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Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 262: The Bored Demon 1
"HOW INEFFICIENT," Grayson rumbled, glaring at the kitchen appliance as if it were a traitor to the crown.
He was dressed in another impeccable suit—this one a deep navy that made his silver-gray eyes look like stormy seas. "Why must the bread be scorched twice to be considered edible?"
"No hellfire in the kitchen, Grayson," Mailah interrupted, sliding a plate of perfectly browned toast toward him. She was wearing a soft cream-colored sweater and tailored pants, looking every bit the professional assistant. "And keep your voice down. The ’consultants’ at the end of the driveway probably have microphones sensitive enough to hear your heart beat."
Grayson sighed, a sound that carried the weight of a thousand years of boredom.
He picked up a piece of toast with the same precision he might use to handle a soul-contract. "Being human is a series of very small, very loud inconveniences."
"That’s the secret," Mailah whispered, leaning in so close she could smell the cedar and cold mountain air that always seemed to cling to him. "The more you complain about the toaster, the more Valerius thinks you’ve forgotten how to move mountains. Be petty. Be annoyed. Be... a CEO."
Grayson caught her gaze, and for a fleeting second, the "annoyed businessman" mask crumbled. He reached out, his fingers grazing the side of her neck, sending a jolt of electricity through her. "I find that being petty is much easier when you are standing next to me."
The moment was broken by Lucson entering the room, looking like he hadn’t slept in a decade but still managing to appear perfectly groomed. He set the leather office bag on the table with a purposeful thud.
"The bag," Lucson said, his voice a low hum. "To the car, to the office, and back. Don’t leave it in the SUV. Don’t let a courier touch it. But once you’re inside your office leave it by the desk. Act as if it contains nothing but boring spreadsheets and perhaps a very expensive fountain pen."
Grayson gripped the handle. "And while I am signing these ’spreadsheets,’ what are you doing?"
"Establishing the path," Lucson replied cryptically. "Valerius is watching the front door. He isn’t watching the floorboards. Now go. You’re five minutes late for your commute. Nothing says ’human’ like a man stressed about a clock."
The drive into the city was a masterclass in mundane frustration. Grayson spent the forty-minute trip complaining about the "unnecessary abundance of red lights" and the way the human drivers seemed to operate their vehicles with the spatial awareness of stunned pigeons.
"They are all in such a hurry to go nowhere," Grayson muttered, gripping the steering wheel. He had insisted on driving himself today, part of the "routine" to show he wasn’t afraid to be seen.
"It’s called a ’rush hour,’ Grayson," Mailah said, hiding a smile behind her hand. "Everyone is just trying to get to work so they can buy more toasters."
By the time they reached the tower, Grayson was in a state of regal irritation. He marched through the lobby, the leather bag swinging at his side, looking like a man who was ready to fire the entire world.
James was waiting by the elevators, leaning against the marble wall with a tablet in one hand and a green smoothie in the other. "He lives! And he looks like he wants to devour a mid-sized accounting firm! Perfect. That’s the Grayson the board knows and fears."
"James," Grayson growled as they stepped into the private lift. "If one more person asks me for a ’touch-base’ or an ’alignment meeting,’ I may actually set the carpets on fire."
"See? This is progress!" James chirped, winking at Mailah. "Yesterday you were a brooding mystery. Today, you’re just a typical boss who hates his life."
As the elevator climbed, Mailah noticed Grayson’s posture. He looked tired, but there was a sharpness to him. He was playing the part so well that she almost forgot he was a prince. Almost.
Once inside his office, Grayson tossed the leather bag carelessly next to a mahogany side table.
He didn’t look at it again. Instead, he collapsed into his leather chair and stared at a computer monitor that was currently flashing an alert about a "System Update."
"It is mocking me," Grayson said, pointing at the screen.
Mailah laughed, walking over to stand behind him. "It’s just an update, Grayson. It happens to everyone."
"I am a Prince of the Second Circle," he whispered, his voice dropping into that dangerously smooth register that always made her skin prickle. "I have commanded legions of shadows. I have walked through fire without singeing a hair. And yet... I am defeated by a loading bar that has been stuck at ninety-nine percent for three minutes."
Mailah leaned down, her hair brushing against his shoulder as she reached for the mouse. "Let the human world defeat you, just for today. It’s the safest place to be."
She felt him turn in the chair, his face now inches from hers.
The office, with its glass walls and digital hum, felt miles away. The air between them thickened, vibrating with a tension that was far more powerful than any corporate deadline.
"Safe is not a word I am used to," Grayson said. He reached up, his hand tangling in her hair, pulling her slightly closer.
