Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 179: The Village

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Chapter 179: Chapter 179: The Village

THE MILES ACCUMULATED in tense quiet.

Cypress trees gave way to steeper terrain, the Tuscan countryside growing more remote with each turn. The afternoon light had begun its slow descent toward evening, casting long shadows across hills that seemed to watch their progress with ancient indifference.

Mailah snuck glances at Lucson periodically, trying to gauge whether he was still angry. His profile remained perfectly composed, hands steady on the wheel, no visible tension in his shoulders. As if their confrontation had been nothing more than a minor disagreement about lunch plans.

Which, she supposed, from his perspective it probably was.

The car began to slow.

Mailah sat up straighter, scanning the area. They’d left the main road several miles back, following increasingly narrow paths that looked more like suggestions than actual routes.

Now Lucson was pulling onto what might generously be called a shoulder—really just a wider spot where sparse vegetation had been worn down by occasional use.

"Have we arrived?" Mailah asked, breaking the long silence.

"Not quite." Lucson killed the engine, the sudden absence of sound making the isolation more pronounced. "Castelvetro is another two kilometers ahead. We’re walking from here."

"Why?"

"Because driving a luxury vehicle into a remote mountain village tends to attract attention we don’t need." He opened his door, afternoon light harsh after the car’s dimmer interior.

Mailah climbed out, immediately struck by how remote they were. No other cars. No sounds of traffic or distant civilization. Just mountains and sky and the kind of oppressive quiet that made her ears ring.

"Discretion," she asked, closing her door with more force than necessary. "Is that what you call abandoning me with Matteo? Discretion?"

Lucson gave her a look over the car’s roof—one eyebrow raised infinitesimally. "Are we returning to that topic? I thought we’d established our respective positions."

"You established your position. I’m still processing mine."

"Process while walking." He started up the path without waiting to see if she’d follow. "We’re losing daylight."

Mailah hurried to catch up, her shoes decidedly wrong for mountain hiking. "You could at least pretend to care that I’m upset."

"I could." Lucson’s pace didn’t slow, his longer stride eating up ground effortlessly. "But pretending would be disingenuous, and you’ve already established you prefer honesty. So: I acknowledge you’re upset. I understand why you’re upset. I would likely make the same tactical decision again given identical circumstances."

"That’s possibly the worst apology I’ve ever heard."

"It wasn’t an apology." He navigated around a boulder with practiced ease. "You want me to feel guilty. I don’t feel guilt—I’m a demon. What I do feel is mild regret that my methods caused you discomfort, combined with satisfaction that those methods were effective."

"You’re impossible."

He stopped abruptly, turning to face her. "You want me to be something I’m not. To operate according to human ethical frameworks that don’t apply to my nature. But I’m helping find Grayson despite having no obligation to do so. Doesn’t that count for something?"

Mailah opened her mouth to argue, then stopped. Because he was right, wasn’t he? Lucson was helping. On his own terms, using his own methods, but helping nonetheless.

"Fine," she said. "But next time, at least warn me before you strategically abandon me."

"I’ll take that under advisement." Something that might have been amusement flickered across his face. "Though I make no promises."

They walked in silence for several minutes, the path growing steeper. Mailah’s breathing became labored—between the altitude, the stress, and barely any sleep, her body was staging a full protest.

Lucson, naturally, showed no signs of exertion. Didn’t even seem to be breathing harder.

"Must be nice," Mailah muttered between gasps, "being supernatural. No sweating. No exhaustion." 𝙛𝒓𝓮𝒆𝔀𝒆𝙗𝓷𝒐𝙫𝒆𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝓶

"The lack of physical limitations is convenient," Lucson agreed. "Though it comes with other drawbacks. Would you like to rest?"

"No." Pride kept her moving forward. "I’m fine."

"You’re clearly not fine. You’re exhausted and—"

"I said I’m fine."

"Stubbornness." His tone carried what might have been approval. "That will serve you well in our world. Assuming it doesn’t kill you first."

Buildings appeared ahead—old stone structures that looked like they’d been standing since medieval times, weathered but still solid. A church spire rose above clustered rooftops.

"Castelvetro," Lucson said quietly, his entire demeanor shifting to heightened alertness.

The village materialized around them like something from a faded postcard. Stone houses with shuttered windows. Narrow cobblestone streets. A small square with a fountain at its center. Everything worn smooth by time and weather, picturesque in the slanting afternoon light.

It also looked completely deserted.

"Where is everyone?" Mailah asked, her voice automatically dropping to match Lucson’s.

"Excellent question." He moved forward cautiously, scanning the area with predatory awareness.

They passed houses with doors standing ajar, laundry hanging motionless on lines, a bicycle leaning against a wall as if its owner had just stepped inside.

But no people.

