Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 201: The Cold Cell 1

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Chapter 201: Chapter 201: The Cold Cell 1

THE SILENCE following Lucson’s grim directive felt like the skin of a drum, stretched thin and vibrating with an incoming storm. Grayson’s hand remained anchored at the small of Mailah’s back, his touch no longer the gentle, reassuring warmth of a fiancé, but the heavy, territorial claim of something ancient.

"We can’t stay here," Lucson said, his voice cutting through the thick tension. "Seryn is a creature of the Third Circle; she’ll have the ley lines screaming our location within hours. The Ashford retreat is a fortress, but it’s a known one. We move to the secondary site—the ’Cold Cell’ in the Grisons."

Carson groaned, leaning his head against the mantelpiece. "The Cold Cell? Seriously, Luc? That place has the charm of an abandoned morgue and smells like wet slate. I haven’t been there since the Great Depression, and I still haven’t gotten the damp out of my favorite leather boots."

"It’s built into a mountain of pure magnetite," Lucson countered, ignored the theatrical whining. "It will ground Grayson’s signature and mask Mailah’s pulse. We leave in ten minutes. Carson, prep the second car. Strip the plates."

Mailah felt Grayson’s fingers twitch against her waist. He hadn’t looked away from her, his eyes tracking the pulse in her throat with a clinical, terrifying intensity. He was hungry—not for food, but for the very essence of her.

"Grayson?" she whispered.

"Get your things," he rasped. His voice sounded like grinding stones. "Do not leave my sight."

The journey to the Grisons was a blur of winding, lightless roads and the rhythmic humming of the car’s engine. They had switched to a nondescript, mud-splattered SUV. Carson drove like a madman, while Lucson sat in the passenger seat, his head back, eyes closed, seemingly meditating.

Mailah sat in the back with Grayson. He sat perfectly still, his hands resting on his knees, looking like a dark god carved from volcanic rock. He didn’t speak. He didn’t touch her. But the air around him felt heavy, as if he were a lightning bolt waiting for a reason to strike.

Every time Mailah shifted her weight, Grayson’s head would turn—sharp, bird-like—his gaze locking onto her.

"I’m just reaching for my water, Grayson," she said softly, her heart hammering against her ribs.

He didn’t answer. He simply watched her hand move, his pupils dilating until the silver ring around his irises was nothing more than a ghost of a memory.

"You’re creeping her out, big bro," Carson chirped from the front, glancing in the rearview mirror. "Try to look a little less like you’re calculating the calories in her soul. It’s bad for the vibes."

"Carson," Lucson warned without opening his eyes.

"What? I’m just saying! If I were a beautiful human artist and my boyfriend started looking at me like a Sunday roast, I’d be checking the door locks too."

Grayson’s lip curled. "My hunger is not your entertainment, Carson."

"Oh, it’s definitely not. It’s more of a high-stakes thriller," Carson muttered, swerving onto a gravel path that seemed to lead straight into the side of a cliff.

The ’Cold Cell’ was exactly as Carson had described—a brutalist bunker carved into a mountain of iron-rich stone. The heavy iron door groaned as Lucson pushed it open, revealing a space that was surprisingly modern beneath the rough-hewn rock walls.

There were sleek, minimalist furnishings, a small kitchen, and a single large sleeping area separated by heavy glass partitions.

"Magnetite walls," Lucson explained, his voice echoing. "It disrupts the sensory input of any tracker. Even Seryn won’t be able to peer through this much mineral density. We rest here. Tomorrow, we plan."

Mailah dropped her bag on a low bench, her body aching with exhaustion. The adrenaline that had sustained her through the warehouse escape was finally curdling into bone-deep fatigue.

"I need to lie down," she murmured.

"The bed is in the inner chamber," Lucson said, nodding toward the glass-walled room. "Grayson, stay in the main hall. You need to center yourself."

Grayson didn’t move. He stood in the center of the bunker, his dark gaze fixed on Mailah. "She stays with me."

"Grayson, your control is frayed," Lucson argued, his voice hardening. "The change is still volatile. If you slip while she’s asleep—"

"I said," Grayson stepped forward, the floor cracking beneath his boot, "she stays with me. My mark, Lucson. My anchor."

The two brothers locked eyes. The air in the bunker grew frigid, frost beginning to spider-web across the glass partitions. Mailah felt the static electricity in the room rise until her hair began to stand on end.

"It’s fine," Mailah interrupted, stepping between them. She looked at Grayson, seeing the flicker of desperation behind the mask. "I want to be with him. I’m not afraid."

It was a lie, but a necessary one. She was terrified—not of Grayson, but of the thing he was becoming. But she knew that if she pulled away now, he would truly be lost to the black.

Carson raised his hands in a ’don’t shoot’ gesture. "Well, if we’re all being brave and suicidal, I’m going to find the wine cellar. I think I saw a 1945 Bordeaux down the hall that’s calling my name."

The inner chamber was cold. Despite the plush furs and high-thread-count sheets on the oversized bed, the room felt like a tomb. Mailah crawled under the covers, her teeth chattering.

