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Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 188: The Trail
THE TRAIL PULLED THEM DOWNHILL.
Not sharply—just enough that Mailah felt it in her calves, in the subtle way the forest shifted from watchful to wary. The trees grew thinner, trunks spaced farther apart, the undergrowth trampled as though something heavier than deer had passed through recently.
Lucson didn’t slow.
Mason did, once—just long enough to crouch and brush his fingers over a scuffed patch of dirt.
"She didn’t bother hiding this part," he murmured.
Mailah frowned. "Is that... good?"
"No," Mason said lightly. "It means she wanted us to find it."
Lucson shot him a look. "Or Grayson did."
That possibility landed differently. Mailah’s chest tightened, hope and fear tangling painfully together.
They broke through the tree line ten minutes later.
The house sat alone at the edge of a clearing, half-swallowed by ivy and shadow. Two stories. Stone foundation. Slanted roof patched with mismatched shingles like someone had repaired it in a hurry, repeatedly. One window upstairs was cracked, a dark line running diagonally through the glass like a scar.
Mailah slowed instinctively.
The place didn’t feel abandoned.
She swallowed. "So. Hypothetical question."
Mason glanced sideways at her.
"When we finally come face to face with the demon princess," she said, keeping her voice casual through sheer force of will, "what exactly is the plan?"
Lucson didn’t answer immediately.
Mailah pressed on. "Because from everything you’ve told me, Seryn isn’t just powerful—she’s strategic. Ancient. If she wanted us dead, we wouldn’t even know she was nearby."
Mason hummed thoughtfully. "True."
"So shouldn’t we be preparing?" she continued. "All I’ve done so far is hike ominously and develop trust issues."
Mason actually smiled at that.
"She won’t keep Grayson in one place," he said. "That’s not how she operates. Seryn moves constantly—layers locations, uses people as buffers. What we’re looking for isn’t her."
"Then what are we doing here?" Mailah asked.
"Confirming direction," Lucson said. "And checking whether she—or Grayson—left something behind."
Mailah’s shoulders sagged despite herself. She hadn’t even gotten close yet. Not a glimpse. Not a voice. Just shadows and theories.
She exhaled slowly. "Right. Of course."
Lucson glanced at her then, brief but sharp. His hand brushed her elbow—barely a touch, but deliberate.
"Stay close," he said. "And do not wander."
She gave him a look. "I’m insulted you think I would."
"You followed us into a demonic exile scar," Mason said. "Uninvited."
"Fair."
The door creaked when Lucson pushed it open.
Inside, the house smelled wrong—not rot, not decay, but absence. Like a room after a fire had burned all the oxygen away. Dust coated every surface except the floor, where faint drag marks cut through the grime.
Mailah’s heart picked up speed.
They moved room to room, footsteps quiet. A kitchen with an untouched kettle. A living room with furniture arranged too neatly, like a stage set. No bodies. No blood. No signs of struggle.
"Empty," Mason muttered. "Recently vacated."
Mailah was just starting to feel a flicker of relief when Mason’s voice carried down from upstairs.
"Uh. Lucson. Something’s here."
Her pulse spiked.
She didn’t wait for permission.
She took the stairs two at a time, excitement bursting through the dread—finally, finally something concrete—
—and then she saw it.
The body lay sprawled on the floor of the second bedroom, limbs stiff, skin drawn tight over bone as though every drop of life had been pulled out from the inside. The eyes were wide, glassy, staring at nothing. The mouth frozen open in a silent scream.
Mailah’s breath hitched violently.
She turned—
—and walked straight into Lucson.
His chest was solid. Warm. Unyielding. He reacted instantly, one arm coming around her shoulders, pulling her back against him, turning her face into his coat before she could see more.
She pressed her forehead against him, heart pounding. "That’s not—normal, right?"
"No," Lucson said. "It’s not."
Mason crouched beside the body, expression grim. "Death was fast. No physical trauma. Life force extraction."
Mailah swallowed hard.
"How recent?", Lucson asked.
"Hours. Maybe less."
Lucson’s jaw tightened. "Any trace?"
Mailah clutched Lucson’s coat.
"Tell me," she said. "Just—tell me."
Mason met her eyes.
"There’s demonic resonance," he said slowly. "Strong. Focused."
Mailah’s stomach dropped. "So... her."
"...or Grayson." He quickly added.
The world tilted.
Lucson went very still.
Mason hesitated.
"If it was Grayson," he said, "then he didn’t feed defensively."
Her throat closed. "What does that mean?"
"It means," Mason continued, voice grave, "he’s operating in full demon mode."
Silence crashed down around them.
Mailah’s fingers tightened in Lucson’s coat as the implications settled—what it meant for Grayson, for his control, for what Seryn might be doing to him.
Lucson’s arm tightened protectively around her.
They left the house without speaking.
Lucson closed the door carefully, almost reverently, as though sealing something inside rather than walking away from it.
Mason lingered long enough to scuff the disturbed dust with his shoe, erasing the most obvious signs of their presence. Habit. Instinct. Damage control.
Mailah didn’t look back.
By the time they reached the car, the adrenaline had burned itself out, leaving behind a hollow ache that spread through her chest and settled there, heavy and immovable.
The sedan pulled onto the road without ceremony.
Mailah slid into the backseat, hands folded tightly in her lap. She didn’t buckle right away. Didn’t reach for her phone. Didn’t even look out the window.
Her mind replayed the image she’d tried not to see.
The body.
Drained.
Empty.
Her throat tightened.
The drive stretched on, winding down the mountain and toward civilization, toward Tuscany’s rolling hills and sun-warmed stone villas that felt impossibly distant from the reality clawing at her ribs.
Mason drove. Lucson sat in the passenger seat, one arm braced against the door, gaze fixed ahead.