Mailah’s heart hammered. She knew they were being watched—perhaps not in this room, but certainly from the buildings across the street or through the digital veils the Council used.
But the passion she felt for him wasn’t an act. It was the most honest thing in her life. 𝕗𝕣𝐞𝐞𝘄𝐞𝚋𝚗𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗹.𝚌𝕠𝚖
She leaned in, her lips nearly touching his. "Then let’s give them something else to whisper about."
He didn’t hesitate. He pulled her down into a kiss that was anything but "mundane." It was a claim—a desperate, hungry connection that spoke of everything they couldn’t say out loud. In that moment, Grayson wasn’t a CEO or a Prince; he was a man who found his anchor in the middle of a storm.
If Valerius was watching, he would see a man hopelessly distracted by a human girl. He would see a Prince who had "lost his edge" to the comforts of the flesh. He would see exactly what Lucson wanted him to see: a man who had stopped being a threat.
An hour later, James burst into the office without knocking. "Alright, lovers, break it up! We have a lunch reservation at The Gilded Lily, and if we’re late, the maître d’ will give our table to a rival hedge fund manager, and I simply cannot have that on my conscience."
Grayson pulled back from Mailah, his eyes still shimmering with a silver light that slowly faded. He smoothed his tie, his expression returning to its default state of "haughty annoyance."
"A lunch?" Grayson asked. "Is it necessary?"
"Essential," James said, already ushering them toward the door. "We need to be seen. You, Mailah, and me. The holy trinity of corporate gossip. People need to see that you’re healthy, happy, and—most importantly—spending money."
Mailah looked back at the office bag sitting lonely by the side table. "Should we...?"
"Leave it," Grayson said firmly, following Lucson’s instructions to the letter. "
The lunch was a symphony of the superficial. James talked incessantly about stock options and the latest "it" vacation spots in the Hamptons.
Grayson contributed by looking bored and occasionally insulting the quality of the sparkling water.
Mailah played the role of the devoted partner, laughing at James’s jokes and keeping her hand resting on Grayson’s arm.
From a table in the corner, a woman in a sharp grey suit watched them. She was scrolling through a phone, but her eyes never truly left Grayson.
But all she saw was a man who seemed more concerned with the fact that his steak was "slightly over-seared" than the fate of the supernatural world.
By the time they returned to the office to retrieve the bag and head home, the sun was beginning to dip behind the skyscrapers, casting long, jagged shadows across the city.
Grayson picked up the leather bag, his movements casual, and led Mailah back to the elevator. He looked like a man who had put in a full day’s work and was ready for a drink and a quiet evening.
But as they stepped into the parking garage, the air shifted. It wasn’t the freezing cold of Caspian, but a heavy, humid pressure.
Grayson stopped, his grip on the bag tightening. He stepped in front of Mailah, his eyes scanning the rows of cars.
"Something is here," he whispered.
"Don’t," Mailah warned, her voice barely audible. "Remember the routine. We are just a couple going to their car. Don’t react."
A crow landed on the hood of their SUV, its eyes a piercing, unnatural green. It let out a single, harsh caw and took flight, disappearing into the dark rafters of the garage.
Grayson took a deep breath, forcing his shoulders to relax. He unlocked the car, helped Mailah inside, and tossed the bag into the back seat as if it were filled with nothing but old newspapers.
The drive back to the estate was silent. The "mundane" mask was starting to crack under the weight of the day.
As they pulled through the iron gates, Grayson finally let out a long, ragged exhale.
"I don’t know how humans do it," he said, resting his head against the steering wheel. "The constant... nothingness of it all. It is more exhausting than a battle."
"That’s why they have coffee," Mailah said softly, reaching over to rub the back of his neck. "And why they have each other."
Grayson looked at her, the moonlight catching the sharp lines of his face. "Lucson says we are making them bored."
"Is that a bad thing?" she asked.
Grayson didn’t answer. He reached into the back seat and grabbed the leather bag, stepping out of the car.
Lucson was waiting for them on the porch, a shadow among shadows. He didn’t ask how the day went. He simply looked at the bag in Grayson’s hand and nodded.
"The routine is established," Lucson said.
"And the Sigil?" Grayson asked.
Lucson’s eyes flashed with a cold, hidden triumph. "The Sigil is ready to move. But we need one more day of ’boredom.’ One more day of toasters, emails, and ’touch-bases.’ Can you handle that, brother?"
Grayson looked at Mailah, then back at the dark, imposing silhouette of the estate. A small, tired smile touched his lips.
"As long as there are donuts," Grayson said. "I can handle anything."
As they walked into the house, Mailah looked back at the gate.
A single black feather drifted down from the sky, landing in the soot-stained grass.