Grayson didn’t lie down. He sat on the edge of the bed, his back to her. His skin was pale, almost translucent in the dim light.

"You should sleep," Mailah said softly, reaching out to touch his shoulder.

He flinched as if she had burned him. "Don’t."

"Grayson—"

"The scent," he gasped, his fingers digging into the mattress. "Every time you move, the air... it carries your scent. It’s like wine, Mailah. It’s like every memory of warmth I’ve ever had. If you touch me right now, I don’t know if I can stop."

Mailah sat up, the furs sliding down her shoulders. This was the dynamic she had only read about in stories, but the reality was far more visceral. He was a starving man, and she was a feast.

"Then don’t stop," she said, her voice bolder than she felt. "Lucson said you need to feed on ’excess.’ Use my excess. Use my dreams, my warmth. Take what you need to stay sane."

Grayson turned his head slowly. The obsidian in his eyes was swirling like a nebula. "You don’t understand. If I take too much, I’ll hollow you out. You’ll be a shell."

"I trust you," she whispered.

He let out a low, tortured sound—halfway between a sob and a snarl—and moved. He was so fast he was a blur. One moment he was at the foot of the bed; the next, he was hovering over her, his hands pinned on either side of her head.

The first wave of his transformation hit her like a physical blow. A psychic pressure flooded the room, thick and sweet like honey.

Mailah felt her senses begin to distort. The gray rock walls seemed to glow with iridescent colors; the sound of Grayson’s breathing became a thunderous rhythm in her ears.

"Look at me," he commanded.

Mailah looked. Up close, his face was impossibly beautiful—sharpened by the demon essence into something that transcended human standards. His skin was like marble, but his breath was hot against her lips.

"This is the hunger, Mailah," he whispered, his eyes searching hers. "This is what I promised you I would never let you see."

He leaned down, his forehead resting against hers. Mailah felt a sudden, sharp pull in her chest, as if a thread were being drawn from her heart. A rush of images flooded her mind—sunlight on a canvas, the smell of the roses in the sunroom, the taste of a peach in midsummer. Grayson was drinking her memories, her sensory ’excess.’

It was intoxicating. It wasn’t the violation she had felt in the warehouse; this was a shared, intimate connection. She felt his gratitude, his desperate love, and the crushing weight of his self-loathing.

"Stay," she whispered, her hands finding the back of his neck, pulling him closer.

He groaned, his teeth ghosting over the sensitive skin of her throat. He didn’t bite, but the vibration of his voice against her skin sent shivers of electricity through her entire body.

"I am a monster," he murmured against her skin. "I am a void that will eventually swallow you."

"Then let it swallow me," she replied, her eyes closing as the psychic warmth enveloped her. "Just don’t go back to the dark alone."

For a long time, they stayed like that—a human girl and an obsidian-eyed demon, suspended in a mountain of iron. Outside, the world was searching for them, Princesses were plotting and mobilizing. But inside the Cold Cell, the line between predator and prey had blurred into something much more dangerous: a bond that neither heaven nor hell could easily sever.

Grayson didn’t pull away; instead, the surrender in Mailah’s voice seemed to snap the final thread of his restraint.

He didn’t just lean in—he claimed her.

The kiss was a collision of worlds. It was desperate, fueled by the terrifying adrenaline of their escape and the dark, intoxicating hunger now coursing through Grayson’s veins.

He tasted of cold iron and sweet jasmine, his tongue tracing the seam of her lips with a predatory demand that left Mailah breathless. There was no gentleness left in him, only a raw, jagged need to anchor himself to the one thing that still felt real in a world of shadows.

Mailah didn’t recoil. The fear that had been simmering in her chest for days finally boiled over into a feverish response. 𝕗𝗿𝕖𝐞𝐰𝗲𝕓𝐧𝕠𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝐨𝚖

She arched into him, her fingers tangling in his dark, matted hair, pulling him closer until there wasn’t a breath of air between them. She wanted to drown out the memory of the warehouse, the scent of the princess, and the cold logic of Lucson. She wanted the monster if it meant she could keep the man.

With a low, guttural growl that vibrated against her throat, Grayson’s hands moved with a terrifying, fluid strength.

The delicate fabric of her dark dress was no match for the power in his grip. There was the sharp, definitive sound of tearing as he ripped through the bodice, the cool mountain air hitting her skin for only a second before the searing heat of his palms replaced it.

"Grayson," she gasped against his mouth, her voice a mix of a plea and a command.

He didn’t stop. He couldn’t. He pinned her wrists against the furs, his eyes inches from hers, swirling with a dark, carnal light. "I told you to run," he rasped, his voice a beautiful, ruined wreckage of its former self. "I told you I would swallow you whole."

"Then do it," Mailah countered, her eyes flashing with a defiance that matched his own.

She broke one hand free and traced the line of his jaw, her thumb on his low lip. She wasn’t playing the victim; she was meeting him in the dark.

The chemistry was no longer a spark—it was an inferno. Every touch felt amplified, every breath a shared secret in the iron-clad silence of the bunker.

Grayson’s mouth found the sensitive hollow of her shoulder, his teeth grazing the skin in a way that promised a different kind of feeding.