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Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 100: The Ashford Manor
DRAWING A STEADYING BREATH, she pulled the door open.
And there he was.
Grayson Ashford stood framed in the doorway, the sinking light of the manor’s corridor gilding him in gold and shadow.
He was dressed in a black suit tailored so precisely it seemed conjured to his frame, the crisp lines softened only by the faint gleam of cufflinks at his wrists.
His eyes—those impossibly blue-gray eyes—swept over her, slow and deliberate, and for the first time Mailah saw something falter in his composure.
It wasn’t much. A fractional pause. A flicker. But it was there.
Her stomach swooped, heat flooding her veins.
Neither of them spoke.
The silence between them stretched, thick as smoke, charged with something she couldn’t name but felt everywhere—her skin prickling, her pulse wild, her breath shallow.
It was Etta who broke the spell, slipping quietly past them with her canvas bag and kit, offering Grayson a polite nod. "She’s ready, Mr. Ashford."
He didn’t look away from Mailah. Not once.
When Etta disappeared down the hall, they were left alone, the air thrumming between them.
Finally, he spoke. His voice was low, dark velvet over steel.
"You’ll ruin me in that dress."
Mailah’s knees nearly buckled. Her lips parted, but no sound emerged.
Grayson stepped closer, the faintest curl of a smile playing at the corner of his mouth—as if he took pleasure in her silence, in her inability to summon words.
The air between them narrowed to inches.
And just when Mailah thought she might either combust or fling herself against him, he extended his arm with formal precision, every inch the gentleman he pretended not to be.
"Shall we?"
Her hand trembled as she placed it against his sleeve, the heat of him burning through the fabric.
"Wait—just one thing," she murmured, turning and walking toward the vanity.
Her fingers curled around the small purse she had chosen earlier, its deep violet shimmer catching the light in a perfect echo of her gown.
She slipped the delicate strap over her wrist, then bent to fasten the strappy silver heels Etta had set aside—their slender lines completing the look as if they’d been designed solely for this night.
When she straightened again, purse in hand, the transformation felt whole.
Grayson’s gaze tracked every movement, the corner of his mouth deepening into something almost sinful.
Together, they turned toward the hall. Toward the waiting car.
Toward the anniversary he had sworn he’d never attend.
Toward whatever would come next.
The estate clock struck the hour, the chimes echoing like an omen.
And Mailah knew—without understanding how—that nothing would ever be the same again.
The clock’s echo seemed to follow her into the corridor, each chime striking her ribs like a secret drumbeat.
Grayson’s stride beside her was unhurried yet sure, the kind of gait that made people step aside without realizing why.
Mailah, in her silver heels and violet gown, tried to match him, the purse at her wrist suddenly feeling more like an anchor than an accessory.
The town car waited in the drive, sleek and black as though it had materialized from shadow itself.
Grayson helped her in with the faintest brush of his hand at her back, a touch so brief she could have convinced herself she imagined it. She didn’t.
Inside, the leather seats were cool and the air faintly scented with cedar like usual.
As the door closed with a soft thud, silence swelled again.
Not absence-of-sound silence—charged silence. A silence that clung like static.
Mailah folded her hands in her lap, pretending interest in the blur of scenery.
Yet the landscape grew steadily stranger. The familiar roads she’d memorized slipped away, replaced with winding paths and dark stretches of woodland.
Then water glimmered, black and endless under the sinking light.
Her pulse quickened.
She wanted to ask, Where are we going? But her tongue felt heavy.
Instead, minutes bled into one another until the car slowed, then stopped.
The door opened to the cool breath of evening air, carrying with it the salt-snap of the sea.
Mailah stepped out, her heels clicking on stone. And then she saw it.
A dock.
The water lapping below.
A sleek yacht moored there, its white hull gleaming like bone in the twilight.
Her brows lifted. "We’re... sailing to the party?"
Grayson’s mouth curved in that half-smile that made her stomach plummet. "The Ashford Anniversary doesn’t begin in the street, Mailah. You’ll learn that soon enough."
Before she could muster a reply, his hand was there again—firm, guiding—helping her down the short path toward the yacht.
