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Becoming Lailah: Married to my Twin Sister's Billionaire Husband-Chapter 240: The Blind Spot 1
GRAYSON DID NOT COME OUT of the shower until after Soren finished his examination.
Soren packed his bag in silence, his movements efficient.
"You’ll be sore," he said quietly to Mailah. "You’ll heal. Slowly. Don’t let him forget that part."
Mailah managed a tired nod. "I won’t."
Soren’s gaze flicked toward Grayson, who remained just outside her line of sight.
"You should learn restraint," Soren added, his voice polite but edged with warning. "Humans don’t break the way your kind does."
Grayson did not respond. The silence that followed felt deliberate.
Once Soren left, the room grew strangely quiet. The weight of what had happened settled into the corners of the space. Mailah pushed herself upright, wincing as her body protested, and found Grayson standing near the window, already dressed, his posture rigid as if he’d been carved there.
"I’ve arranged transport," he said without turning. "We’re leaving the estate."
Mailah blinked. "Leaving... where?"
"There is a museum in the city," he replied. "It might house objects from my realm. From my history." A pause. "I need to see if anything there triggers memory. You are coming with me."
The words were blunt, transactional. And yet—A museum.
Of all the places he could have taken her.
Mailah’s chest tightened unexpectedly. "You’re... taking me out?" she asked, unable to keep the surprise from her voice.
Grayson’s gaze flicked to her face. "You are coming with me," he corrected. Then, after a pause that felt deliberate, "You said humans value experiences. This is... one of them."
The words were awkward, almost begrudging.
Mailah’s chest tightened in a way she didn’t expect.
A museum.
He was trying. In his own blunt, strange way, he was trying.
"Okay," she said. "I’d like that."
The drive into the city passed in a quiet that wasn’t uncomfortable. The world beyond the estate gates unfolded in steel and glass, streets busy with humans who had no idea a demon prince was sitting in the back seat of a luxury car beside a woman he didn’t know how to love.
The museum rose like a monument to memory itself—huge, pale stone walls and tall panes of glass that reflected the gray sky.
Inside, the air shifted. It was cooler, calmer, infused with the soft hush of reverence. The kind of place where voices lowered without being told to.
Mailah felt it immediately.
The weight of stories.
Grayson paused just inside the entrance, his eyes tracking the space as if he were mapping exits, corners, weaknesses. Then he straightened, jaw tightening with something that looked almost like resolve.
"Stay close," he said.
Mailah smiled faintly. "That’s not exactly a romantic instruction."
"This is not a romantic outing," he replied.
"Sure," she said lightly. "Of course it isn’t."
They began to walk.
At first, the museum was just... a museum. Vast halls, high ceilings, echoing footsteps. Displays of ancient civilizations, maps of empires that had risen and fallen, weapons behind glass that once tasted blood.
Grayson slowed in front of a massive mural depicting a long-forgotten war between human factions.
"You give ruin its own rooms," he said quietly. "In my realm, destruction is left where it falls."
Mailah followed his gaze. "We’re good at remembering our worst moments."
"Your worst moments look... small," he said, not dismissive, just observant. "In my realm, wars don’t end when borders shift. They end when something fundamental breaks."
She glanced at him. That felt like more honesty than he intended to offer.
They wandered deeper into the museum. Mailah found herself pointing things out to him—small details, textures, colors. 𝙛𝒓𝒆𝙚𝒘𝒆𝓫𝙣𝓸𝙫𝓮𝒍.𝒄𝒐𝓶
Grayson, surprisingly, listened. He murmured observations about materials used in artifacts, the way a blade had been forged for intimidation rather than efficiency, the way certain armor favored spectacle over survival, the way a story had been compressed into something more palatable.
He didn’t remember his exile.
But he remembered what conflict looked like when it was meant to last.
At one exhibit, a digital display lit up with an interactive timeline. Mailah pressed a button experimentally, and a map bloomed into light, showing the slow spread of human cities across continents.
Grayson leaned closer, his shoulder brushing hers.
"You expand outward," he noted. "In my realm, territory expands inward. Conquest there consumes what it takes. Here, you build on top of it and pretend nothing was lost."
Mailah elbowed him lightly. "We don’t have the luxury of devouring continents."
"No," he agreed. "You devour each other instead."
The corner of his mouth twitched. It wasn’t quite a smile—but it was something.
They passed through a hall of sculptures, then into a wing devoted to "mythic history." The word made Grayson’s eyes narrow.
"Your kind categorizes what frightens it," he said. "In my realm, we carve our fears into laws."
