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Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 200: The Cage
THE ATMOSPHERE didn’t just shatter; it underwent a molecular shift.
As Lucson stood between Mailah and Seryn, he didn’t draw a weapon. He didn’t even move his hands from his sides. Instead, he simply exhaled, and the silver of his eyes didn’t just glow—it ignited into a searing, blinding white.
It wasn’t a blast of fire or a physical shockwave. It was a manifestation of pure presence.
Seryn shrieked, a sound of genuine, unadulterated shock. She was a Princess of the Third Circle, but she was being confronted by a force that operated on a different celestial frequency.
She threw up a shield, her heels skidding across the floor as the pressure of Lucson’s light slammed into her.
"Go!" Lucson’s voice didn’t just travel through the air; it resonated within Mailah, a command that brooked no hesitation.
Carson was already a blur of motion. While the princess was momentarily blinded and pinned by Lucson’s light, Carson reached Grayson. The silver-etched chains were smoking, the holy salt reacting violently to the proximity of an Ancient’s power.
Carson didn’t reach for a key. He gripped the manacles with his bare hands, his own skin sizzling and blackening. With a guttural roar of agony and effort, he twisted. The reinforced silver groaned and then snapped, the links shattering like brittle ice.
"Grab him!" Carson choked out, his hands trembling as the metal fell away.
Mailah didn’t think. She lunged forward, catching Grayson as he slumped toward the floor. He was heavy, his body a dead weight of scorched skin and exhausted muscles, but the moment her arms wrapped around him, his head lolled onto her shoulder.
He smelled of the dying embers of the jasmine dream.
"We have to move!" Carson hauled Grayson’s other arm over his shoulder, and together, they dragged him toward the side exit.
Lucson remained at the center of the room, his body a pillar of white radiance. Seryn was beginning to fight back, her shadows lashing out like whips, slowly adapting to the brilliance. She was powerful—dangerously so—and every second they lingered narrowed their window of survival.
"Lucson!" Mailah cried out over her shoulder as they reached the heavy steel door.
"Run!" Lucson commanded, his silhouette flickering as he prepared to release a final, concussive burst to seal the room.
They burst through the door and into the biting chill of the Basel afternoon. The contrast was staggering—the quiet industrial street, the gray sky, and the mundane sound of a distant seagull. Carson fumbled with the keys to the black sedan, his hands raw and bleeding from the silver.
"Backseat! Now!" Carson shoved Grayson inside.
Mailah scrambled in after him, pulling Grayson’s torso into her lap. He was shaking, a fine, rhythmic tremor that spoke of shock.
As Carson floored the accelerator, the tires screaming against the asphalt, a massive thump echoed from the warehouse behind them. The windows of the surrounding buildings shattered outward, and a wave of white light spilled from the warehouse doors, followed by a silence so heavy it felt like a physical weight.
"Did he make it?" Mailah gasped, her eyes fixed on the rearview mirror. 𝕗𝐫𝚎𝗲𝘄𝐞𝕓𝐧𝕠𝘃𝕖𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝚖
"It’s Lucson," Carson grunted, swerving around a rusted shipping container. "He’ll find a way. Right now, we have to put a border between us and that bitch, or she’ll track his scent to the moon."
Carson didn’t head back toward the city center. He drove toward the mountains, his hands gripping the steering wheel so hard the leather groaned. He pulled a small, silver remote from the visor and clicked it.
"What’s that?" Mailah asked.
"A series of EMP and salt-burst charges Lucson planted along the industrial perimeter," Carson said, his eyes darting to the mirrors. "It won’t kill a demon like Seryn, but it’ll scramble the trail. It makes the air taste like static. Even a demon princess can’t track through a localized collapse of the veil."
As he clicked the button, a series of muffled whumps echoed behind them. The sky seemed to shimmer for a second, like a heat haze, before settling into a dull, flat gray.
Mailah looked down at Grayson. He was awake, but barely. His eyes were open, staring at the ceiling of the car, but they weren’t the eyes of the man she loved.
The color deeper and more terrifying than before. The silver irises were gone, replaced by a swirling, light-drinking blackness.
"Grayson?" she whispered, her hand ghosting over his cheek.
He didn’t blink. He didn’t turn his head. He looked like a statue carved from shadows.
"He’s deep in the change, Mailah," Carson said from the front seat, his voice missing its usual comedic lilt. "Seryn pushed him over the edge. He didn’t just feed on you in that dream; he touched the core. He’s... he’s mostly instinct right now."
Three hours later, the urban sprawl of Basel had been replaced by the jagged, snow-dusted peaks of the Swiss Alps. Carson had driven them through winding mountain passes and hidden tunnels until the temperature outside dropped significantly.
They pulled up to a secluded stone villa perched on a cliffside, surrounded by a dense forest of black pines. It was a fortress disguised as a getaway.
"The Ashford family retreat," Carson muttered, killing the engine. "Only we have the coordinates. We’re safe. For now."
The door of the villa opened, and Lucson stepped out. He looked disheveled—his jacket was gone, his shirt was torn and stained with soot, and his hands were wrapped in makeshift bandages. But he was alive. His eyes had returned to their disciplined silver, though they were clouded with exhaustion.
"Help me with him," Lucson said, his voice a rasp.
