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Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 203: The Relief
WHEN MAILAH’S EYES finally flickered open, the world felt heavy—literally. Her first conscious thought was that she had been hit by a freight train, or perhaps the mountain itself had decided to settle on top of her.
Every muscle in her body hummed with a dull, throbbing ache, and as she tried to shift, the soreness reminded her of exactly how Grayson had "fed" on her excess the night before.
She was covered in a landscape of blooming purples and deep reds. Her thighs were tender, her wrists bore the faint shadow of his grip, and her skin felt sensitized, as if the very air was too abrasive.
She expected to be alone. In the past, Grayson was a phantom in the night. He would bolt the moment he felt her pulse steady into sleep, terrified that his subconscious hungers would override his fragile humanity. He had always treated her dreams like a glass museum—beautiful, but too easy for a monster to break.
But today, the sun was clearly up, casting a dim, slate-gray light through the high vents, and Grayson was still there.
His heavy arm was draped across her waist, pinning her to the mattress with the casual possessiveness of a predator guarding its prize.
One of his thighs was hooked over hers, anchoring her. The coldness of his skin had been replaced by a low, simmering heat that radiated from him like a dying hearth.
He had changed. The old Grayson was careful; this Grayson was territorial.
"You’re awake," a voice rasped.
Mailah jumped slightly, wincing as the movement pulled on her sore abdomen.
Grayson was looking at her, but he hadn’t moved an inch to give her space. His eyes weren’t the soulful blue-gray of her fiancé; they were back to the dark, stormy obsidian, the silver ring around the pupil flickering like a dying star.
"I... yeah," she whispered, her voice husky. "You’re still here."
He didn’t smile. He didn’t lean in to kiss her forehead or ask if she was okay. He simply stared at her, his gaze dropping to the visible marks on her exposed skin with an expression that was chillingly neutral.
"Get up," he said, his voice devoid of the warmth that had fueled their fire hours earlier. "Lucson wants to move by noon."
The coldness in his tone hit her harder than the bruises. He withdrew his arm and sat up in one fluid, predatory motion, his back facing her like a stone wall. He didn’t look back as he headed toward the shower, leaving Mailah shivering in the sudden absence of his heat.
Forty minutes later, Mailah emerged from the inner chamber. She had scrubbed the salt and sweat from her skin, but no amount of hot water could wash away the marks. She had dressed in a high-necked sweater to hide the bruises, but she still walked with a slight, tell-tale stiffness.
As she entered the main hall, the smell of burnt toast and expensive coffee hit her.
Lucson was standing by the holographic map, looking every bit the stoic demon, though he was pointedly staring at a digital ley line as if it were the most fascinating thing in existence.
Carson, however, was leaning against the kitchen island, holding a mug of coffee and wearing a grin that could only be described as ’professionally obnoxious.’
Grayson was already there, leaning against the far wall, nursing a glass of dark liquid—likely some high-calorie essence Lucson had packed. He didn’t look up when Mailah entered.
Carson’s eyes traveled from Mailah’s stiff gait to the way she gingerly sat on a stool. His grin widened by three centimeters.
"Morning, sunshine," Carson chirped, his voice echoing too loudly in the stone bunker. "You look like you fought a mountain. And lost. Or won? Hard to tell with the glow you’ve got going on."
Mailah felt the heat climb from her chest to her hairline. "I’m just... tired. The mountain air is heavy."
"Is that what we’re calling it now? ’Mountain air’?" Carson let out a bark of laughter, glancing at Grayson, who remained stoic. "Because from where I was sitting—which, for the record, was in the kitchen trying to enjoy a nice 1945 Bordeaux—it sounded like a localized earthquake. Or perhaps a very enthusiastic construction crew."
"Carson," Lucson warned, though he still didn’t look up from his map.
"No, really, Luc! I was impressed," Carson continued, leaning over the counter toward Mailah. "I didn’t know you had that kind of lung capacity, Duchess. At one point, I thought the magnetite was going to crack. I was actually worried about the structural integrity of the Grisons."
Mailah’s face was now a shade of red that rivaled a ripe tomato. "I—I thought these rooms were soundproof! You said this was a bunker!"