No one spoke.
Mailah stared at the back of Lucson’s head and wondered—absurdly—when he’d started feeling like something solid she could lean on. When his presence had shifted from unsettling to... anchoring.
She didn’t like needing that.
She liked it even less that Grayson wasn’t here to provide it.
Her thoughts spiraled, circling the same terrifying question over and over.
What if Grayson wasn’t Grayson anymore? 𝒻𝓇𝑒𝘦𝘸𝑒𝒷𝓃ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝒸ℴ𝘮
The words Mason had spoken echoed mercilessly.
Full demon mode.
Her fingers curled into her palms.
The road blurred beneath the car, and she was no longer seeing trees or sky—but memory.
She had asked on the way back.
She remembered that part clearly, because it was the first time she’d heard her own voice shake.
"How does that even happen?" she’d asked, breaking the silence as they reached the clearing. "Losing... humanity. You talk about it like it’s something that can just slip."
Mason had sighed, glancing toward Lucson before answering.
"It doesn’t slip," he’d said. "It’s taken. Or surrendered."
Lucson hadn’t contradicted him.
"What does that mean?" Mailah had pressed. "He’s not weak. He’s controlled himself for centuries."
"Being controlled," Lucson had interrupted quietly. "That’s the difference."
She’d stopped walking then. Forced them to look at her.
"You’re saying Seryn could just... flip a switch."
"No," Mason had said gently. "She applies pressure. Carefully. She isolates him. Provokes him. Makes restraint cost more than release."
Lucson’s jaw had tightened. "She knows how to fracture his self-perception. How to make the demon feel like relief."
Mailah’s heart had pounded painfully. "And if he lets it take over?"
Mason hadn’t answered immediately.
Lucson had.
"Then he won’t feel the conflict anymore."
That had terrified her more than anything else.
The car took a sharp turn, pulling Mailah back into the present. She finally buckled her seatbelt with trembling fingers and leaned her forehead against the cool glass.
Tuscany unfolded outside—vineyards, golden hills, distant cypress trees standing tall and indifferent. Beautiful. Normal.
Cruel, in its normalcy.
"Say something," she murmured suddenly.
Lucson’s eyes flicked to the rearview mirror.
Mason glanced back briefly. "About?"
"About anything," she said. "If I stay in my head any longer, I’m going to start imagining him with red eyes and claws and—"
"That’s not how it works," Lucson said firmly.
She swallowed. "I know."
That shut him up.
Mason’s grip tightened on the steering wheel. "He won’t lose himself overnight. Even under her influence."
Mailah exhaled shakily. "You sound like you’re trying to convince yourself."
Mason’s mouth curved faintly. "Occupational hazard."
Silence settled again, but it was different now—less empty. Threaded with shared fear.
Mailah closed her eyes.
Grayson’s face surfaced instantly. The way he looked at her when he thought she wasn’t paying attention. The way he always checked the exits of every room. The way his voice softened only for her, as though gentleness were a private language he refused to speak aloud to anyone else.
You are the only, he’d told her.
Her chest ached.
"He wouldn’t choose this," she said quietly. "He hates what he is when he feeds without control."
Lucson nodded once. "Which is why Seryn would force his hand."
Mailah’s nails dug into her palm. "How?"
"By convincing him he’s already lost," Mason said. "By making him believe the monster is inevitable."
"That’s cruel," Mailah whispered.
Lucson’s voice was flat. "That’s Seryn."
The villa appeared at the end of the road like a mirage—stone walls glowing in the late afternoon sun, windows reflecting gold. Safety, on the surface.
The car slowed.
Mailah straightened, suddenly restless. "What happens when we get there?"
"We regroup," Mason said. "Reassess. Track secondary trails."
"And if we find him?" she asked.
Lucson turned fully in his seat to face her.
"Then you let us handle him," he said.
Her breath caught. "Absolutely not."
His gaze sharpened. "Mailah—"
"No," she repeated, stronger this time. "If he’s... if he’s not himself, I’m the one person who might still reach him."
"That’s exactly why you shouldn’t," Mason interjected. "You’re leverage. Emotional variables are dangerous."
She laughed, sharp and humorless. "You don’t get to talk about variables when the equation is my fiancé."
Lucson studied her, something unreadable passing through his eyes. "And if he hurts you?"
Her voice didn’t waver. "Then he’ll hate himself forever."
Silence fell again.
The car rolled to a stop.
Mailah opened the door before either of them could say anything else. She stepped out into the warm Tuscan air, inhaling deeply, grounding herself in the scent of earth and sun and olive trees.
She wasn’t breaking.
Not yet.
She turned back to them, eyes fierce despite the fear burning behind them.
"Whatever Seryn thinks she’s doing," she said quietly, "she’s forgotten one thing."
Mason raised a brow. "Which is?"
Mailah’s jaw set.
"She taught him obsession," she said. "I taught him love."
Lucson didn’t smile.
But for the first time since the forest, something like respect flickered in his gaze.
And far away—too far for any of them to sense yet—Grayson opened his eyes, and the world felt different around him.
Cold.
Hungry.
And wrong.
Mailah watched the familiar stone walls rise around them like a promise and a warning all at once. This place was supposed to be safe. Supposed to be quiet.
Her phone vibrated softly in her pocket. She froze.
It stopped before she could pull it out. No missed call. Just a notification.
Her pulse spiked anyway.
Lucson noticed. Of course he did. His gaze met hers, sharp and questioning.
"Nothing," she said quickly, forcing her hands to unclench.
But as she stepped out of the car moments later, a chill traced her spine—an unshakable realization settling deep in her bones.
Seryn knew what they were doing and going to do.
And Grayson—her Grayson—was slipping farther away with every mile they drove.







