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Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 111: The Breakaway
GRAYSON’S MOVEMENT was liquid shadow and lightning combined.
One moment he stood at the doorway, silver eyes blazing with barely contained fury. The next, he’d crossed the space between them with supernatural speed, his hand closing around Varrow’s skeletal wrist with enough force to make the older demon’s bones creak audibly.
"I said," Grayson repeated, his voice dropping to a register that made the walls themselves seem to shudder, "let her go."
Varrow’s triumphant grin flickered, as though a shadow had passed over it.
His grip slackened, just enough for Mailah to tear herself free and stagger back, her spine colliding with the cold marble wall. Her wrist pulsed with pain, angry red marks already blooming where his claws had dug in.
She didn’t understand what had made him falter, but maybe Varrow had suddenly realized—he was no match for a demon like Grayson, not one who looked as dangerously uncontrollable as he did now.
"Bold words from an Ashford who’s been playing human for centuries," Varrow hissed, though there was new wariness in his sunken eyes. "Do you even remember how to fight anymore, boy? Or have you forgotten that along with everything else?"
Grayson’s smile was all teeth and no warmth. "Would you like to find out?"
The temperature in the room plummeted.
Mailah could see her breath misting in the air, could feel frost beginning to form on the mirror above the sink. This was power—raw, ancient, and absolutely terrifying.
And it was on her side.
Varrow must have felt it too, because he took a step back, releasing Mailah entirely. But his retreat was strategic rather than fearful, his posture suggesting a predator reassessing rather than one admitting defeat.
"Interesting," he said, tilting his head like a curious vulture. "The rumors were true then. You’ve been feeding again. I can taste it on you—fresh energy, newly restored vitality." His gaze slid to Mailah with nauseating implication. "From her, I presume?"
"My feeding habits are none of your concern," Grayson replied, positioning himself between Varrow and Mailah with deliberate finality.
"Oh, but they are," Varrow countered, his voice taking on a sly quality. "Because if you’ve been feeding from your pretty little human, that makes her fair game under the old laws. Any demon can challenge for access to a feeding source, provided proper protocols are observed."
Mailah’s stomach dropped. "What?"
"He’s lying," Grayson said, though something in his tone suggested Varrow wasn’t entirely wrong.
"Am I?" Varrow’s smile returned, sharper now. "The laws are quite clear, Ashford. A human who willingly feeds a demon enters the demonic compact, whether they understand it or not. And compacts can be... transferred. Under the right circumstances."
"Those laws haven’t been enforced in two hundred years," Grayson countered.
"Perhaps not. But they’ve never been repealed either." Varrow’s gaze fixed on Mailah with renewed hunger. "Which means technically, legally, your wife is open to... negotiation."
Elin whimpered from her position against the wall, and Mailah felt a surge of fury cut through her fear.
This was exactly what had happened to Elin, to who knew how many other humans who’d gotten tangled in supernatural politics they didn’t understand.
"No," she said firmly, stepping around Grayson despite his attempt to keep her protected. "I’m not property to be negotiated or transferred or whatever sick game you’re playing."
Both demons turned to stare at her—Varrow with amusement, Grayson with concern and something that might have been pride.
"The human speaks," Varrow drawled. "How refreshing. Though I’m afraid your opinion on demonic law carries little weight, my dear."
"Maybe not," Mailah agreed, her heart hammering but her voice steady. "But I know contracts. And if what you’re saying is true about me entering some kind of compact with Grayson, then that compact exists between us. Not you."
She moved closer to Grayson, close enough to feel the supernatural energy radiating from him like heat from a furnace. Close enough to touch, though she kept her hands at her sides, aware of the delicate balance of the confrontation.
"I chose him," she continued, meeting Varrow’s sunken gaze without flinching. "Whatever I entered into, I entered willingly and specifically with Grayson Ashford. No other demon. Not you, not anyone else at this godforsaken party. Just him."
The silence that followed was electric.
Varrow’s expression shifted through several emotions—surprise, calculation, and finally a kind of grudging respect. "Well, well. Perhaps you’re not quite as helpless as you appear." He turned his attention back to Grayson. "Your human has spirit. I can see why you’re so... attached."
"She’s not my human," Grayson said quietly. "She’s my wife. There’s a difference."
"Is there?" Varrow’s smile was razor-thin. "We both know what demons are capable of, Ashford. We both know what you’ve done to previous wives over the centuries. What makes you think this one will end any differently?"
The question hung in the air like poison, and Mailah saw something flicker across Grayson’s features—guilt, maybe, or old pain.
"Because this time I’m choosing differently," Grayson replied, his voice carrying absolute conviction. "Now take your companion and leave. Before I forget that we’re supposed to be maintaining some semblance of civility tonight."
Varrow studied them both for a long moment, his ancient eyes seeing far too much. Then, unexpectedly, he laughed—a dry, rasping sound that held genuine amusement.
"Very well, Ashford. You win this round. But I suggest you teach your wife about the realities of our world before someone less... understanding... decides to educate her themselves."
He turned toward Elin, who shrank back against the wall with a whimper. "Come, my dear. We’ve overstayed our welcome."
"No," Mailah said firmly.
All eyes turned to her.
"She’s not going with you," Mailah continued, moving to position herself between Varrow and Elin. "Not tonight. Not ever, if she doesn’t want to."
