Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 233: The White Fire

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Chapter 233: Chapter 233: The White Fire

"WE’RE CLOSE," Lucson said, his voice strained. "The altar is just beyond the next ridge."

The ridge was a steep, rocky climb that felt like ascending the spine of some sleeping beast. As they reached the summit, the Ashford manor finally came into view. Below it, the altar sat like a massive stone stage, surrounded by hundreds of guests whose eyes glowed like embers in the dark. The King himself was there, a silent, terrifying figure of shadow sitting in frozen majesty.

But between the Ashfords and their goal lay a final, impossible obstacle.

The red line of fire they had crossed at the start of the game hadn’t just grown; it had transformed. The flames had turned a haunting, ethereal shimmering white, so bright it hurt to look at. It didn’t flicker like a normal fire; it flowed like a liquid wall of light.

Standing in front of it was a figure in gold-and-black armor—the King’s elite guard.

"To finish the game," the guard announced, his voice like grinding stones, "the House must prove they can protect the prize from the fire. This flame does not burn the flesh of the supernatural—it only consumes the soul of the mortal."

Mailah felt the blood drain from her face. She looked at the white wall. It wasn’t just heat radiating from it; it was a sense of absolute nothingness.

"Wait," Mailah whispered, her voice trembling. "If it consumes mortals... and I’m the only human here..."

"It will turn you to ash before you even take a step," Grayson growled, his hand tightening on his sword hilt until his knuckles turned white.

Lucson pulled his horse to a sharp halt, his eyes narrowing as he scanned the tree line behind them. The forest was crawling. He could hear the heavy thud of House Malakor’s stone-skin warriors and the whistling wind of House Vane’s mist-jumpers.

The other houses closing in for one last desperate attempt to snatch Mailah before she could reach the altar.

"They’re coming," Lucson said, his voice cold and sharp. "They know we’re stalled."

"We can’t stall," Carson said, his usual humor replaced by a frantic energy. He drew a pair of glowing silver pistols, his eyes darting to the shadows. "If they get a hand on her now, all of this was for nothing. Gray, what do we do? You can’t just carry her through that. She’ll die."

Grayson looked at the fire, then at Mailah.

"Lucson, Carson—hold the ridge!" Grayson commanded. "Don’t let a single soul through. Ravenson, stay in the shadows and pick off anyone who gets too close."

"And the fire?" Lucson asked, already turning his horse to face the oncoming horde. "How do you plan on getting a human through a soul-burning flame?"

Grayson didn’t have an answer. He looked at Mason, who was still sitting on his horse, his head tilted as he studied the white flames with a strange, clinical focus.

"Mason," Grayson called.

Mason hopped off his horse, landing lightly on the rocky ground. He walked right up to the edge of the white fire, close enough that the light turned his skin a ghostly pale. He didn’t look at the enemy; he didn’t look at his brothers. He looked at the moonstone choker around Mailah’s neck.

"The stone," Mason murmured, a clever, wicked smile spreading across his face. "It’s a vessel."

"What are you talking about?" Mailah asked, clutching the cool stone at her throat.

"That stone absorbs energy," Mason said, turning to Grayson. "Specifically, Ashford energy. If we can ’overload’ the stone with Grayson’s essence, it will create a temporary vacuum—a bubble of supernatural protection. To the fire, Mailah won’t look like a human. She’ll look like an extension of Grayson’s own soul."

"Will it work?" Grayson asked, stepping toward them.

"In theory?" Mason shrugged, his eyes glinting. "In practice, it’s going to hurt like hell for both of you. You have to give the stone everything, Gray. You have to bleed into it, metaphorically speaking. You have to link your life force to hers."

A thunderous roar echoed from the ridge. A massive boulder smashed into the ground nearby—House Malakor had arrived.

"Decide now!" Lucson yelled, his sword clashing against a stone-hammer as he engaged the first wave of attackers. Carson was a blur of silver light, his pistols barking as he kept the House Vane mist-hunters at bay. "We can’t hold them forever!"

Grayson didn’t hesitate. He grabbed Mailah by the waist and pulled her against him. The contact was jarring—his armor was cold, but his body was radiating a frantic, protective heat.

"Mason, do it," Grayson commanded.

Mason reached out and grabbed the moonstone. He closed his eyes, his hands glowing with a faint blue light as he began to chant in a low, guttural language. "Grayson, hand on the stone."

