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Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 209: The Beast 2
THE SENSATION of falling was not a new one for her, but the sensation of landing was.
In the Third Circle, one did not land; one simply shifted from one state of shadows to another. But this? This was a violent, jarring collision with a reality that felt far too solid.
When Seryn’s eyes finally flickered open, the sky was a bruised shade of violet-gray, and the air smelled of wet asphalt, stale tobacco, and something curdled. Her first conscious thought was of the parking lot—the silver sigils, Grayson’s savage roar, and the witch’s cold, black eyes.
The second thought was a sharp, localized throb in her ribs.
Thump.
Something blunt and heavy nudged her shoulder.
Thump.
"Oi. You dead, or just remarkably committed to that nap, love?"
The voice was grating, a gravelly rasp that sounded like it had been dragged through a bed of charcoal.
Seryn tried to summon a blade of shadow to sever the tongue of whoever dared speak to her, but her internal well of darkness was... empty.
It was worse than empty; it felt as if the very plumbing of her soul had been ripped out and replaced with lead.
She looked up. A man stood over her, silhouetted against a flickering streetlamp. He was wrapped in a coat that had more holes than fabric, and he smelled like a brewery that had been set on fire. He was using the toe of a boot so filthy and worn it was held together by duct tape to prod her shoulder.
"Get away from me, vermin," Seryn hissed. At least, she tried to hiss. What came out was a dry, pathetic croak.
"She’s alive!" The man chuckled, a wet, hacking sound. "And she’s got a temper. Look, princess, you can’t sleep behind the dumpsters. The rats here are bigger than you, and they don’t have half your manners."
Seryn’s rage flared, hot and sudden, but it stayed trapped behind her ribs. She tried to stand, and the world tilted. Every joint screamed in protest. Her skin felt too tight, her bones too heavy. She looked down at her hands. They were pale, trembling, and—most horrifyingly—smeared with red.
Not ichor. Not the liquid night of a royal demon.
Red. The thick, iron-scented blood of a human.
A choked sound of pure horror escaped her throat. She scrambled back, her palms scraping against the grit of the alleyway, the pain sharp and immediate.
She reached for the veil, for the rift, for the whispers of the Unbound that usually hummed in the back of her mind like a loyal choir.
There was only silence. The terrifying, hollow silence of a mortal mind.
"What did she do?" Seryn whispered, her voice trembling as she clutched her stomach. "What did that witch do to me?"
Seryn stared at the man’s filthy shoe, the realization sinking into her like a poison. Ysoria hadn’t just banished her; she had architected a new cage. She hadn’t sent the Princess back to the Rift. She had exiled her into the one thing Seryn despised more than the Ashfords.
She was a lowly, fragile, bleeding human.
The iron gates of the estate didn’t swing open; they dissolved.
Mailah watched as the ancient, wrought-iron bars, etched with sigils that made her eyes ache, shimmered like a heat haze and pulled back into the stone pillars. It was a display of casual, overwhelming power meant to intimidate anyone who dared approach.
As they walked up the winding gravel path, the silence was heavy, broken only by the crunch of their footsteps.
Mailah kept her head down, her hands tucked into the sleeves of her sweater. She felt the weight of Grayson’s presence behind her—a cold, shimmering aura that felt like a predatory shadow.
"Stop dragging your feet, human," Grayson’s voice rang out, sharp and impatient. "The Council does not appreciate tardiness, and I am not in the mood to explain why my ’anchor’ moves like a wounded fawn."
Mailah bit her lip, refusing to look back at him. "Maybe if your anchor wasn’t covered in bruises from your ’meditation’ earlier, she’d move a little faster."
A low, dangerous growl vibrated from Grayson’s throat. Mailah felt the air behind her grow cold, and a second later, a hand clamped around her upper arm. Grayson didn’t stop walking, but he pulled her flush against his side, his grip firm and territorial.
"You have a sharp tongue for someone so easily crushed," he murmured, his breath ghosting against her ear. It wasn’t the warm, loving breath of her fiancé; it was the chilling air of a prince who saw her as a curiosity to be toyed with. "Be careful. I might decide to see if your spirit is as fragile as your skin."
Mailah looked up at him, her heart doing a traitorous leap at the sheer, dark beauty of his face. His gray eyes were fixed on the looming villa ahead, but the way his fingers tightened on her arm told her he was acutely aware of her.
"You already know the answer to that, Grayson," she whispered. "You just don’t remember it yet."
He didn’t respond, but his jaw tightened, a muscle leaping in his cheek.
"Oh, look at you two! Playing ’Beauty and the Beast’ already," Carson chirped from a few paces ahead, swinging a set of silver keys around his finger. "Truly, it’s like a romance novel, if the hero was a sociopath and the heroine had a death wish. I’m shipping it. #GrayLah? Or maybe #MailSon? No, that sounds like a postal service."
"Carson, if you speak again, I will harvest your vocal cords," Lucson said, though his voice lacked any real bite. He was looking at the entrance of the estate with a grim focus.
"Tough crowd," Carson muttered, falling back to walk beside Mailah. He lowered his voice, his usual mask of mischief slipping for a moment. "Stay sharp, Duchess. The Council members you probably met before? They were the ’polite’ ones. The ones waiting inside... they’re the ones who think the Great Peace is a suggestion, not a law."
