Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 86: The Storm

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Chapter 86: Chapter 86: The Storm

GRAYSON STOOD behind his desk, towering, his shoulders rigid as though he were holding himself back by sheer force of will.

His tie hung loose, his dark suit jacket hanging open, and the top button of his shirt was undone. He looked disheveled in a way that only heightened his menace.

Opposite him, a man—a mid-level executive, if Mailah remembered right—sat stiffly, face pale with tension.

Grayson’s voice cut through the air like a blade. "I do not tolerate failure dressed as excuses. If you cannot do your job, there are a hundred others waiting to take your place."

The man stammered, "Mr. Ashford, I—"

"Do not waste my time groveling." Grayson’s eyes flashed, faintly glowing, the unmistakable mark of his demon nature simmering beneath his skin.

He looked almost feral, dangerous in a way that made Mailah’s heart lurch.

When he noticed her, the change was immediate, like the snap of a trap.

His gaze shifted, cold and sharp, landing on her with the weight of a thousand unspoken words.

For a fraction of a second, he didn’t look like the Grayson she had teased in the park, or the one who had smirked at her in the car. He looked like a predator, irritated at the intrusion into his lair.

"Mailah," he said, her name carved in warning.

She froze, her hand still on the door handle. For a heartbeat, she thought he might actually throw her out.

But something in the lines of his face made her stand straighter.

"I need to talk to you," she said, injecting more confidence into her voice than she felt.

The silence that followed was suffocating.

The man in the chair glanced between them nervously, clearly aware that he’d just become invisible in the face of something much more dangerous.

Grayson’s jaw flexed. His glare said not now, but Mailah refused to back down.

"I said," she repeated, steady, "I need to talk to you. Alone."

For a long, taut moment, it felt like the room itself held its breath.

Finally, Grayson exhaled slowly, as if leashing the fury coiled beneath his skin.

His gaze flicked to the trembling executive. "Leave us. We will finish this later."

The man scrambled to his feet, relief written in every line of his body as he fled the office.

The door clicked shut behind him, and silence settled like a weight.

Mailah swallowed hard.

Her heart was racing, but she forced herself forward, each step deliberate until she stood in front of his desk.

"You can’t keep doing that," she said quietly.

Grayson leaned back against the edge of his desk, crossing his arms. His eyes, still faintly aglow, narrowed. "Doing what?"

"Letting that side of you take over." She gestured vaguely toward the door. "I heard you from outside. That wasn’t... human anger, Grayson. That was you feeding on it."

His lips curved into something between a smirk and a snarl. "So what if it was? Do you want me to play the polite human CEO? Pretend I’m something I’m not? You, of all people, should know better."

Her chest tightened. He wasn’t wrong, but still— "I know who you are. But if you keep tearing into people like that, you’re going to lose control. And when you lose control..." She let the sentence hang.

They both knew what it meant.

For a moment, the fire in his gaze flared, his demon nature pushing against the thin veneer of humanity. But then, something softer flickered there.

"And what," he asked slowly, "would you have me do?"

Mailah met his eyes. "Try again. Call him back. Talk to him. Not as a demon who feeds on fear, but as Grayson Ashford. As the man who’s supposed to lead this company."

The silence stretched. He looked at her like she’d lost her mind.

"Mailah..." His voice was rough. "That’s crazy."

"It’s not," she said firmly. "And I think you can do it." 𝑓𝑟𝑒𝘦𝓌𝑒𝑏𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝘭.𝒸𝘰𝑚

His laugh was humorless, bitter. "You think a demon can simply... turn it off?"

"I think you can," she countered. "You’re not like your brothers. You’re trying. And I’m not going to let you throw that away."

For a long time, he didn’t move. The battle inside him was visible in every line of his body—the tension in his jaw, the faint tremor in his hands, the shadows in his eyes.

Finally, with a sharp inhale, he pushed off the desk and strode to the door.

His hand lingered on the handle for a moment before he yanked it open.

"Elena," he called, voice still edged but less lethal. "Bring him back."

The assistant appeared, her eyes flicking briefly to Mailah before she nodded and disappeared down the hall.

Moments later, the nervous executive returned, glancing between them like a cornered rabbit.

Grayson stood tall, composed, though Mailah could see the strain in every line of him.

"Sit," he said, voice lower now.

The man obeyed quickly.

Grayson’s jaw tightened, then—deliberately, almost painfully—he forced the words out. "I may have... been harsher than necessary."

The executive blinked, clearly shocked.

Mailah held her breath.

Grayson continued, each word feeling as though it cost him. "What I want is results. But I will hear your plan again. Explain how you intend to fix this."

The man stammered but launched into an explanation, and though Grayson’s eyes still burned faintly, his voice stayed measured this time.

Mailah, standing to the side, watched him struggle—watched him try.

