Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 199: The Negotiation

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Chapter 199: Chapter 199: The Negotiation

​"...MAILAH?", Grayson whispers weakly.

The moment the name left his lips, the world narrowed down to the space between them. The cacophony of the warehouse—the hissing guards, the low hum of the machinery, the crackling energy of Lucson’s power—faded into a dull roar.

Seryn, leaning back against her throne of rebar, didn’t move. She watched with a terrifying, amused curiosity, her chin resting on a pale hand. She didn’t stop Mailah. She wanted this. She wanted to see the tragedy unfold.

Mailah didn’t wait for permission. She broke into a run, her boots splashing through the black, oily liquid on the floor.

"Mailah, no!" Lucson’s voice was a whip-crack of authority, but she ignored it. Even Carson’s desperate reach for her arm missed by a fraction of an inch.

She reached Grayson and fell to her knees before him. The silver chains clattered, but he didn’t move to strike. Mailah reached up, her hands trembling as she cupped his face. His skin was fever-hot, slick with sweat and the grime of his captivity, yet it was still him.

"Yes," she whispered, her voice thick with a mixture of terror and hope. "It’s me. It’s Mailah. I’m here, Grayson. I’m right here."

She looked into his eyes, searching for the man who had kissed her in the sunroom. For a heartbeat, she thought she found him. The silver in his irises flickered, and that tiny spark of deep, sapphire blue—the color of his true soul—surfaced like a drowning man gasping for air.

"Mailah..." he breathed again.

But then, the blue vanished. It was replaced by a flash of jagged, electric violet that bled back into a cold, shimmering silver. His pupils dilated until they swallowed the light. The man she knew didn’t come back; instead, something ancient and starving looked out through his features.

Before she could scream, Grayson lunged.

He pressed his forehead against hers, and the world simply... evaporated.

Suddenly, Mailah was no longer in the warehouse. She was standing in a distorted version of Grayson’s sunroom. The plants were black and shriveled, the glass windows were weeping dark ink, and the sky outside was a swirling vortex of ash.

Grayson stood before her, but he looked like a ghost—flickering, translucent, and terrified.

"Mailah, you shouldn’t have come," he said, his voice echoing from every direction at once. He reached for her, but his hands were trembling uncontrollably. "I can’t stop it. The hunger... she triggered the change too early. I’m losing the perimeter. You have to leave. You have to leave before I kill you."

"I’m not leaving without you," she cried, reaching for him.

"There is no ’me’ left to take!" he roared, and as he spoke, the darkness in the room surged forward.

The dream shattered. The "Grayson" she was talking to was dragged into the floor by shadow-tendrils, and in his place rose a towering, monstrous silhouette. It had his face, but it was elongated, beautiful, and utterly devoid of mercy.

In the mental space of the incubus, the feeding began.

It wasn’t physical pain. It was worse. It felt like her very essence—her happy memories, the warmth of the sun, the feeling of her own heartbeat—was being siphoned through a straw. She felt her life force being pulled into the void of him. It was a sick, intimate violation, a psychic vacuum that left her feeling cold and hollow.

Strangely, she didn’t fight. She looked up at the monster wearing the face of the man she loved, and a wave of tragic acceptance washed over her. If this is the end, she thought, her consciousness flickering like a dying candle, at least it’s him. But the moment she surrendered, the vacuum snapped shut.

A golden light, sharp and violent, pierced the dream-darkness. She felt a phantom hand—strong, steady, and unmistakably Lucson’s—grab the back of her soul and yank.

Mailah’s eyes flew open. She gasped for air, her lungs burning as if she’d been underwater for minutes.

She was back on the cold, oily floor of the warehouse. Her head was being cradled, but not by Grayson. Carson was kneeling over her, his usual smirk replaced by a look of grim intensity. He was holding her upright, his hand pressing against the back of her head.

"Easy, Duchess," Carson muttered, his voice unusually soft. "Breathe. Just breathe. You almost went into cardiac arrest."

Mailah blinked, her vision blurred. "Grayson?"

"Back there," Carson tilted his head.

A few yards away, Grayson was slumped against the floor. He looked catatonic, his eyes rolled back, steam rising from the manacles where Lucson’s power had clearly interfered with the feed. Lucson stood between them and the throne, his back to Mailah.

He looked different. His clothes seemed to hum with latent energy, and a faint, ethereal glow emanated from his skin. He looked less like a man and more like an icon—an illuminated deity of cold, righteous fire.

"I told you to come alone!" Seryn’s voice shrieked, shattering the tense silence. She had descended from her throne, her hair whipping around her as if caught in a private gale. "You’ve ruined the negotiation!"

She raised a hand, and the shadows in the corners of the room coalesced into jagged blades of solidified darkness. "You will all rot here. I’ll turn you into a husk and feed you to Grayson every night for a century!"

Lucson didn’t flinch. He didn’t even raise his voice. He simply took a step forward, the floor beneath his boots cracking and turning to white ash.

