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Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 99: The Gown
"ALL OF THAT. If Mr. Ashford took the trouble to purchase a gown and arrange for someone to prepare you, he wanted it done properly."
That last sentence landed with its own little boom.
Grayson had asked for this. He’d bothered to think through the logistics.
The fact underscored everything already churning in Mailah’s chest: he’d changed his mind, he’d made an effort, he’d thought of her.
She stepped aside, letting Etta pass into the room, and for a moment their eyes met — a professional appraising a client.
The dresser’s gaze flicked to the box, then to Mailah’s face as if cataloguing the small tensions in her posture.
"Shall I?" Etta asked simply.
Mailah nodded before she had time to analyze whether she’d allowed it too quickly. "Yes. Please."
Etta placed her canvas bag on the chair and unlatched the metallic kit with the practiced motion of someone who’d done it a thousand times.
The tools inside gleamed with the clean geometry of professionalism: rows of brushes, palettes closed like neat trays, a compact of powders, an array of clips and pins.
Mailah set the box gently on the bed and sat on the edge, the dress a silent, shimmering presence between them.
Up close it took on new facets — those threads of violet and silver winking like secrets caught and released. The thought of wearing it flushed heat to her skin.
Etta worked with a quiet efficiency that soothed more than she anticipated.
She asked a few quick, practical questions — the tone of the evening, whether Mailah preferred a looser or more structured hair, whether she wanted anything dramatic for makeup.
There was no prying into the strange private life implied by the estate; only an eye for aesthetics, a focus on making someone present their best self to the world.
"Something to complement this?" Etta asked, her eyes tracing the gown’s violet and silver shimmer. "I’d keep the makeup refined and understated. A soft wash of champagne over the lids, a touch of light brown at the crease for definition, and a fine line close to the lashes. For your cheeks, a gentle peach blush to bring warmth. And for the lips—something natural, a rosy nude with a satin finish. We can let your hair frame your face in loose waves, or pin it half up so the embroidery on the bodice isn’t hidden."
Mailah surprised herself by answering without hesitation. "Full up. Loose. Soft waves." The picture of the dress in motion convinced her. Up felt right; up felt like an offering, like an act of both defiance and embrace.
Etta hummed approvingly and began selecting brushes and shades.
As she worked, she moved around Mailah with a respectful intimacy that made the room feel private in a way that had nothing to do with doors and curtains.
The conversation that unfurled in the background was small and human: Etta asking about Mailah’s comfort, offering tips to prevent the bodice from pinching, proposing a delicate set of earrings that would catch that violet sheen.
"And Mr. Ashford?" Mailah asked, curiosity threading through the practical exchange. "Is he... did he say why he wanted this so badly?"
Etta paused, palette in hand. She didn’t look like someone who orchestrated social theater for mischief; she looked like someone who’d learned how to read people and keep confidences. "Mr. Ashford is particular," she said carefully. "He didn’t elaborate, but Mrs. Baker told me he asked for discretion and that he wanted you to feel... remarkable. He said it in a way that makes me think it means more than prettiness."
Mailah felt the words land — not as an explanation, exactly, but as another small hint of the thought Grayson had put into tonight.
He wanted her to feel remarkable. He’d gone to lengths to make that happen. It tightened something in her throat.
Etta’s hands were warm and steady as she swept color across Mailah’s lids.
The touch was oddly grounding; with each brushstroke Mailah felt some of the jittery edge smooth out.
The world narrowed to the reassuring ritual of the artist: blending, shading, softening lines, setting the base.
There was a care here that had nothing to do with vows or danger; it was simple craftsmanship.
"You titrate the intensity," Etta said conversationally as she worked. "Strong enough to read across a room, subtle enough that it still feels like you when you take the mask off."
Mailah let out a small bark of laughter at the word mask, surprised at how easily the image fit. "I don’t plan on taking it off," she said, then, correcting herself with a softer note, "I mean—tonight is not a costume. It’s... important."
"As if the night would allow anything less," Etta replied. "And you’ll want to breathe in it, so I’ll make sure everything moves with you."
When the brushes were set aside and the powder settled into a soft matte, Etta moved to Mailah’s hair.
She gathered the long dark length in her hands with respectful reverence, as if handling silk.
The stylist’s fingers moved with practiced ease, sweeping Mailah’s hair into a loose updo that felt both elegant and effortless.
A few soft waves were left free at the sides, framing her face in a way that softened her features while drawing attention to the graceful line of her neck.
"You have the kind of hair that looks dangerous let loose," Etta murmured, a note of appreciation in her voice that made Mailah smile.
"Dangerous?" she repeated, a laugh tugging at her voice, though the word settled in her chest with a surprising heat.
Etta shook her head with a knowing smile. "Not dangerous in the wrong way. Dangerous because it commands attention. This way—" she gestured at the soft waves brushing Mailah’s cheeks "—it balances grace with just the right amount of defiance. It will flatter your face and let the neckline of the gown do the rest."
Mailah brushed her fingertips along one of the loose curls, marveling at how the style felt like more than vanity. 𝒻𝑟ℯℯ𝑤𝑒𝑏𝑛𝘰𝓋𝑒𝓁.𝒸𝑜𝘮
The gown, the hair, the subtle makeup—all of it layered together like pieces of a quiet ritual.
