©WebNovelPub
Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 205: The Huddle
"WHAT ARE YOU willing to lose to keep her, little demon?"
The question hung in the air, heavy and jagged. Ysoria’s gaze didn’t flicker; she looked like a banker assessing a high-risk loan rather than a sorceress bartering for a soul.
Grayson took a step forward. The movement was sharp, almost twitchy, a remnant of the raw instinct currently overriding his human grace. He didn’t look at Lucson for permission, nor did he look at Carson for a quip. He stared directly into those bottomless, matte-black eyes.
"Anything," Grayson said. The word didn’t just vibrate in the room; it seemed to sink into the floorboards. "Name the price. Whatever it is. Just ensure Seryn is scrubbed from this world so completely she doesn’t even remain a memory."
Ysoria’s shark-like smile widened, revealing teeth that were just a little too perfect to be natural. She tapped her stylus against the desk in a rhythmic, hypnotic beat. "Anything? Such a dangerous, romantic word. You Ashfords always did have a flair for the dramatic. Very well. I shall hold that blank check in reserve, Grayson. Rest assured, when I call it in, you will find the cost... transformative."
She turned back to her digital tablet, dismissively swiping away the blueprints of the tram line. "The logistics are simple, though I suspect the execution will be bloody. Bring the Princess to the parking lot of this building before midnight. I require a very specific catalyst: a drop of her blood, drawn from a fresh injury. Not a scratch, but a wound born of genuine conflict."
"You want us to bleed a Princess of the Third Circle in a public parking garage?" Carson asked, raising an eyebrow. "Do you have any idea how much royal demon blood stains concrete? The janitorial fees alone—"
"I don’t care how you achieve it," Ysoria interrupted, her voice dropping into a register of terrifying finality. "Lure her, drag her, or bait her. But if you aren’t there by 11:59 PM with the blood, I shall consider our contract void, and I might just hand you over to her myself to restore the ’symmetry’ I mentioned."
Without another word, she sat back down and began scrolling through a new set of data—likely the sewage schematics for the Old Town.
The dismissal was absolute. She didn’t say goodbye; she simply ceased to acknowledge their existence, her silver-blonde bob shimmering under the office lights as she returned to the mundane task of urban planning.
The brothers didn’t protest. Even Carson stayed silent, his usual bravado swallowed by the sheer atmospheric pressure of the witch’s presence. They turned as one and exited the glass office, the air in the hallway feeling suspiciously thin.
As they stepped back into the elevator, Mailah felt the breath finally leave her lungs in a shaky huff. "That was... not what I expected. I thought there would be more sage. Or a black cat. Not a woman who cares about tram lines and iron flow."
"Ysoria is the most dangerous kind of monster," Lucson said, his voice low as the elevator descended. "One who has perfectly integrated into the system. She doesn’t need to hide in the woods when she can own the woods and turn them into a high-rise."
"And Grayson," Mailah turned to him, her heart aching as she looked at his rigid profile. "You shouldn’t have said ’anything.’ You don’t know what she’ll ask."
Grayson didn’t look at her. He kept his eyes on the floor numbers as they flashed by. 40. 39. 38. "It doesn’t matter, Mailah. If Seryn gets her hands on you, there is no ’anything’ left for us."
The elevator doors opened into the marble lobby, and they stepped out into the bustling Zurich afternoon.
The contrast between the cold, calculated deal they had just made and the business-as-usual vibe of the city was jarring. People were laughing at a nearby bistro, oblivious to the fact that three demons and a human were planning a supernatural assassination in their neighborhood.
"Okay, tactical huddle," Carson said as they reached the sidewalk. He looked around, his eyes sharp. "Luring Seryn. Suggestions?"
"She wants Mailah," Lucson said, his silver eyes darkening. "And she knows we’re here. The magnetite masked us for a time, but Ysoria’s building is a beacon on the ley lines. Seryn is likely already circling the perimeter like a shark."
Mailah felt a cold shiver crawl up her spine. "So... I’m the bait?"
Grayson’s hand shot out, his fingers interlacing with hers, his grip tight enough to be bruising. "No. You are the prize. I am the bait."
"He’s right," Lucson agreed, nodding toward where they had left the car. "She thinks Grayson is broken. She thinks his ’transformation’ has made him a mindless predator she can dominate. We use that. We make her think the bond between you two has finally snapped him, and he’s looking for a way to trade you for his own sanity."
