Item from Bride by Ali Hazelwood
The Alpha's private collection of architectural drawings and portraits — a secret window into the emotional life of a man who won't talk about his feelings but will absolutely draw them.
Lowe's sketchbook is the artifact that betrays everything his composure tries to hide. As an architect, he draws buildings — clean lines, structural solutions, spaces designed to shelter people. But the portraits of Misery that start appearing between the blueprints tell a different story. He draws her when she's not performing — reading, laughing with Ana, asleep on the couch. The care in the lines is unmistakable. When Misery finds the sketchbook, it becomes the moment she can't unsee — the proof that whatever is happening between them isn't just politics or proximity. He's been paying attention in a way that's deeply, specifically personal.
A worn, well-used sketchbook — the kind carried by someone who draws constantly and without pretense. Pages filled with architectural plans, structural studies, and increasingly, portraits of Misery drawn with an attention to detail that says more than Lowe's words ever do.
Also known as: The Sketchbook, Lowe's Drawings