No dogs barking. No birds singing. No ambient sounds of human habitation.

Just silence.

"This feels wrong," Mailah said, skin prickling with instinctive unease.

"Very wrong." Lucson had gone very still, head tilted as if listening to something she couldn’t hear. "There should be sounds. Life. The normal noise of existence. Instead—"

"Nothing," Mailah finished, her voice barely above a whisper.

They moved deeper into the village, checking doorways and peering through windows. Every house showed signs of recent occupation—tables set for meals, books left open, a pot still sitting on a cold stove.

As if everyone had simply vanished mid-activity.

"Lucson." Mailah’s hands were trembling now. "What happened here?"

"I’m beginning to develop theories I don’t particularly like." He stopped in the village square, turning slowly to take in the entire scene.

"You think the villagers were—"

"Taken. Erased. Consumed." His jaw tightened.

Horror crawled up Mailah’s spine with cold fingers. "Three hundred people? Just gone?"

"Welcome to the supernatural world." Lucson’s voice had gone flat, emotionless. "When powerful entities want something, collateral damage is expected. Three hundred humans? That barely registers as a footnote."

"That’s monstrous."

"Yes." He didn’t argue or soften it. "It is. And it’s the reality Grayson has been trying to shield you from."

Mailah looked around at the ghost village, trying to imagine what it had been like. Three hundred people living ordinary lives—cooking, arguing, loving, aging—and then something crossed over and erased them all.

For what? For secrecy? For convenience?

"If whoever took Grayson is willing to do this," she said slowly, "what might they be doing to him?"

"Nothing pleasant." Lucson’s expression had gone grim. "But at least we know he’s valuable to them. You don’t cross dimensional barriers and erase entire villages just to kill someone quickly. This level of effort suggests they need him for something. Which means he’s likely alive."

"Likely isn’t certain."

"Nothing is certain." He moved toward the church. "Come. If there are clues about what happened, they’ll be there."

"Why the church?"

"Supernatural entities often leave stronger traces in places humans consider sacred. Concentrated belief creates... residue." He pushed the heavy wooden door open.

The interior was dim and cold.

Mailah shivered, wrapping her arms around herself. "I really don’t like this."

"Noted." Lucson moved through the space with methodical precision, checking surfaces, examining corners. "But discomfort is secondary to finding answers."

"You know what?" Mailah watched him work. "Grayson never mentioned how thoroughly pragmatic you are. He made you sound just manipulative."

"I am manipulative." Lucson crouched near the altar, running fingers along stone.

"That’s still horrifying."

"Would you prefer I lie about my nature? Claim noble motivations?" He straightened, holding something—old paper, yellowed and fragile. "I help Grayson because it serves my interests. Self-interest is remarkably reliable as a motivator."

"And yet here you are, helping when it’s inconvenient."

"Long-term self-interest sometimes requires short-term inconvenience." He examined the paper carefully. "Besides, watching you navigate our world is unexpectedly entertaining."

"I’m so glad my suffering amuses you."

"Not your suffering. Your adaptation." Something that might have been respect flickered in his expression. "Most humans would have broken by now. You’re still fighting. Still standing. That’s... noteworthy."

"Is that another almost-compliment?"

"Don’t let it go to your head." But there was the faintest hint of warmth in his voice. "You’re still human. Still fragile. Still fundamentally outmatched by everything in our world."

Mailah moved closer, trying to see what he’d found. "What is that?"

"Journal entry. From the village priest." Lucson’s expression had shifted to something darker. "Dated three weeks ago. He describes lights in the sky. Voices that made his ears bleed."

"Does he say what happened to everyone?"

"He says they were ’called.’" Lucson’s voice dripped with distaste. "Summoned by something beautiful and terrible. Most went willingly. Those who resisted..." He trailed off, reading further. "Those who resisted were taken anyway."

"Called where?"

"He doesn’t specify. Or couldn’t. The writing becomes increasingly erratic." Lucson folded the paper carefully. "Either he was losing his sanity or being influenced by something that fed on more than just physical sustenance."

Before Mailah could respond, Lucson’s phone buzzed.

He pulled it out, read the screen, and his entire posture changed—going from alert to something harder, more dangerous.

"What?" Mailah demanded, moving closer. "What is it?"

"Text from Ravenson." Lucson’s voice had gone carefully neutral in a way that made Mailah’s instincts scream danger. "He spoke with Kieran about The Hollow."

"And?"

"The Hollow isn’t involved. Kieran’s terrified, actually—says whoever took Grayson is far beyond his capabilities. Refused to even speculate on who it might be."

Mailah’s stomach dropped. "Then who—"

"There’s more." Lucson’s eyes met hers, and she saw something she’d never seen before in his expression.

Fear.

Actual, genuine fear.