeze hit my face—not cold, but cool enough to slice through everything, the kind that makes you reluctantly wake up. Not floral, not fresh. Just clean.
I let it settle on me for a moment. Let it quiet the heat coiled tight in my chest.
I glanced to my right.
Lucian stood with two guards, tall and impossible to miss. He was speaking in a low voice I couldn't hear and didn't care to. Whatever orders he was giving didn't involve me. And if they did… I didn't ask.
My eyes drifted past him.
And stopped, because what I saw can't even be called a house.
It rose from the earth like something carved for a darker god—black stone, tall golden windows blinking like lidded eyes, modern lines cutting through ancient bones. A castle taught to behave like a mansion. History dipped in steel and glass. Everything about it whispered control.
Power, without noise.
Even the warm glow from the windows felt intentional—soft, rich, designed to lull someone into thinking this place was safe.
I knew better.
This was old money—rebuilt, refined, and sharpened at the edges.
Behind me, engines hummed to life. I turned, blinking. A procession of black luxury cars slipped into the courtyard like shadows arriving late to a ceremony. Rolls Royce. Maybach. Bentley. All matte black with gold trims. They parked in a perfect line in the roundabout, like obedient wolves dressed in tuxedos.
Classic Lucian move.
I said nothing. Just faced the mansion again, I noticed Lucian waited quietly behind me, giving me a moment.
Up close, it was even more intimidating. Something between a fortress and a museum. The reflecting pool at the center mirrored the night sky so clearly it looked like a second moon had been placed there just to impress the stars. Sculptures lined the edges—silent, symmetrical, unmoving.
Then I saw people… Guards I think.
Lined on either side of the staircase. Guards in matte black. Maids in muted grey. Not a single word between them. Heads bowed the moment we stepped forward. Not nervous. Not stiff. Just… ceremonial. Practiced to perfection.
Lucian passed first. They held their bows.
Then I walked through them, their heads still bowed as I walked past.
The front doors opened without anyone touching them.
Silence greeted us.
Inside was a cathedral carved from shadowed gold and polished stone. Cream marble stretched beneath my feet, kissed by soft light from crystal chandeliers that glowed instead of sparkled. Everything was elegant, but nothing screamed for attention.
Even beauty here was controlled.
Then I smelled it.
The air wasn't scented with cologne, dominance or thick air. It was calm.
And I noticed it smelled like him.
Lucian's scent—pine warmed on stone, a hint of toasted orange peel, clean air, and something rich but quiet. Like thunder that chose not to storm. Masculine in a way that didn't suffocate—just settled against my ribs until they softened.
I hated that I recognized it.
It smelled exactly like the scent of him I picked in the car.
Subtle. Calm. Comforting.
Too comforting.
Even though we'd exchanged barely more than glances and a vow neither of us meant, I couldn't deny how it made me feel.
It made me want to let go.
Even for a second.
That alone was enough to make me clench my fists.
We reached the staircase—two sweeping curves of pale gold-veined marble, arching upward like a throne's arms. Clean. Grand. Silent.
My footsteps echoed softly as I climbed. Two maids followed a respectful distance behind—never touching me, never speaking. Just there to guide, and make sure I didn't fall.
When they got to the ending of the stairs, they stopped.
Then bowed.
Perfect. Timed. Like choreography.
I didn't look back.
At the top, the hallway stretched long and dim. Warm lights threw soft shadows across the floor, the walls painted in muted bone tones trimmed with dark accents. Quiet. Calming. Too controlled.
I opened the door to the room,
And what waited inside, was not what I expected…
I expected confinement, not… this.
Cream walls. Draped white curtains catching the faint breeze from hidden vents. A velvet-soft rug curled beneath a wide bed draped in champagne silk, pillows in soft blush shades arranged with delicate care. Gold accents touched the vanity, the corners of shelves, the edges of lamps.
A vase of white hydrangeas sat on the nightstand. Fresh. Quiet.
Books lined one wall. Not many. Just enough to say someone wanted me to feel like I had options.
A reading lounge faced a window looking out into the star-lined sky. Glass so clear it made the world outside feel closer than it should.
Everything was soft and softness was how people were tamed.
Warm light. Clean sheets. Silent halls. A room that didn't demand, didn't command—just waited. Just breathed with you.
And I hated how much the omega in me wanted to fall into all of it, but I won't allow it.
I didn't touch the bed. Didn't remove my shoes. Didn't run my hand along the glossy edge of the bookshelf.
I stood in the center of the room with my arms folded.
Blinking. Thinking.
Because no one had ever given me space before.
Not space to breathe. Not space to exist. Not space to undo myself without consequence.
This place had. He had, I wasn't even expecting up to this, I was expecting to be confined in the four walls of his room but it was different.
And that part of me—stupid, small, yearning, wanted this softness,but,
Softness could be dangerous too.
And this— This was the softest thing anyone had ever given me.