"Mailah," Grayson said quietly, a warning in his tone.
But she ignored him, focused entirely on the withered demon before her. "You said I entered some kind of compact with Grayson by feeding him. Well, I’m saying Elin can enter a compact with me. For protection. That’s allowed under your laws, isn’t it?"
Varrow’s eyebrows rose. "Clever. Though technically, you’d need to actually provide her with something—protection, sustenance, shelter. Can you do that, little human? Can you protect her from what I am?"
"No," Mailah admitted. "But he can."
She turned to look at Grayson, seeing the surprise in his silver eyes. "Can’t you? If I’m under your protection as your wife, then anyone under my protection would be under yours too. Isn’t that how it works?"
The question was as much a test as a genuine query. Would Grayson stand with her in this? Would he help save Elin from the same fate that had most likely befallen the other?
Or would he choose the easier path of letting Varrow take what he claimed was his?
Grayson’s expression was unreadable as he studied her face, and Mailah’s heart hammered with sudden uncertainty. Maybe she’d pushed too far. Maybe she’d asked for something he couldn’t—or wouldn’t—give.
Then, slowly, a smile spread across his features. Not the cold, dangerous smile he’d been wearing since entering the room, but something warmer.
Genuine.
"Technically," he said, his gaze never leaving Mailah’s face, "my wife is correct. Any human under her direct protection falls under mine by extension of our bond."
He turned to Varrow, and the warmth disappeared, replaced by arctic finality. "Elin stays. Find another feeding source."
Varrow’s face contorted with fury, his skeletal features becoming even more grotesque. "You would break centuries of precedent for one worthless human?"
"Two humans," Grayson corrected mildly. "And yes. I would."
The declaration sent a thrill through Mailah’s chest that had nothing to do with fear and everything to do with the way Grayson had said it—casually, as if choosing her over supernatural law was the most natural thing in the world.
Varrow looked between them, his expression suggesting he was reevaluating every assumption he’d made about Grayson Ashford.
Finally, he straightened, his composure returning like a mask sliding back into place.
"This isn’t over," he said softly. "You’ve made your choice, Ashford. But choices have consequences. Particularly when they upset the natural order."
"Noted," Grayson replied, his tone suggesting he found the threat mildly tedious.
With a final venomous glare at Mailah, Varrow turned and swept from the room, his dark velvet coat billowing behind him like wings.
The moment he was gone, the oppressive weight in the air lifted, leaving Mailah suddenly dizzy with relief.
She stumbled, and Grayson was there immediately, his hands steadying her with surprising gentleness given the violence that had been promised just moments before.
"Are you hurt?" he asked, his silver eyes searching her face with urgent concern.
"I’m fine," she managed, though her legs felt like water and her wrist throbbed where Varrow had gripped her. "Just... that was intense."
"That was insane," Grayson corrected, though there was no real heat in his words. "What possessed you to challenge Varrow? He could have killed you before I even reached you."
"But he didn’t," Mailah pointed out. "And now Elin is free."
They both turned to look at the young woman, who had collapsed against the wall, sobbing with a mixture of relief and residual terror.
Mailah gently extracted herself from Grayson’s steadying grip and moved to kneel beside Elin.
"Hey," she said softly. "You’re okay. He’s gone. You’re safe now."
"Safe?" Elin laughed, the sound brittle and broken. "I’m never safe. He’ll come back. He always comes back."
"Not this time," Mailah promised, though she wasn’t entirely sure how she’d keep that promise. She looked back at Grayson. "She can stay with us, right? At the estate?"
Grayson’s expression suggested he had several objections to this plan, but after a moment, he nodded. "For tonight, at least. We’ll figure out something more permanent later."
The practicality of his response wasn’t romantic, but it was real.
Solid.
Dependable in a way that made Mailah’s chest ache with something that might have been affection or might have been relief or might have been both.
"Thank you," she said quietly.
"Don’t thank me yet," Grayson replied. "What you just did—invoking protection rights, challenging Varrow’s claim—it’s going to have repercussions. The other demons will have noticed. They’ll be watching to see what happens next."
"Let them watch," Mailah said, helping Elin to her feet with surprising fierceness. "I’m tired of seeing what demons do to humans and just accepting it as normal."
Grayson’s laugh was surprised and genuine. "You realize you just declared war on centuries of supernatural tradition?"
"Did I?" Mailah considered this, then shrugged. "Well, someone had to."
The look Grayson gave her then was complicated—equal parts exasperation, admiration, and something deeper that made her pulse quicken despite everything they’d just been through.
"We need to leave," he said finally. "Now, before anyone else decides to test your newfound convictions."
He was right, of course. But as they made their way toward the door—Grayson leading, Mailah supporting a still-shaking Elin—she couldn’t help but feel a strange sense of triumph.
She’d stood up to a demon. She’d saved someone. And she’d done it with Grayson backing her, choosing her stance over supernatural law.
Maybe, just maybe, they could make this work. Not as demon and human, not as predator and prey, but as something more equal. More genuine.
More real.
They were halfway down the corridor when Elin suddenly stopped, her hand tightening on Mailah’s arm.
"Wait," she whispered. "There’s something I need to tell you."
Mailah and Grayson exchanged glances.







