Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 207: The Aftermath
THE CONCRETE FLOOR of the parking garage still vibrated with the ghost of the banishment—a low-frequency hum that seemed to sync with the frantic, jagged beat of Mailah’s heart.
She watched the taillights of the SUV as the red glow reflected off the puddles of oil and violet ichor. Grayson was already inside the vehicle, sitting in the far corner of the back seat like a king who had been mildly inconvenienced by a peasant’s outburst.
Lucson stood beside Mailah, his shadow long and sharp under the buzzing fluorescent lights. He didn’t look at her immediately; his gaze was fixed on the space where Seryn had been unmade.
He looked weary—not the physical exhaustion of a man, but the soul-deep fatigue of an immortal who had just watched history repeat itself in the cruelest way possible.
"We aren’t going back home yet," Lucson said quietly, his voice cutting through the ringing in Mailah’s ears.
Mailah wrapped her arms around herself, the silver-weave suit feeling like a cold second skin. "Then where do we go?"
"A hotel," Lucson answered, finally turning to her. "We stay in Zurich for a few days. We let the dust settle." 𝓯𝓻𝓮𝙚𝙬𝓮𝙗𝒏𝙤𝒗𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝒐𝓶
"Home," Mailah whispered, the word tasting like ash. "I don’t... I don’t know where that is anymore if he doesn’t remember."
She looked toward the SUV. Through the tinted glass, she could see the silhouette of Grayson’s head. He wasn’t looking toward her. He was staring straight ahead, his posture as rigid and unyielding as the magnetite walls they had just fled.
The man who had once spent hours watching her sleep was gone. In his place was a creature of high-born ice.
Unexpectedly, Lucson stepped closer. He didn’t touch her—he knew better than to intrude on her grief with physical contact—but he lowered his voice, his silver eyes softening with a flicker of genuine empathy that felt entirely new.
Perhaps it was the time they had spent together in the trenches of the search, or perhaps even an Ancient could be moved by the sight of a human woman standing in the wreckage of a demon’s heart.
"Mailah," he said, and there was a rare note of assurance in his tone. "I will not let you be cast out. Carson and I... we will talk to him. We will explain the shift, the past, and exactly who you are to him. He is an Ashford; his mind might be a vault Ysoria has locked, but his blood still carries the imprint of the choices he made."
Mailah looked up at him, her eyes red-rimmed but searching. "How far do you think he’s forgotten, Lucson? Is it just the last few weeks? Or is it... is it everything? Does he even know why he’s in this realm?"
Lucson took a deep, steadying breath. "That remains to be seen. Memories are complex things for our kind. They aren’t just files in a cabinet; they are anchors for our power. By taking his memories of you, Ysoria didn’t just take his love—she might have taken the reason he fought to stay human. We will only know the extent of the damage once we get him behind closed doors."
He gestured toward the car. "For now, you need to rest. You look as though you’re held together by sheer spite and silver-weave. A few nights in a hotel will give you the space to breathe and prepare for the next few days. We need to help him settle his current predicament before we decide what ’home’ looks like for any of us."
The Baur au Lac was the kind of hotel that didn’t just provide rooms; it provided a fortress of five-star luxury. It sat on the edge of Lake Zurich, a sprawling palace of marble, silk, and silence.
As they pulled into the private circular driveway, the valets hurried forward, oblivious to the fact that the men in the car could unmake the building with a thought.
Grayson stepped out of the SUV first. Even in his torn shirt, with black blood dried on his shoulder, he carried an aura of such staggering, effortless authority that the staff instinctively bowed their heads.
He didn’t wait for the others. He strode into the lobby, his gray eyes scanning the opulence with a bored, clinical detachment.
"I want the top floor," Grayson told the concierge, his voice a smooth, aristocratic baritone that made the receptionist’s hands shake. "And have a tailor sent up. Immediately."
"Grayson, perhaps a bit of discretion?" Carson muttered, rolling his eyes as he followed behind. He looked at Mailah and gave her a wink. "Don’t mind him, Duchess. He’s gone full ’Crown Prince of the Abyss’ on us. It’s a bit retro, but he always did pull off the ’I-own-your-soul’ look better than anyone else."
They were ushered into a sprawling suite. It was all gold leaf, velvet drapes, and floor-to-ceiling glass overlooking the dark, shimmering lake.
Mailah stood in the center of the living area, feeling like a ghost in a cathedral. She watched as Grayson moved through the space, checking the exits and the warding potential of the windows with a predatory efficiency.
He hadn’t spoken a word to her since the parking lot. He didn’t even look her way, treating her presence with the same indifference he gave the antique vases.
"I’m going to shower," Mailah announced to the room at large, her voice trembling.
Grayson stopped his circuit of the room. He turned slowly, his cold gray eyes landing on her. The silence stretched, simmering with a sudden, unexpected intensity. Even without his memories, his body seemed to react to her voice. His nostrils flared slightly, as if he were catching a scent that confused his logic.