Grayson placed his gloved hand over Mailah’s, pressing the moonstone into the hollow of her throat.

Mailah gasped. Suddenly, it felt like a bolt of lightning had struck her chest. A wave of silver energy erupted from Grayson, flowing into the stone and then pouring into her skin.

It was overwhelming. She could feel his rage, his possessiveness, and a deep, aching loneliness that made her heart hurt. But most of all, she felt his heat.

The stone flared with a blinding light, expanding into a shimmering sphere that enveloped them both.

"It’s holding!" Mason shouted, stumbling back as the energy pushed him away. "Go! Now! It might not last long!"

Grayson didn’t waste a second. He swept Mailah up into his arms, carrying her bridal-style. He looked at her, his eyes no longer silver, but darkening with a fierce intensity.

"Close your eyes," he whispered. "Don’t open them until I tell you."

Mailah buried her face in the crook of his neck, her fingers digging into the leather of his jacket. She could hear the chaos behind them—the screams of the rival houses, the clatter of steel, Carson’s wild laughter as he fought off three men at once.

Then, everything went silent.

As Grayson stepped into the white fire, the world disappeared. Mailah felt a coldness so deep it felt like her bones were turning to ice.

The shield around them groaned, the white flames licking at the edges like hungry ghosts. She felt Grayson’s heart hammering against her chest—not in fear for himself, but in a desperate, grinding effort to keep the shield from collapsing.

He let out a low, pained grunt. The fire was trying to peel his protection away. Mailah felt a sting on her arm, like a thousand needles.

"Grayson..." she cried.

"I have you," he rasped, his voice sounding like it was being torn from his throat.

He took another step. The heat and the cold clashed, creating a vacuum that made it hard to breathe. Mailah felt the energy from the stone pulsing, dimming, then flaring again as Grayson forced more of his life force into the link.

It was a brutal test of will. He wasn’t just walking; he was fighting the very laws of their world to keep her alive.

Finally, the pressure vanished. The air became heavy and smelled of old stone and expensive wine.

"You can open your eyes," Grayson said. His voice was weak, barely a whisper.

Mailah looked up. They were on the other side. The white wall of fire was behind them, a silent curtain of death. They were standing at the base of the altar.

The crowd was dead silent. Even the King had leaned forward, his eyes fixed on the two of them. No human had ever survived that fire.

Grayson set Mailah down on her feet. He stumbled slightly, his face pale, sweat dripping down his forehead. He looked exhausted, his eyes dimmed. But as Mailah reached out to steady him, he caught her hand, his grip still firm, still possessive.

The King stood up. The sheer weight of his presence forced the entire clearing to drop to their knees. Mailah felt the air leave her lungs as she sank to the cold stone. Grayson knelt beside her, but he kept his head up, staring directly at the King.

"The Ashfords have returned," the King’s voice boomed, vibrating through the ground. "And the prize has been brought through the fire."

A moment later, the four other brothers emerged from the fire. They looked like they had been through a war. Lucson’s armor was cracked; Carson was limping; Mason and Ravenson were covered in the dark ichor of their enemies. They took their places behind Grayson, a wall of dangerous, beautiful power.

The King stared at each of them, his eyes unreadable.

Then he gave a single, slow nod. The white fire behind them vanished instantly, leaving nothing but scorched earth. "The victory is yours. The realm will be under your stewardship for the next century."

The celebration that followed was a blur. The Ashfords were surrounded by sycophants and rivals, but Grayson didn’t let anyone get within five feet of Mailah. He led her away from the noise, through the twisting halls of the manor, until they reached a high stone balcony overlooking the forest.

The adrenaline was gone, replaced by a simmering, heavy tension. Grayson leaned against the railing, staring out at the woods they had just escaped.

"You’re still bleeding," Mailah said softly, noticing a small cut on his temple where the fire had managed to break through.

"It’s nothing," he replied, though he didn’t move.

Mailah stepped closer, reaching up to brush a smudge of ash from his cheek. "You almost died in there, Grayson. Mason said you gave the stone everything."

Grayson turned to her then. In the moonlight, the silver in his eyes was returning, pulsing with a slow, hypnotic rhythm. He caught her wrist, his thumb tracing the pulse point there.