Kaede's personal theme shines trough every detail in the room, revealing her main interests to anyone that wasn't aware of them yet. The office is not too small but not too large either, and it's spacious enough not to feel crowded with even tree or four people in it. The floor is tiled with dark mahogany, providing a striking contrast to the spotlessly white walls, giving off an eerie silvery glow. In the wall pposite to where the massive cherrywood door is, a wide window is placed, filling most of the wall. Light white curtains embrodiered with silver thread are drawn over the glass surface most of the time, and the sunlight protrudes through it, bending over the room and lighting it up nicely without any lighter or darker spots. Next to the window, heavy royal blue velvet curtains are hanging, but are rarely drawn.

The furniture is rather simple, consisting mainly of comfortably shaped cherrywood table and chairs. The wide table is placed in the centre of the room, and is normally piled up with heaps of documents, forms and other paperwork. A pile of textbooks is place on the right corner of the desk (looking from the door), which rarely leaves its respective place. Behind the desk, a simple cherrywood chair is placed, and two copies of it are standing in front of it. All three of them are cushioned with comfortable but not too soft royal blue velvet pillows.

The decoration of the room is mostly scarce. Both of the side walls are lined with one rather crammed bookshelf each, exhibiting Kaede's love towards literature. The books range from kidou textbooks and guides to human literature, predominatingly by Russian and French authors. Under each of the bookshelves, an identical painting of a falcon in flight is placed. Surpringly enough, the room is obviously designed to be perfectly symmetrical, even if that means hanging two identical paintings and arranging the books in mirror image order.

On the outside of the door, there's a notice pinned with a single blue peg. It says:
"Knock and enter."