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Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 191: The Stop
SOMETHING UNREADABLE flickered across Lucson’s face.
Then it was gone.
He turned his attention back to the road, knuckles resting easy on the wheel, posture unchanged—if anything, more controlled. The kind of stillness that didn’t invite questions.
Carson noticed anyway.
He seemed to always do.
"Well," Carson said cheerfully, stretching his arms above his head, "since we’re all emotionally exposed and headed toward danger, anyone want to know where we’re going?"
Mailah lifted her head slightly. "Yes. I would actually love to know that."
Carson glanced sideways at Lucson. For the first time since they’d left the villa, his grin dulled. Not vanished—just... sharpened into something thinner.
"We’re still following her," he said.
"Seryn," Mailah murmured.
Carson nodded. "She’s being polite about it."
Lucson let out a quiet breath. "She’s being deliberate."
Mailah frowned. "How so?"
"She’s leaving traces," Carson said. "Little ones. Not enough to pin her down. Just enough to make sure we know she knows we’re coming."
Lucson added, "Breadcrumbs, not footprints."
Mailah’s stomach tightened. "She wants you to follow."
"Yes," Lucson said. "But not predict."
Carson tapped the window lightly, once. "It’s a taunt. A very old one."
Mailah thought of Grayson—of the way he’d always seemed to stand half a step ahead of disaster, half a step behind instinct. Of how he’d once told her that the most dangerous traps weren’t the ones that snapped shut, but the ones that invited you to walk in.
"And where are the breadcrumbs leading?" she asked quietly.
Lucson hesitated.
Just long enough for her to notice.
"Outside Italy," he said finally. "East."
Carson tilted his head. "You’re being generous."
Lucson shot him a look.
"Fine," Carson amended. "Northeast. Across borders that don’t like to stay put."
Mailah swallowed. "Where exactly?"
Lucson’s voice lowered. "The Black Pass."
Her brows knit. "That’s not a place."
"It is," Carson said. "Just not one humans agree on."
Lucson continued, "It sits between old trade routes and newer fault lines. Part mountain. Part memory. It appears differently depending on who’s looking."
Mailah exhaled slowly. "That sounds... ominous."
Carson brightened. "It’s extremely ominous."
The road continued to unwind, the landscape subtly changing—less pastoral now, more severe. Hills gave way to jagged silhouettes. The sky dimmed earlier than it should have, clouds stacking thick and unmoving above them like they were being held in place.
Mailah’s eyelids grew heavy before she realized it.
She tried to fight it—tried to stay alert, stay useful—but exhaustion crept in anyway, bone-deep and unavoidable. She was human. No power humming beneath her skin. No centuries of endurance stitched into her bones.
The next thing she knew, her head dipped forward—
And then she was gone.
When she woke, it was gradual.
Warmth first.
Then stillness.
Her body felt... supported. Reclined. Comfortable in a way she didn’t remember choosing.
Mailah blinked slowly and stared at the ceiling.
Leather. Soft lighting. The faint vibration of an engine at rest.
They weren’t moving.
She shifted, then paused.
Her seat was reclined farther back than before. A blanket—where did that come from?—was tucked loosely over her legs. Not tight. Not restraining. Thoughtful.
She sat up, heart ticking faster.
Before she could speak, Carson’s face appeared at the edge of her vision, peering in through the open passenger door.
"Well look at that," he said pleasantly. "The human is awake."
Mailah stared at him. "Did you... move my seat?"
Lucson answered from somewhere outside the car. "You fell asleep mid-sentence."
Carson added, "It was adorable. Very trusting."
Mailah groaned softly. "I didn’t mean to—"
"You didn’t do anything wrong," Lucson said, tone calm. "We stopped anyway."
Mailah leaned forward, peering past Carson. They were parked at a roadside pit stop—one of those places that looked innocuous at first glance. A café. Fuel pumps. A restroom sign flickering faintly, like it couldn’t decide whether to stay lit.
"Where are we?" she asked.
"Between places," Carson said lightly.
Lucson closed the driver’s door and turned to face her. "We stopped so you could do human things."
She blinked. "Human things."
"Food," Carson supplied. "Bathrooms. Stretching. Complaining about legroom."
Mailah snorted despite herself. "You’re enjoying this."
"Oh immensely."
She climbed out of the car, legs stiff but steady, the gravel crunching beneath her shoes.