Grayson might have commissioned the gesture, but the transformation felt startlingly intimate, a shift that was hers alone to claim.
Etta plucked a small pair of earrings from the kit — silver, with a faint violet stone — and held them up against Mailah’s cheek. "These," she said. "Subtle, but they catch the light. They’ll whisper, not shout."
Mailah nodded, and a strange, tender gratitude unfurled inside her. For the first time that day, she allowed herself to believe that perhaps tonight might be less of a battlefield and more of an opening.
The thought was equal parts frightening and intoxicating.
A soft knock sounded at the door, then a pause, and then the muted creak as someone moved beyond it.
Mailah startled, and Etta straightened, eyes flicking toward the sound with professional awareness.
"Mr. Ashford?" Mailah asked, the name spilling unguarded.
Etta’s expression shifted in a way that made Mailah pause. She didn’t look surprised, only measured. "Soon," she said. "He said he’d be here in time to collect you. But you should finish dressing."
Mailah took a breath and let it out, slow and steady.
Tonight was a precipice. The dress lay folded on the bed beside her, both promise and test.
Whatever came after — declaration, danger, desire — would begin when she stepped through the doorway in that gown.
She slid the dress from the box with careful fingers, feeling the fabric’s cool weight; Etta moved around her, hands skilled and discreet, preparing the space for the next stage.
Outside, somewhere in the manor, the clock ticked toward evening.
Inside the little sanctum of Mailah’s bedroom, the small, human rituals of preparation carried on — hair, makeup, the click of clasps — each one a quiet drumbeat toward the moment that would change everything.
Mailah stood before the mirror, the gown flowing around her in whispering folds of violet-black, catching stray streaks of light like secrets being spilled and swallowed again.
The bodice hugged her frame as though it had always been waiting for her. The embroidery, delicate as vines etched in silver, wound over the fabric like enchantments stitched into silk.
She barely recognized the woman staring back.
Not because she looked unlike herself—if anything, it was the opposite.
The woman in the glass looked as though she belonged in Grayson’s world, not as an intruder who had stumbled past thresholds she wasn’t meant to cross.
"You’ll want to stand taller," Etta said quietly, adjusting the drape of the gown at her hip. "It isn’t about vanity. It’s armor. Every inch you claim will tell the room you aren’t to be overlooked."
Mailah obeyed, shoulders squaring, spine lengthening. Armor. Yes—that felt closer to the truth.
The dress didn’t just fit. It commanded.
Her pulse thundered, her throat tight with a dozen questions that had no answers yet: Why had Grayson changed his mind? Why bring her to the anniversary—the very battlefield he’d sworn to avoid? Why choose her to stand beside him?
And what would the rest of the world think when she appeared there, on his arm?
She imagined whispers slicing through the ballroom: Who is she? Why her? How long will she last?
The thought should have hollowed her with dread. Instead, something treacherous sparked inside her—defiance, maybe even thrill.
She pressed her palms against the cool vanity table, steadying herself.
"Etta," she said softly, "what if I’m not enough for what he’s asking of me tonight?"
Etta’s reflection met hers in the glass, calm and certain. "Then you fake it until you are. That’s how women have always survived."
Mailah laughed despite herself, the sound nervous but real. "That almost makes me feel better."
"It should," Etta said, fastening the final clasp at her back. "Because from where I’m standing, you’re already more than enough."
The words burrowed into her chest, unexpected and steadying.
When Etta finished, she began quietly packing up her brushes and palettes, moving with efficient tidiness.
Mailah remained at the mirror, studying the stranger who was herself.
Outside, the manor settled into the deepening hush of evening. The light slipped into a honeyed gold that caught the edges of her gown and made them burn faintly violet.
Time seemed to bend, stretching taut, each second another reminder that she would not be walking into this night alone.
The thought of Grayson sent another rush of heat spiraling through her body.
What would he think when he saw her?
As if on cue, a sudden knock at the chamber door jolted them both.
It wasn’t loud. It wasn’t hurried. It was deliberate.
Mailah’s breath caught, her heart seizing in her chest.
Etta straightened, her hands pausing over the clasp of her kit.
The knock came again, softer this time, but with the same gravity—like a ritual gesture, more command than request.
Mailah swallowed. Her throat felt dry.
Grayson.
She knew it in her bones before she heard the familiar cadence of his voice, low and unhurried, seeping through the heavy oak like smoke.
"Mailah."
Her name. Just her name, spoken like a summons.
The air in the room shifted, thickened, every molecule seeming to lean toward that voice.
Etta busied herself with the kit, offering Mailah a discreet nod—as though to say: This is your moment. Go claim it.
Mailah’s fingers fluttered at her sides, unsure what to do with themselves.
The gown seemed suddenly too heavy, the room too small, her heart too loud.
She forced her feet forward, one slow step, then another.
When she reached the door, she hesitated, her hand hovering over the handle.
She should open it. She should let him in.
But some part of her wanted to delay just one second longer—to savor the trembling edge between anticipation and revelation.
Drawing a steadying breath, she pulled the door open.







