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Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 214: The Return 1
THE SILENCE that followed the elevator’s closing chime was not empty; it was heavy, pressurized by the unspoken revelations of the last hour.
Mailah stood in the center of the observatory for a moment longer, the taste and the ghost of a kiss that shouldn’t have been possible—lingering on her lips. The glass dome above her reflected a version of herself she barely recognized: a woman in a midnight-blue dress that shimmered like a bruised sky, her eyes wide with a mix of terror and a hope so fragile it felt like glass.
When she finally descended back to the suite, the atmosphere was a jarring shift from the starlit intimacy of the dome.
Carson was in the middle of the living area, surrounded by several open, designer suitcases. He was currently trying to decide if a pair of silver-toed boots belonged in the "Essentials" bag or the "Tactical" bag.
"Ah, the star-crossed lovers return!" Carson chirped, not looking up from his luggage. He tossed a silk tie over his shoulder. "So, did he try to execute you, or did he finally admit that the risotto was a religious experience? I’m betting on a confusing mix of both."
Mailah ignored the jab, her eyes scanning for Grayson. He was nowhere to be seen, likely having retreated to the shadows of his private quarters to brood over the fact that his "biological reflexes" had a better memory than his mind.
Lucson was standing by the window, his tablet discarded in favor of a thick, leather-bound ledger. He looked up as Mailah approached, his silver eyes searching her face with a clinical but not unkind intensity.
"Pack your things, Mailah," Lucson said, his voice a calm anchor in the room’s frantic energy. "The Zurich fog is lifting. We leave within the hour."
Mailah felt a jolt of anxiety. "Are we going back to the villa? To Tuscany?"
The thought of the Tuscan sun, the smell of lavender, and the safety of the hidden villa felt like a lifeline. In Tuscany, Grayson had been different. In Tuscany, they were a family of sorts—a jagged, mismatched collection of supernatural outcasts, but a family nonetheless.
Lucson shook his head slowly. "No. You are going back to his estate."
Mailah froze, her hand gripping the back of a velvet armchair. "The estate? In the city? But Grayson said the villa was the only place we could stay hidden. He said the reason we were in exile was because we had to stay far away from those who were pursuing us. If we go back there, aren’t we just walking into a trap?"
"The chess board has changed," Lucson replied, closing the ledger with a final, echoing thud. "In Tuscany, you were hiding. Grayson needs his seat of power if he is to survive the ’Restoration’ the Council is so eager to impose. He cannot fight a war from a vineyard."
"But what about the others?" Mailah asked, her voice rising with concern. "Erin, Lucien, Oliver... they’re still at the villa. We can’t just leave them there if things are getting this dangerous."
Carson finally managed to zip a suitcase shut, sitting on it for good measure. "Don’t you worry your pretty human head about them, Duchess. Erin is currently under the most suffocatingly overprotective guardian in the history of the three circles."
"Lucien?" Mailah whispered.
"The one and only," Carson grinned. "Your resident Fallen Angel has taken his job as ’Guardian’ very seriously. When the news of the Zurich situation broke, Mason offered to move Erin to a secure bunker in the North. Apparently, Lucien almost took Mason’s head off with his tongue."
Lucson sighed, though a ghost of a smile touched his lips. "Lucien was quite clear. He told Mason that as Grayson’s appointed guardian, he is the only one capable of keeping Erin safe from Lord Varrow. He basically told Mason to stay in his lane or find out what heavenly fire feels like."
Mailah felt a wave of relief wash over her. She pictured Lucien—tall, stern, with the weight of centuries of regret in his eyes—standing between Erin and a nightmare demon.
Grayson and she had saved Erin from her former mate, Lord Varrow, months ago, and employing a Fallen Angel to watch over her had been one of his more inspired, if controversial, decisions.
"And Oliver?" she asked. "And Shadow?" 𝗳𝗿𝐞𝕖𝘄𝗲𝕓𝗻𝚘𝚟𝕖𝐥.𝚌𝕠𝕞
The thought of the young and still new hedge witch and his sleek black cat brought a sharp ache to her chest. Shadow wasn’t just a pet; the cat had become her Familiar, a silent, feline shadow that seemed to understand her.
"Oliver is fine," Carson assured her, standing up and dusting off his trousers. "He and the cat have been moved under new identities. To the mundane world, they’re just a student and his pet on a very long, very expensive vacation. No one is going to harm them. Lord Varrow doesn’t even know they exist, and the Council doesn’t care about a human witch and a familiar with a penchant for expensive tuna."