She reached back into the car and slung her bag over her shoulder before anyone could say anything else. The familiar weight steadied her more than she expected. Lip balm. Phone charger. Notebook. The small, ordinary inventory of a human trying to keep up with demons.
"I’m just going to—" she gestured vaguely toward the building.
"Do human things," Carson finished helpfully.
"Yes. Those."
Carson gave an exaggerated bow. "We’ll be in the café. Arguing over whether espresso counts as nourishment."
Lucson shot him a look. "It doesn’t."
"It does emotionally," Carson countered.
Mailah huffed a quiet laugh and headed toward the restrooms. The pit stop was the kind of place designed to look neutral enough to belong anywhere—faded posters advertising regional pastries, a rack of postcards that had probably never been updated, a hum of fluorescent lights that made everything feel slightly unreal.
Inside, the restroom hallway smelled faintly of soap and lemon cleaner. Blessedly normal.
She pushed open the door to the women’s bathroom and paused, staring at her reflection in the mirror.
She looked... tired. Not unraveling. Not hysterical. Just worn around the edges, like someone who had slept in fits and kept waking up halfway through bad thoughts.
Her hair was pulled back too tightly. There were faint shadows under her eyes she didn’t remember earning.
"Get it together," she murmured to herself.
Shadow would have approved of the pep talk. She smiled faintly at the thought of the cat—how he’d followed her around the villa like she was his second home now, how Oliver pretended not to notice.
She splashed water on her face, grounding herself in the sensation.
Cold. Real. Simple.
When she stepped back outside, bag adjusted on her shoulder, she headed toward the café.
Lucson and Carson had already claimed a corner table.
Lucson sat with his back to the wall out of habit, posture composed, attention divided between the room and the window.
Carson lounged opposite him, chair tilted back slightly, one boot hooked around the leg like gravity was optional.
Carson spotted her first. "She survived."
Lucson’s gaze flicked to her face. "Everything all right?"
"Yes," she said.
Carson beamed. "Knew you’d pull through."
She ordered something warm—tea, because it felt like the right choice—and joined them. The chair creaked faintly as she sat, grounding again, reminding her that this was happening in increments. Mile by mile. Stop by stop.
"So," she said, setting her bag at her feet. "Do all your road trips involve pit stops that feel like they exist slightly out of time?"
Lucson answered evenly. "Most places do, if you pay attention."
Carson grinned. "You should hear him talk about grocery stores."
She snorted before she could stop herself. "I’m picturing that."
Lucson ignored them both. 𝑓𝘳𝘦𝑒𝑤𝑒𝘣𝘯ℴ𝘷𝘦𝓁.𝑐𝑜𝑚
Mailah wrapped her hands around her cup when it arrived, letting the warmth seep in. For a moment, she just watched them—these two beings who shared blood and power and absolutely nothing else in temperament.
Lucson’s presence was stabilizing in a way she hadn’t expected. He didn’t fill space so much as anchor it. Carson, by contrast, seemed to vibrate against the edges of it, like he was daring the world to blink first.
"And Grayson," she said quietly, the name still strange on her tongue when spoken aloud in places like this.
Both brothers looked at her.
She traced the rim of her cup. "That’s why this feels... wrong. Not just because he’s missing. Because the balance is."
Carson tilted his head. "Careful. That’s starting to sound like insight."
She gave him a look. "Don’t make me regret it."
Lucson watched her with something like respect. "You’re handling this well."
She laughed softly. "I’m really not."
"You are," he insisted. "You’re still here."
That did something to her chest. She looked away before either of them could see too much.
Outside the window, the road waited—patient, indifferent.
Mailah took another sip of tea, steadied herself, and let the moment settle.
Whatever came next—
She would meet it awake.
The door chimed softly as another traveler wandered in, ordered quickly, and left again, the café slipping back into its quiet bubble.
Mailah watched the movement with mild envy. In. Out. Simple trajectories.
She set her cup down. "How much longer?" she asked, not demanding—just needing a shape for the waiting.
Lucson answered without hesitation. "Hours. Possibly less, if the trail tightens."
Carson leaned forward, resting his elbows on the table. "Think of it as a scenic route. With fewer postcards and more existential dread."
Lucson shot him a warning look. "This isn’t a game."
Carson’s grin didn’t fade, but something sharpened behind it. "I know. That’s why it’s interesting."
Mailah studied him—really studied him—and realized the chaos he fed on wasn’t cruelty. It was motion. Uncertainty. The crack in the pattern where things could still change.