"Seryn," Lucson said, his voice echoing with a double-tonal resonance that vibrated in Mailah’s teeth. "Quiet yourself. Your theatrics are beneath a Princess of the Third Circle."

The guards hissed, moving forward, but Lucson’s gaze swept over them, and they froze as if turned to stone.

"You didn’t come all the way from the Rift just to play at being a kidnapper," Lucson continued, his silver eyes now burning with a steady, golden radiance that filled the warehouse. "You aren’t here to kill us. If you wanted us dead, you would have collapsed the hotel suite while we slept. You need something. And you knew Grayson was the only one who could draw it out."

Seryn’s eyes narrowed, the fury in them flickering into something more calculating. She stopped the shadows from advancing, though they stayed poised like vipers. "You always were the arrogant one, Lucson. Even when we were children, you looked down on the rest of us from your golden pedestal."

"I am an Ancient demon," Lucson reminded her, his voice devoid of pride, stating it as a simple, terrifying fact. "I don’t look down. I look through. Now, tell me why you’re here."

Mailah struggled to sit up, leaning against Carson’s shoulder. Her mind was still reeling from the dream—from the feeling of Grayson’s hunger. She looked at Grayson, who was beginning to stir, his breath coming in ragged hitches.

"He’s hurt," Mailah whispered to Carson. "The chains... they’re burning him."

"They’re with holy salt," Carson whispered back, his eyes darting between Lucson and Seryn. "Stops him from using his psychic weight. It’s like a migraine wrapped in a sunburn for us. Just stay still, Mailah. Lucson is doing the heavy lifting right now."

Seryn walked in a slow circle around the perimeter of Lucson’s light. "The ’Great Peace’ you helped broker a millennium ago is rotting. There’s a faction rising—The Unbound. They don’t want to hide in the shadows anymore. They want the world to be an open buffet. And they’ve found something... or someone... who can break the seals."

Lucson’s posture didn’t change, but Mailah saw the way his fingers twitched. "The seals of the First Gate?"

"Among others," Seryn purred. She looked at Mailah, a predatory smile stretching her lips. "They need a bridge. A human who has been ’primed’ by an Ashford. Grayson was supposed to find you, mark you, and bring you back. But he caught feelings. He started playing house. He became... human."

Mailah felt a cold dread settle in her stomach. "Primed? What does that mean?"

Seryn ignored her, keeping her eyes on Lucson. "I’m not here to kill him, Lucson. I’m here to save our kind from a war we can’t win. Give me the girl, and I’ll let you and Grayson go back to your pathetic little hiding spots. The Unbound only need her blood and the resonance of the mark Grayson left on her soul."

"No," Grayson’s voice cracked through the room.

He was sitting up now, the obsidian blackness in his eyes receding to a pained, stormy gray. He looked at Mailah, his expression one of profound, agonizing regret. He looked like he wanted to crawl to her, but the chains held him fast.

"Don’t... don’t listen to her," Grayson wheezed. "Lucson... get her out of here. Now."

"Shut up, Grayson," Carson shouted, though his tone was fond. "We’re kind of in the middle of a diplomatic crisis here."

Lucson looked at the Princess. The silver in his eyes flared, illuminating the entire warehouse until the shadows were forced into the very edges of the room. 𝑓𝓇𝘦ℯ𝘸𝘦𝑏𝓃𝑜𝘷ℯ𝑙.𝑐𝑜𝓂

"You ask me to hand over the woman my brother has claimed as his own?" Lucson’s voice grew deeper, more dangerous. "To a group of radicals who want to tear open the Gates? You’ve spent too much time in the Rift, Seryn. You’ve forgotten what it means to cross an Ashford."

"I’m not asking as an enemy, Lucson!" Seryn snapped, her poise finally cracking. "I’m asking as someone who doesn’t want to see our world burn! If The Unbound get to her first, they won’t just take her blood. They’ll use her as a living battery until there’s nothing left but ash. At least with me, she’ll be a political prisoner. She’ll be comfortable."

"Comfortable?" Mailah found her voice, pushing herself away from Carson and standing up, despite her shaky legs. She looked at Seryn, the woman who had tortured Grayson and called her a snack. "You chained him. You scarred him. You tried to turn him into a monster just to prove a point. I wouldn’t trust you to look after a houseplant, let alone my life."

Carson let out a snort of laughter. "She’s got a point, Princess. You’re a bit of a ’one-star’ on the hospitality scale."

Seryn’s face turned a dangerous shade of porcelain white. "You think this is a joke? Look at him!" She pointed at Grayson. "He tried to eat you! That is the man you’re so desperate to save. He is a predator, and you are the prey. That is the only truth in this room."

Mailah looked at Grayson. He was watching her, his eyes filled with a soul-crushing sadness. He didn’t deny it. He couldn’t.

"He stopped," Mailah said, her voice small but firm. She looked Seryn in the eye. "He was starving, and he was lost, but he stopped. He chose to let go. Can you say the same? Can any of you?"

Lucson stepped into the space between Mailah and Seryn. "The conversation is over. We are taking Grayson, and you’re not taking the girl."

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