"The human stays in the secondary wing," Grayson said, his voice flat. "Lucson, ensure she has what she needs, but I do not want her wandering near my quarters. Her pulse is... distracting."
"Her name is Mailah, Gray," Carson snapped, his playful tone finally sharpening into annoyance. "And she’s the reason you aren’t currently a shadow-stain on a garage floor."
Grayson’s gaze shifted to Carson, a dangerous, icy light flickering in his eyes. "Her services were noted, brother. That does not mean I am obligated to endure the noise of her heart in my ears all night."
He turned on his heel and disappeared into the master bedroom, the heavy oak door clicking shut with finality.
An hour later, Mailah sat in a deep, claw-foot tub, the hot water turning the bruises on her skin into vibrant, aching maps. She leaned her head back against the porcelain, closing her eyes. She could still feel the phantom pressure of Grayson’s hands on her jaw, the way his thumbs had pressed into her skin right before he gave himself to the void.
He’s still in there, she told herself. He has to be.
She dressed in a thick, white hotel robe, the fabric soft against her sensitized skin. As she walked back into the main living area, she found Carson raiding the minibar with practiced ease.
"Don’t let the ’Prince of Darkness’ routine get to you," Carson said, popping the cap off a small bottle of expensive gin. "He’s always been a bit of a drama queen when his ego gets bruised. The memory loss has just given him a license to be a total prick."
"He called me ’the human,’ Carson," Mailah said, sitting on the edge of a velvet sofa. "Like I’m a house pet."
"Well, to be fair, you are a bit small," Carson teased, though his eyes were kind. "But Lucson is talking to him now. Giving him the ’History of the World: Mailah Edition.’ It’ll take some time for his brain to catch up to what his soul already knows."
"What does his soul know?"
Carson took a long sip of his drink and looked toward the closed bedroom door. "He hasn’t looked at a woman—human or otherwise—the way he looked at you in that garage for four hundred years. Even with his memories gone, did you see how he reacted when you spoke? He’s annoyed because he can’t figure out why he wants to be near you. It’s driving his inner demon crazy."
Suddenly, the door to the master suite swung open. Lucson stepped out, looking incredibly grave. Behind him, Grayson appeared. He had changed into a crisp, black silk shirt, the top few buttons undone, revealing the pale, corded muscles of his chest.
The air in the room seemed to vanish. Grayson’s presence was a physical weight, a simmering, dark energy that made the fine hairs on Mailah’s arms stand up. He walked toward the bar, his movements fluid and lethally graceful.
He stopped two feet from Mailah. He didn’t look down at her, but he didn’t move away either. The silence was thick, charged with a tension that felt almost like a physical touch.
"Lucson has informed me of our... arrangement," Grayson said. He didn’t use her name. He kept his eyes on the bottles behind the bar. "He claims you are a ’vital anchor’ to my stability in this realm. He claims that I chose to undergo this banishment specifically to ensure your safety."
"You did," Mailah said, her voice stronger than she expected. She stood up, forcing him to look at her.
Grayson’s gaze dropped to hers. The gray was still there—cold and distant—but as he looked at her, the pupils began to dilate, a thin ring of his human blue eyes shimmering at the edges. His nostrils flared again. He took a half-step closer, encroaching on her personal space until she could feel the cold radiance of his skin.
"I find that difficult to believe," he whispered, his voice dropping into that low, vibratory register that made her knees weak. "I have no taste for humans. Your lives are a blink. Your emotions are messy. Why would I sacrifice my own history for a creature that will be dust in fifty years?"
He reached out, his hand hovering near her throat. He didn’t touch her, but the heat of her pulse seemed to draw his fingers like a magnet. His eyes fixed on the bruises he had left—the deep purple marks of his teeth and fingers.
"And yet," Grayson continued, his voice turning into a dangerous, silken snarl, "my blood hums when you are in the room. I look at these marks on your skin, and I feel a territorial urge to claim them again. It’s an irritating paradox."
"It’s not a paradox, Grayson," Mailah said, her breath hitching as his fingers finally ghosted over the sensitive skin of her neck. "It’s love. Even if Ysoria took the pictures out of your head, she couldn’t take the feeling out of your chest."
Grayson’s hand tightened, his fingers curling around the back of her neck, pulling her just an inch closer. The intensity in his stare was suffocating—swoon-worthy and terrifying all at once.
For a second, Mailah thought he was going to kiss her, to claim her right there in front of his brothers just to settle the "paradox" in his blood.
"Love is a human fairy tale," Grayson hissed, though his thumb was tracing the line of her jaw with a tenderness that contradicted his words. "I am a Prince of the Ashford line. I do not ’love.’ I possess."
He let go of her abruptly, as if the contact had burned him. He turned to Lucson, his face a mask of iron once again.
"We leave for home in seventy-two hours," Grayson commanded. "Until then, the girl stays in her wing. I need to meditate. My essence is... agitated."
He disappeared back into his room, the door slamming shut with enough force to rattle the crystal chandelier.







