Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 165: The Council’s Visit
THE GATES CLICKED closed behind the black sedans, and the villa fell into a tense, expectant silence.
Mailah felt the shift immediately—the kind of charge that prickled along her skin, the sense that centuries of judgment and power were about to descend upon them.
Grayson’s hand found hers instinctively. He didn’t speak, didn’t need to; his presence alone was a tether, a steadying force amidst the storm of anticipation.
Mailah inhaled, trying to calm her racing heart. Two days. Two days until the wedding. And now, the gauntlet begins.
The Council members advanced along the cobblestone driveway, their steps crisp, precise, like the ticking of a metronome measuring authority. Three figures, but they carried the weight of an entire supernatural hierarchy.
One, tall and hawk-faced, with eyes that seemed to pierce straight into her soul. Another, shorter but muscular, radiating an aura of quiet danger—every inch a predator in restraint. And the last, almost delicate in appearance, yet she could feel the subtle force in her chest that whispered: do not underestimate her.
"Welcome," Grayson said, his tone formal but tight, a predator sizing up other predators.
The hawk-faced one stepped forward first. "Incubus Grayson," he said smoothly. "Mailah. We’ve received notice of your union. It is... unexpected."
Mailah’s stomach flipped. Unexpected? Really? We’ve literally announced it, sent invitations, and are standing here like civilized mortals!
She forced a polite smile. "It is unconventional," she admitted. "But not without precedent."
The Council member’s eyes narrowed. "It is unprecedented in recent memory." His gaze flicked to Grayson, then back to Mailah. "And yet you insist it proceed?"
"Yes," Grayson replied, voice even but firm. "We insist."
The second Council member spoke, voice low, gravelly. "You realize the obligations, the dangers, and the scrutiny you are inviting."
"I do," Mailah said quickly. Her pulse jumped. Grayson’s thumb brushed hers under the table—small, intimate, grounding. "I understand everything. And I’m prepared."
The delicate member stepped closer, gaze flicking between them like a searching flame. "Prepared is not enough. You will be bonded, your lives intertwined on a level beyond mortal comprehension. One misstep could unravel centuries of control."
Mailah’s stomach tightened. She felt Grayson shift closer, protective, warning, solid. She whispered under her breath, "We can handle it."
He gave her hand a brief, firm squeeze in reply.
The next hour was a barrage of questions. Protocols, rituals, bindings, contingencies. Every response from Grayson was calm, collected, precise. Every answer from Mailah was measured, clever, with just enough defiance to keep the Council from dismissing her outright.
And yet, through it all, her attention kept drifting to Grayson—the way he subtly shielded her from the more cutting questions, the way his gaze softened whenever the Council looked away, the occasional, fleeting brush of fingers that sent heat racing through her.
"You’re audacious," the delicate member finally said, voice almost impressed. "Most humans would crumble in the presence of the incubus alone, let alone stand beside him so confidently."
Mailah smirked, brushing hair from her face. "Confidence is a survival tactic."
Grayson’s lips twitched in amusement. "And stubbornness," he added under his breath.
Mailah’s heart stuttered. The Council didn’t notice the exchange, but she did. She liked that they had these little private moments, silent conversations in the middle of scrutiny and judgment.
The hawk-faced Council member leaned forward, voice sharper now. "Explain the feeding arrangements. The rituals. We demand full disclosure before any sanction is granted."
Grayson’s jaw tightened slightly. "All rituals are consensual. All feeding is controlled. The bond will not harm Mailah beyond what she has already agreed to."
Mailah swallowed hard, sensing the tension spike. "And I will endure it," she said, voice steady, meeting their scrutiny. "I trust Grayson. I trust our bond."
There was a long, unreadable pause. Then the delicate member tilted her head, faint curiosity flickering across her features. "Most humans would claim trust but falter at the first taste of instinct. You seem... different."
"I’m human," Mailah said, feeling bold, empowered by Grayson’s presence. "But I’m not ordinary."
The second Council member let out a low, disbelieving whistle. "Boldness will either save you or doom you."
Mailah felt a shiver—not entirely from fear. She glanced at Grayson. His shadow form shimmered faintly, more pronounced than usual, a reminder of the hunger she had felt the night before.
He leaned just slightly closer, letting his presence be a shield without words.
Then came the test.