Mailah swallowed hard. She remembered the last time she stood before the Council. She had been wearing her wedding gown. They had looked at her with a mix of fascination and disdain—a human girl who had managed to tether a demon.
Now, she was returning not as a bride, but as a liability.
They reached the massive oak doors of the villa. She was surprised to see Vivienne standing there, her hair pulled back into a tight, severe bun. She didn’t look at Mailah; her eyes were fixed on Grayson, searching for any sign of the man she had helped raise.
"They are waiting," Vivienne said, her voice like cracking ice. "Elder Vane is particularly... inquisitive tonight. He’s already asked three times why the wedding bells haven’t been rung."
"Elder Vane can ask until his lungs rot," Grayson said, stepping past her into the foyer. He didn’t let go of Mailah’s arm. In fact, he pulled her closer. His grip was cold, but the possessiveness was undeniable. It wasn’t love—not yet—but it was a claim.
The Solarium was a vast, glass-domed room filled with exotic, bioluminescent plants that pulsed with a soft, eerie light. In the center of the room sat a long table made of obsidian. Five figures were seated there, their silhouettes blurred by the shifting shadows of the room.
Mailah felt a cold sweat break out on her neck. She recognized the man at the head of the table from the wedding. Elder Vane. He looked ancient, his skin like yellowed parchment, his eyes two burning coals of orange light.
"Grayson Ashford," Vane’s voice echoed, sounding like dry leaves skittering over stone. "You return to us. And you bring the... human witness."
Grayson led Mailah to the table, standing before the Council with a chilling, effortless grace. He didn’t bow. He didn’t even acknowledge the other four members.
"The Seryn problem has been resolved," Grayson announced, his voice ringing with a metallic authority that made the plants in the room flicker. "The Princess has been banished. The Gate remains secure."
"At a price, it seems," another Council member—a woman with skin the color of twilight—remarked, her eyes fixed on Grayson’s gray pupils. "You smell of witch-work, Grayson. And your resonance has shifted. You feel... colder. More like your grandfather."
"The price was mine to pay," Grayson snapped. "The results are what matter to the Council."
Elder Vane leaned forward, his orange eyes drifting to Mailah. "And what of the union? The marriage that was to seal the treaty? We were told the wedding was imminent."
Mailah felt Grayson’s fingers tighten around her arm until it almost hurt.
"The wedding is postponed," Grayson said, his voice flat. "I have no memory of the contract, nor do I have any desire to tether myself to a human while the Rift is still settling. The girl remains under my protection as a witness, nothing more."
A murmur went around the table—a sound of wheezing breaths and clicking teeth.
"Nothing more?" Vane echoed, a ghost of a smile touching his thin lips. "Then she is of no political value to us. And a human who knows the secrets of the Ashford’s and the banishment... that is a security risk we cannot afford."
Mailah felt the air in the room sharpen. Behind them, Lucson and Carson shifted into defensive stances.
"She is mine," Grayson said. It wasn’t a protest; it was a decree. He turned to look at Mailah, his gray eyes burning with a sudden, dark intensity that made her heart stop. He reached up, his hand tangling in her hair, forcing her to look at him in front of the most powerful beings in the world.
"She is my possession," Grayson continued, his voice dropping into a low, predatory purr that was meant for Mailah alone. "And until I decide what to do with her, anyone who touches her answers to me. Is that understood, Elder?"
The silence in the room was absolute. Elder Vane stared at Grayson, his orange eyes flickering. He saw the beast simmering just beneath the tailored suit—the version of Grayson who didn’t care about treaties or peace, only about what belonged to him.
"Understood," Vane whispered.
"Good," Grayson said. He turned to Mailah, his gaze lingering on her lips for a second too long, a flash of blue sparking in his pupils. "Let’s go. I’m tired of the smell of old dust."
As they walked out of the Solarium, Mailah felt the eyes of the Council boring into her back.
She was safe, for now. But as she looked at Grayson—the cold, beautiful monster who had just claimed her in front of his peers—she realized that being his "possession" was going to be far more dangerous than being his bride.
They reached the grand staircase of the villa, the moonlight streaming through the stained-glass windows, casting patterns of red and blue across Grayson’s pale skin.
He stopped suddenly, turning to face her. He didn’t let go of her hand. He backed her against the banister, his presence overwhelming, his scent of iron and jasmine filling her world.
"You’re very quiet," he murmured, leaning in until their noses touched. "Are you disappointed that your ’hero’ has forgotten how to be a gentleman?"
"I’m just wondering," Mailah whispered, her hand coming up to rest on his chest, feeling the heavy, rhythmic thrum of his heart. "If you don’t remember me, why did you just risk a war with the Council to keep me?"
Grayson’s eyes darkened, the silver ring pulsing with a sudden, violent heat. He didn’t answer with words. Instead, he leaned down, his lips brushing against the shell of her ear.
"Because," he growled, his voice a silken, terrifying promise. "Even if I don’t remember your name, my body remembers the way you taste. And I’m not finished with you yet."