And for the first time since she met him, she felt a deep, swooning ache in her chest. Because he was doing this for her.

Against every instinct, every urge, every part of his nature screaming to dominate and destroy, he was trying to be better. For her.

The executive stumbled through his plan, his words tumbling over themselves in nervous bursts.

Grayson listened, stone-still, his gaze fixed but not searing this time. His fingers drummed once on the desk before going still again, the smallest sign of strain.

Mailah watched with bated breath. Every instinct in her screamed to step closer, to steady him, but she didn’t move.

This was his fight, his choice. Still, her heart raced when she noticed the faintest flicker of gray in his eyes dim, leaving behind only their storm-blue-grey hue.

It was working. He was pulling himself back.

When the man finally finished, Grayson exhaled slowly, the sound sharp in the quiet.

He gave a short, curt nod. "See that it’s done. If you fail again, there will be no discussion."

The executive bobbed his head so fast Mailah thought it might snap off, then hurried out of the office as though chased by fire.

The door clicked shut, leaving them alone once more.

The silence that followed wasn’t heavy this time—it was electric.

Grayson leaned back against the desk again, his head tilted down slightly, his jaw tight.

The faintest tremor passed through his hand before he curled it into a fist and shoved it into his pocket.

He looked dangerous still, but not because of the demon lurking beneath his skin. This danger was something else—something intimate, something sharpened by restraint.

"You’re infuriating. As usual," he said finally, his voice low, hoarse, carrying that rough edge that sent a shiver straight through her.

Mailah arched a brow, though her chest was still heaving. "Because I made you apologize?"

"Because you make me want to try," he growled, as if the words themselves cost him something.

His gaze snapped to hers, searing and unflinching. "You walk into my office, into my chaos, and you demand things of me no one else would dare. And the worst part?" He pushed off the desk, closing the distance between them with deliberate slowness. "I listen."

Her throat went dry as he stopped just inches away, the heat of his presence crashing into her.

"That’s not a bad thing," she whispered, her voice barely steady.

"It is for me." His lips curved into the faintest, bitterest smile. "Because every time I give in to you."

She shook her head, swallowing hard. "Well. Every time you give in, you get closer to what you could be."

His eyes darkened at that, unreadable, and then he was closer still, close enough that the faint brush of his breath ghosted against her cheek.

"You think you’re changing me," he murmured, his voice a low, dangerous rumble. "But what if I’m only pulling you deeper into me? What if you don’t survive it, Mailah?"

The air between them trembled, thick and alive.

"I’m not afraid of you," she said softly, though her heart thundered against her ribs.

He leaned in further, until his lips were a hair’s breadth from hers, his eyes locked on her mouth. "You should be."

The words were a warning, but the way his hand lifted—hesitant, trembling, before brushing lightly against her jaw—betrayed him.

Her breath caught.

"You’re holding back," she whispered, tilting into his touch.

"I’m trying," he rasped, his control fraying in the edges of his voice.

And then, with a guttural sound that was half a curse, half a surrender, he closed the last inch between them.

The kiss wasn’t gentle.

It wasn’t sweet.

It was fire and hunger and desperation tangled together, weeks of restraint burning away in a single moment.

His mouth claimed hers fiercely, as though he couldn’t hold himself back any longer.

Mailah melted against him, her hands clutching his shirt, pulling him closer, closer, until her body was flush against the heat of his.

She could feel the faint tremor running through him, the way his self-control warred with his desire.

When he finally tore his lips from hers, his forehead rested against hers, his breathing ragged.

"This," he said roughly, his voice breaking, "is why I keep my distance. Because if I take too much, if I stop holding back even for a second—" His hand slid down her side, fingers curling into her waist with restrained possession. "I won’t stop."

Her chest heaved as she met his gaze, eyes wide but unwavering. "Then don’t."

The silence that followed was thick, molten, filled with the gravity of what she’d just said.

Grayson’s jaw clenched. He searched her eyes as though looking for hesitation, for a crack in her resolve. But all he found was fire.

With a sound that was half a growl, he dragged her back into another kiss.

This one was different—slower, deeper, but no less consuming.

His lips moved against hers like he was learning her, memorizing her, as if every second mattered.

Her fingers tangled in his hair, tugging him closer. His hands slid down her back, anchoring her against him.

For a man who ruled boardrooms and bent empires, he kissed her like she was the only thing that had ever truly undone him.

When they finally broke apart, both gasping, Mailah managed a shaky laugh. "So much for keeping it professional."

Grayson’s lips curved, though his eyes still burned with hunger. "You make me forget every rule I’ve ever made for myself." His thumb traced her lower lip slowly, reverently.

She leaned in, her lips brushing his ear as she whispered, "Then let me terrify you a little longer."

He closed his eyes, a shudder rippling through him, and for a fleeting, fragile moment, the demon inside him went utterly silent.