The hawk-faced member produced a small crystal orb, black as obsidian, resting it carefully on the table between them. "Demonstrate control," he commanded. "Bonded or not, we must know the stability of this union."
Grayson’s gaze flicked to Mailah, and in that instant, the world seemed to narrow to just the two of them. His hand brushed hers under the table again, a silent promise: I will not let anything harm you.
Mailah’s pulse raced. The orb pulsed faintly, almost breathing with a life of its own. She remembered the warnings Grayson had whispered in the sunroom: the moment you feel my hunger, you must anchor me.
She placed a hand over his, pressing firmly. Energy leapt between them—not violent, not unkind, but electric, alive. The crystal trembled, then steadied. The Council members leaned closer, expressions shifting from suspicion to wary fascination.
Grayson’s shadow shimmered and solidified, his strength and restraint evident. "See?" he murmured, almost inaudible. "We are capable."
Mailah swallowed. "We are capable," she echoed, though every nerve in her body thrummed with the knowledge that this was only the beginning.
When the Council finally departed, they were quieter than they had arrived. Words were few, but the weight of observation lingered.
Outside, the sun had dipped low, painting the villa in gold and crimson. Mailah exhaled, releasing tension she hadn’t realized she’d been holding.
Grayson wrapped an arm around her waist, pulling her close. "Survived," he murmured.
"For now," she replied, tilting her head to kiss him lightly.
He deepened the kiss, and she felt the thrill of fire and danger in every brush of his lips. Shadow weaved between their feet, tail flicking like a metronome marking the rhythm of their moment.
"You were remarkable," he said against her hair. "I didn’t think the Council would respect my human."
Mailah grinned. "I have my ways."
"And I’m endlessly proud," he added softly, brushing a strand of hair from her face.
She laughed softly, heat curling through her chest. "And you terrify me."
"Good. Mutual terror is part of love, right?" he teased, the faintest smile tugging at his lips.
"You’re insufferable," she said, pretending to scold, though her heart leapt at the low, rumbling chuckle he gave in reply.
They moved together across the terrace, hands intertwined, shadow and human, predator and chosen, savoring a quiet victory in a world that demanded vigilance and power.
"Two days," Mailah whispered, resting her head against his chest.
"Yes," Grayson said, lips brushing the top of her hair. "Two days until we bind ourselves, until this madness is official. And we’ll face it—whatever, whoever—together."
Her heart swelled, anticipation mixing with a delicious pulse of desire. The thrill, the danger, the intimacy—it all made her dizzy in the best way.
Mailah let her eyes fall shut, breathing in the faint spice of Grayson’s skin. The terrace was quiet now. No Council. No scrutiny. No tests. Just the two of them and the slow, steady beat beneath his ribcage.
For the first time all day, she let herself sag into him.
Grayson shifted so subtly she barely felt it, but the gesture wrapped around her like a shield: protective, anchoring, a barrier against a world that suddenly felt far too sharp.
"You did well," he murmured again, voice lower now, almost reverent. "Better than they expected. Better than I expected."
She snorted softly. "Are you saying you doubted me?"
He brushed a finger under her chin, lifting her gaze to meet his. "Never doubted. Only feared... they wouldn’t see what I see."
Mailah felt the heat crawl up her neck, blooming under her skin. "Which is?"
"That you were forged for this," he whispered. "That you’re stronger than they know. And that you’re mine."
A shiver skated down her spine—not from fear, but from the way he said mine: not possessive, but claiming, reverent, as though the universe had carved the word into his very bones.
She stepped closer, fingers curling around the back of his shirt. The air between them changed. Deepened. Thickened. The kind of shift that always preceded something dangerous or intimate—often both.
"Grayson," she breathed, letting her forehead touch his, "for a moment back there, I thought they were going to tell you no."
"They wouldn’t." His thumb brushed her lower lip, slow, deliberate. "I wouldn’t allow it."
"You say that like you can dictate the Council’s decisions."
"I can’t," he admitted. "But I can dictate how far I’d go for you."
Her pulse fluttered. "And how far is that?"
He smiled—slow, dangerous, and devastating.
"Farther than they’re prepared to test."
A gust of wind swept across the terrace, lifting her hair, brushing cool air against her heated skin. Grayson’s hand slid down her waist, settling at the small of her back. Not possessive. Not demanding.
But full of intent.
"Come inside," he said softly, but there was nothing soft in the way he looked at her.