"Ouch," Carson winced. "That’s dark. Even for us."
"It has to be believable," Grayson rasped, finally looking at Mailah. His obsidian eyes were swirling, the hunger and the love battling for dominance behind the dark glass of his pupils. "She has to believe I’ve chosen the black over you."
Mailah looked up at him, her thumb tracing the pulse point at his wrist. "You’re a terrible liar, Grayson. Even when you were human, you couldn’t keep a secret for more than ten minutes."
"I’m not the man who bought you presents anymore, Mailah," he said softly, his voice dropping into that terrifying, metallic resonance. "The thing inside me... it knows exactly how to play the monster."
They spent the next few hours in a state of high-tension preparation. Carson handled the "mundane" logistics, which apparently involved stealing a high-end luxury sedan and "borrowing" several rolls of heavy-duty industrial tape.
Lucson, meanwhile, was busy carving intricate, invisible sigils into the concrete of the parking garage’s lower level, his hands glowing with a soft, holy light that seemed to drain him with every stroke.
Mailah watched them from the passenger seat of their car, feeling like the eye of a hurricane. Everything was moving around her, swirling with lethal intent, while she remained the static center.
Grayson leaned against the car door. He didn’t look tired; he looked hollowed out, his features sharpened into something dangerously beautiful.
"Are we really going to do this?" she asked.
He reached out, his fingers hooking under her chin. His touch wasn’t just cold—it was like ice against a burn. He didn’t caress her; he held her in place, his thumb pressing with a firm, territorial weight against the curve of her jaw.
His eyes, dark as a moonless sea, raked over her face. He didn’t offer a comforting smile. Instead, his gaze settled on the bruises at her neck—marks he had made—and a dark, carnal satisfaction flickered in his pupils.
"We have to. Seryn won’t stop until she’s bored or dead. And princesses don’t get bored easily."
He leaned in, his face inches from hers. The scent of him filled her senses, making her dizzy. Despite the bruises on her neck and the ache in her bones, she wanted him.
"If this goes wrong," Mailah whispered, "if Ysoria takes something from you..."
He kissed her then—not the explosive, soul-shattering kiss of the night before, but something slow, deep, and filled with a desperate, heartbreaking sweetness. It was the kiss of a man saying goodbye.
"Get ready," Lucson’s voice broke the moment. He was standing by the entrance to the lower level, his silhouette framed by the harsh fluorescent lights. "The sun is down. The veil is thinning. She’s here."
The parking garage was a cathedral of concrete and echoes.
At 11:30 PM, the air began to change. It didn’t get colder; it got thicker. The shadows in the corners of the garage began to stretch and writhe, detaching themselves from the walls like peeling paint.
Mailah stood in the center of the designated "kill zone," her heart hammering against her ribs so hard it felt like it might burst. She was wearing the silver-weave suit Lucson had provided, but she felt exposed, a single candle in a room full of dark winds.
Grayson was ten feet away, slumped against a concrete pillar. He looked magnificent and terrifying—his shirt was torn, his obsidian eyes were wide and vacant, and he was letting out low, rhythmic growls that echoed through the garage. He looked like a beast that had finally, truly lost its anchor.
"Grayson... please..." Mailah cried out, her voice echoing.
Grayson roared, the sound echoing like a gunshot. He lunged toward her, stopping just inches away, his face a mask of predatory hunger.
From the darkness of the ramp, a low, melodic laugh drifted toward them.
"Oh, what a delicious tragedy," Seryn’s voice sang out.
The Princess stepped into the light. She looked different than she had in the warehouse. She was wearing a dress of pure, liquid shadow that seemed to swallow the fluorescent light. Her eyes were burning, and her skin was so pale it was almost blue. She looked exhausted, but her presence was still a physical weight that made it hard to breathe.
"I told you, little prince," Seryn said, walking toward Grayson with the confidence of a queen. "Humanity is a poison. Look at what she’s done to you."
Grayson turned toward her, his body coiling. "Take her. Take the girl. Just give me the silence back. Make the burning stop."

![Read In This Rebirth, The Male Lead Is Mine [BL]](http://static.novelbuddy.com/images/in-this-rebirth-the-male-lead-is-mine-bl.png)