Lucson finally looked up, his expression a masterpiece of "I’m trying to be a leader but I’m surrounded by idiots."
"Mailah," Lucson said calmly, "nothing is truly soundproof to a demon with heightened auditory senses. Especially not an Ashford during a... spiritual grounding."
"A spiritual grounding?" Carson snickered into his coffee. "Is that the official term for ’tearing the furniture apart’?"
"Shut up, Carson," Grayson growled from the corner.
"Oh, look! The beast speaks!" Carson turned his teasing on his brother. "Seriously, Gray, I haven’t heard you growl like that since you were a fledgling. I had to put on headphones. I actually felt bad for the mountain. It didn’t ask for that."
Mailah buried her face in her hands. "I’m never leaving this bunker. Just leave me here."
"Nonsense!" Carson hopped over the counter, sliding a plate of toast toward her. "Eat up. You’ve clearly burned about ten thousand calories. Besides, if it makes you feel any better, Lucson was pretending to read a book on Babylonian history upside down for three hours just to drown you out."
Lucson cleared his throat, a faint, rare glimmer of amusement reaching his silver eyes. "It was a very interesting book, Carson."
The sheer absurdity of the moment broke the tension that had been suffocating Mailah since she woke up. Despite the bruises, the danger, and the terrifying change in Grayson, she found herself letting out a small, huffed laugh.
"You guys are the worst," she muttered, grabbing a piece of toast.
"We’re the best," Carson corrected, leaning in to whisper loudly. "But seriously, Duchess, next time? Maybe try a pillow? My ears are sensitive."
Grayson finally moved, crossing the room in a few long strides. He didn’t look at Carson, but he placed a hand on the back of Mailah’s chair. The coldness from the bedroom hadn’t entirely vanished, but the protective edge was back.
"Leave her alone, Carson," Grayson said, his voice low and vibrating. "Or I’ll show you exactly how ’loud’ I can be when I’m annoyed."
Carson held up his hands in a mock gesture of surrender. "Alright, alright! Message received. No more sex-ed in the morning briefing."
Lucson stood straight, his face returning to its professional mask. "Now that the ’ice’ is thoroughly shattered, we have a situation. We need to move to the Grisons border."
The comedy evaporated, replaced by the cold, sharp reality of the hunt. Mailah looked at the three men. They were a mess of trauma and supernatural power, but for the first time, the bunker felt less like a cage and more like a home.
"Let’s go," Mailah said, standing up despite the ache in her legs. "I’ve had enough ’mountain air’ for one day."
Grayson’s hand lingered on her shoulder for a second longer than necessary, a ghost of a squeeze that told her he was still in there somewhere, beneath the obsidian.
"Keep the sweater on," he muttered, his voice dropping into that possessive, metallic register. "The bruises are mine to see."
Mailah’s heart did a traitorous little flip. Monster or not, she thought, he’s definitely an Ashford.
Carson let out a sharp whistle, spinning his car keys around his index finger like a propeller. "Well, if we’re staking claims, I claim the right to not be the one explaining those marks to Seryn if she catches us."
"Carson, if you don’t stop talking, I will personally throw you into the Rift without a tether," Grayson said, though the edge of his voice had lost its lethal bite, replaced by a weary sort of brotherly exasperation.
Mailah took a deliberate bite of her toast, trying to regain some semblance of dignity while three powerful demons debated her sex life over breakfast. She looked at Lucson, who was now meticulously folding a map, his fingers moving with a grace that suggested he’d done this for centuries.
Mailah looked at Grayson. He was watching her, and for the first time that morning, the obsidian in his eyes softened. He didn’t say it, but she felt the echo of Carson’s words through their bond. She wasn’t just a human tag-along anymore. She felt like she was an Ashford, marked by the black and baptized in the fire of their mountain sanctuary.
"Let’s get moving," Grayson said, his hand sliding down from her shoulder to catch her fingers. "The mountain is waking up."
As they gathered their gear, the humor stayed behind in the bunker, but the warmth remained—a small, flickering candle against the encroaching eclipse.