Mailah nodded, but the hollow feeling in her stomach remained. She was going to miss them. She had spent weeks in that villa, tucked away from the world, pretending that life could be simple. She’d spent hours speaking to Oliver and Erin, watching Lucien pace the perimeter like a restless ghost, and feeling Shadow’s soft purr against her ankles while she read by the fireplace.
Now, that life was being dismantled.
"Wait," Mailah said, her voice small. "If we’re going back to the estate... if we’re going back to ’claim’ Grayson’s seat..."
She didn’t finish the sentence. She didn’t have to.
There was no more wedding. Not now. Maybe not ever. Going back to the estate meant stepping back into the cold, ruthless reality of demonic politics. It meant Grayson being his old self, not the man who cooked risotto and worried about the butter ratio.
"Mailah," Lucson said softly, stepping closer.
"I know," she whispered, blinking back tears. "I’m not a child, Lucson. I know where we’re going."
"Good," a voice rasped from the doorway.
Grayson stood there, his presence filling the room like a sudden storm. He had changed out of his suit and into a long, black overcoat that looked like it was woven from shadows. His face was a mask of cold, lethal resolve, the tenderness of the observatory erased as if it had never happened.
"We leave now," he commanded. "The jet is fueled. Carson, take the bags. Mailah... you’re with me."
He didn’t wait for an answer. He turned and strode out of the suite, his boots echoing with a metallic, final ring against the marble floor.
The private jet was a sleek, silver needle that pierced the Zurich fog with effortless grace. Inside, the cabin was a masterclass in Ashford excess—cream leather, dark mahogany, and a bar stocked with vintage spirits.
Grayson sat in the back, staring out the window at the clouds. He hadn’t spoken a word since they boarded. Carson was currently occupied with a handheld gaming device, his thumbs flying over the buttons with frantic energy, while Lucson was back to his ledgers, his brow furrowed in concentration.
Mailah sat across from Grayson, watching the way the moonlight caught the silver rings in his eyes. He looked magnificent and terrifying, a king returning to a kingdom that was itching to betray him.
"You’re thinking about the villa," Grayson said, his voice cutting through the hum of the engines. He didn’t turn his head to look at her.
"I’m thinking about how much has changed in such a short time," she replied.
"Change is the only constant for your kind, Mailah. You live, you struggle, and then you fade. You should be used to it by now."
"That’s a very bleak way of looking at it."
Grayson finally turned his head. His gaze was heavy, weighing her down. "It is the truth. The villa was a dream. A temporary lapse in judgment. The estate is reality. It is where I have ruled since the city was nothing but mud and stone. It is a place of blood and shadow, not moon-lilies and risotto."
"You remember the risotto," she said, a small smile playing on her lips.
A muscle jumped in his jaw. "I remember a biological sensation of flavor. Do not confuse it with sentiment."
"And the butter?"
Grayson’s eyes narrowed, a flash of something that might have been amusement—or perhaps just extreme irritation—flickering in the gray. "The chef was incompetent. It is a matter of professional pride, not emotion."
"Right. Professional pride for a Prince of the Third Circle who doesn’t ’saute’ vegetables."
"I will have Carson throw you out of the plane," Grayson said, though his voice lacked any real venom.
Mailah laughed, and for a second, the tension in the cabin lifted. Even Carson looked up from his game, a wide grin spreading across his face.
"Oh, please do it, Gray! I’ve always wanted to see if humans can actually glide in silk dresses. It would be a scientific breakthrough!"
"Shut up, Carson," Grayson and Mailah said in unison.
The brothers shared a look—one that Mailah couldn’t quite decipher. It was a look of shared history, of secrets that went back centuries. In that moment, she realized how much she didn’t know about them. She knew the "other Grayson" and the "pre-exile Grayson," but who were they when the world wasn’t watching?
"We’re crossing the ley line," Lucson announced, his voice tense.
The plane suddenly lurched, the air in the cabin shimmering with a faint, blue light. Mailah felt a sudden pressure in her ears, a high-pitched hum that made her teeth ache.
"What was that?" she gasped, clutching the armrests.
"The perimeter wards," Grayson said, his voice dropping into a low, melodic growl. He stood up.
"Welcome back home."