Together, the brothers carried Grayson into the villa. Mailah followed, her heart in her throat. They laid him on a sprawling velvet sofa in front of a massive stone fireplace.
Lucson immediately began working on the manacles’ burns, applying a translucent salve that smelled of sage and iron.
Mailah stood back, watching the three of them. The brothers—three demons—and her, the human.
Grayson’s eyes finally moved. They tracked across the room, landing on Mailah. The blackness didn’t soften. He sat up, his movements fluid and predatory, lacking any of the human hesitation he used to possess.
"Stay back," Grayson said.
His voice was different. It was deeper, stripped of its melodic warmth, replaced by a metallic coldness that made the hair on Mailah’s neck stand up.
"Grayson, it’s okay," Mailah said, taking a step toward him. "We’re safe. Lucson and Carson got us out."
"I said stay back," he growled.
The sound was primal. It wasn’t a warning; it was a territorial claim. Grayson stood up, his shirtless chest heaving. The scars on his back were no longer glowing; they were black, like ink spilled under the skin.
He looked at Mailah, and for the first time, she felt a genuine, cold spike of fear. He wasn’t looking at her as his fiancée. He was looking at her as food.
"He’s right, Mailah," Lucson said, standing between them. "He’s lost the anchor. The human part of him—the part that loved you—is buried under a thousand years of predatory instinct. He’s an apex predator right now, and you smell like life."
"I don’t care," Mailah said, her voice trembling but defiant. She looked around Lucson at the man she had spent the last week searching for. "Grayson, look at me. You remember me. In the dream, you told me to leave. You tried to protect me even then."
Grayson took a step toward her, his movements a terrifying dance of grace and threat. Lucson put a hand on his chest to stop him, and for a second, the two brothers faced off.
"I didn’t protect you," Grayson hissed, his black eyes fixed on Mailah. "I was trying to save myself the guilt of your death. But that guilt is gone now, Mailah. Seryn was right about one thing. Humanity is a choice. And I’ve stopped choosing it."
The words were a dagger to her heart. Mailah pushed past Lucson, ignoring his warning hiss. She walked right up to Grayson, stopping inches from his chest. She could feel the cold radiating off him—a literal drop in temperature that made her breath mist in the air.
"Then prove it," she challenged, her eyes wet with tears. "If the man I love is gone, then take what you want. Kill me. Drain me. Become the monster Seryn wanted you to be."
The room went deathly silent. Carson stopped fidgeting with his blade; Lucson went still as stone.
Grayson stared down at her. The obsidian in his eyes swirled, a tempest of hunger and something else—a flickering, dying ember of the man who she was supposed to marry. His hand reached out, his long, elegant fingers ghosting over the line on her throat where Lucson had applied the scent-masker.
"You smell like him," Grayson whispered, a trace of his old voice bleeding through the cold. "You smell like my brother’s protection."
He leaned down, his face inches from hers. Mailah didn’t flinch. She leaned into him, her hand coming up to rest on his heart. It was beating—fast, erratic, and powerful.
"I smell like home, Grayson," she whispered. "Look at me. Really look at me."
The tension in the room was a live wire, ready to snap. Grayson’s hand tightened on her neck—not enough to choke, but enough to feel the lethal strength behind his grip.
His pupils flickered. For a fraction of a second, the obsidian was pierced by a needle-thin ring of silver.
He let out a strangled, pained sound, half-sob and half-growl, and buried his face in the crook of her neck. He just breathed her in, his body shaking with the effort of not devouring her.
"I hate you," he muffled against her skin, his voice cracking. "I hate that you came for me. I hate that I can’t... I can’t even be a monster properly when you’re looking at me."
Mailah wrapped her arms around his waist, holding him as if she could anchor him to the earth by sheer force of will. "Good. Don’t be a monster. Be Grayson."
He pulled back, his eyes still dark, but the predatory edge had softened into something resembling a wounded animal. He looked at her with a mixture of desire and self-loathing that was so intense it made her dizzy.
"She’s right about the mark, Mailah," Grayson said, his voice dropping to a low, passionate rumble. "I didn’t just claim you. I bound us. If they take you, they take me. If you die, I become a void."
He reached out, his thumb tracing her lower lip. The touch was electric, a searing heat that made her knees weak. Even in this "changed" state, the chemistry between them was a physical force, a gravitational pull that defied the logic of their species.
"We’re not going to let them take me," Mailah said. "And we’re not going to let you disappear."
Carson cleared his throat, breaking the moment. "Not to ruin the swooning, but we have a problem. Seryn is incapacitated, sure. But she’s a demon princess. She’ll be here within twenty-four hours. And they won’t bring light; they’ll bring the eclipse."
Lucson turned to the large windows, looking out at the darkening forest. "We have one advantage. They don’t know Grayson has turned this far. They expect a victim. They aren’t prepared for an Ashford who has embraced the black."
Lucson turned back to them, his expression grim. "Grayson, you need to stay in this state. If you try to claw back your humanity now, you’ll be too weak to fight. You have to feed. Not on Mailah... but on the excess."
Grayson looked at his brother, his black eyes flashing. "You’re asking me to stay a monster."
"I’m asking you to stay alive," Lucson countered.
Grayson looked back at Mailah. The passion in his gaze was now laced with a dark, possessive hunger.