The crew moved with wordless precision, lowering the gangway as though choreographed.
For a moment, Mailah felt like she was stepping not into a vessel but into another world.
The yacht’s deck gleamed under lantern light. Somewhere, music throbbed faintly, not loud but steady, like the sound of a heartbeat carried through water.
Grayson led her inside, up a narrow flight of stairs to a chamber perched at the yacht’s top.
It wasn’t ostentatious—no chandeliers or velvet curtains—but there was something quietly decadent in its simplicity.
A low sofa upholstered in pale gray. Shelves lined with leather-bound volumes. Glass walls on every side, giving a near-panoramic view of the dark water stretching to the horizon.
Mailah’s breath caught. "It’s like floating inside a glass box."
Grayson glanced at her, a flash of amusement in his eyes. "If you prefer the illusion of safety, I can draw the shades."
"I didn’t say I wanted safety." The words slipped out before she could stop them.
The silence that followed was more dangerous than any shout.
Grayson moved to a small cabinet and drew out a folded blanket, holding it out as though the gesture were matter-of-fact. "Here. You’ll get cold."
She hesitated. The act was almost too... ordinary. Too human.
She took it, wrapping the softness around her shoulders. It smelled faintly of clean linen and cedar—like him.
Before she could gather her thoughts, a knock came at the door.
A crewman appeared, silent, setting down a tray: a bottle of wine and two glasses. Then he was gone, vanishing so quickly Mailah wondered if she’d dreamt him.
Grayson poured without asking, handing her a glass with unstudied grace.
She held it but didn’t drink.
Instead, her gaze fixed on the dark water streaking past the glass walls. The sea stretched vast and unknowable, and she felt a sudden, raw kinship with it.
Grayson broke the silence. "You should know what to expect tonight."
Mailah turned toward him. His eyes caught the lamplight, sharp as steel.
"The Ashford Anniversary is not merely a family gathering," he said. "It is an... unveiling. A proving ground. Everyone there will be watching. Weighing. Measuring."
He leaned back slightly, his glass turning lazily between his fingers. "And you will be at my side."
Heat crawled up her throat, colliding with a dozen unspoken questions.
Grayson’s gaze lingered on her, so unwavering she almost forgot how to breathe. Then, softly—too softly—he asked, "Are you ready for my world, Mailah?"
Her fingers tightened on the stem of her glass. "What if I say no?"
"Then I take you back." He shrugged with unnerving calm. "You’d never see what waits on the other side of this water."
"And if I say yes?"
His eyes burned brighter, like a storm brewing. "Then you’ll have to decide whether to trust me. Or whether I’m the very one you should fear."
She let out a breath that wasn’t quite a laugh. "Not exactly reassuring."
He leaned closer, his voice dropping low. "If reassurance is what you want, you should have chosen someone else."
The distance between them collapsed to a breath, the tension crackling like fire on the air.
For a fleeting, treacherous moment, she wondered what it would be like if he kissed her—if the storm inside his eyes broke over her.
But then the yacht slowed. Engines hushed. The motion of the sea calmed to a gentle sway.
Grayson rose and extended his hand, all elegance again. "We’ve arrived."
Mailah swallowed and set down her untouched wine. She placed her hand in his, and he led her to the deck.
The night air wrapped cool around her, carrying with it the faint strains of distant music and laughter.
And then she saw it.
The Ashford manor loomed on the shore like something from a fever dream—vast and glittering, its windows spilling golden light across the black water. Towers rose against the sky, their stone veined with ivy that shimmered faintly as though laced with silver. Lanterns lined the long dock, flames flickering in glass globes, leading up to gates that were more wrought sculpture than metal.
Mailah’s breath caught sharp in her chest.
She’d never seen anything like it.
It wasn’t just a house. It was a statement. A citadel. A trap dressed as a palace.
Grayson’s hand tightened around hers.
"Welcome," he murmured, his breath brushing her ear. "To the Ashford Manor."
And as the yacht docked with a soft bump, Mailah knew—with bone-deep certainty—that she was crossing into a place where nothing would be the same, and where trust was the rarest currency of all.