"We categorize what we don’t understand," Mailah replied. "It’s a coping mechanism."
He hummed, unconvinced.
They stopped in front of a massive tapestry depicting horned figures wreathed in flame. The faces were wrong, exaggerated into monstrous caricatures—too many teeth, too many shadows where eyes should have been.
"That’s not accurate," Grayson said flatly.
Mailah studied the woven figures, then glanced sideways at him. "I figured."
He leaned closer to inspect the stitching, unimpressed. "They made us monstrous to make themselves smaller. Fear warps proportion."
Something in his tone softened, just a fraction. As if he understood that fear wasn’t just human.
Mailah’s lips twitched. "Well," she said lightly, tilting her head, "you’ve done a pretty good job proving you don’t actually look like... that."
She gestured vaguely at the tapestry’s many horns, the fanged grin, the flaming eyes.
Grayson’s gaze shifted to her. Slowly. The way it did when something he hadn’t planned on noticing suddenly demanded his attention.
"No?" he asked.
She shrugged, teasing. "I mean, unless you’ve been hiding extra horns somewhere I don’t know about."
For a heartbeat, he only studied her, the corner of his mouth lifting in something that wasn’t quite a smile. Then his eyes glinted—dark, amused, and suddenly far too warm.
"If you are attempting to verify the accuracy of demon anatomy," he said mildly, "there are... more direct methods."
Mailah blinked. "That is not what I meant."
"It could be," he countered. His gaze flicked pointedly to the tapestry, then back to her, heat curling beneath the calm. "If you wish to conduct an investigation of my true form here and now, I can arrange privacy. The museum’s security is... inefficient."
Her face warmed. "Grayson. We are in public."
"Yes," he agreed thoughtfully. "Which would make the effort required... entertaining."
She stared at him. "You are unbelievable."
"You brought up anatomy," he said, entirely too pleased with himself.
Mailah shook her head, laughing under her breath. "I was teasing you."
"I am aware," he replied. "I am choosing to misunderstand you."
She bumped his arm with hers, trying to ignore the way her pulse had betrayed her.
He naturally fell into step beside her as they moved on.
The tapestry faded behind them, but the heat of his gaze lingered far longer than the flames woven into the cloth.
The date—because that’s what it was becoming, no matter how much he refused to call it that—settled into a strange rhythm.
Grayson’s precise observations. Mailah’s quiet wonder. The museum’s vastness swallowing their footsteps, leaving them in a bubble of muted conversation and careful proximity.
At one point, Mailah paused in front of a small exhibit about ancient writing systems. The scripts were beautiful, curling lines etched into stone.
"They tried to preserve language," she murmured. "Knowing it would change."
Grayson studied the stone. "In my realm, language is weaponized," he said. "We preserve it to keep power intact. You preserve it because you know you’ll lose it."
She turned to him, surprised. "That’s... poetic."
"It’s accurate," he replied. Then, after a beat, "You like this place."
"I do," she said. "Thank you for bringing me."
His gaze lingered on her face longer than necessary. "This was not for your enjoyment," he reminded her.
She smiled anyway. "It can be two things."
They turned a corner.
The room beyond was smaller, more intimate. The lighting dimmer. The artifacts older. The placards more cautious in their wording, as if the curators themselves weren’t entirely sure what they were presenting.
Mailah took two steps inside—and then Grayson’s hand closed around her wrist.
Before she could speak, he pulled her sharply to the side, pressing her back against the cool stone wall tucked between two tall display columns.
The shift was sudden enough to steal her breath. His body bracketed hers, close without quite touching, his presence swallowing the small space between them.
Her pulse spiked.
"Grayson," she whispered, startled. "What do you think you’re doing?"
His breath brushed her cheek, warm and deliberate, his voice low enough that it barely carried beyond them. "This corridor bends at the corner," he murmured. "The sightlines don’t reach here. It’s a blind spot."
Her eyes flicked instinctively toward the open room. People moved beyond the displays, unaware of the narrow pocket of shadow they were hidden in.
"You mapped the museum?" she breathed.
"I map rooms the way others breathe," he replied, his gaze dropping to her mouth and lingering there. "Your species builds spaces full of rules and assumes no one will look for the gaps."
Her skin prickled where the cool air met the heat of him. "And the reason you needed a gap is...?"
His jaw tightened as if he were irritated with himself. "This body is inconvenient," he said quietly. "It does not understand restraint the way my kind does. It keeps responding to you. To your voice. To the way you look at things as if they matter." His eyes lifted to hers, dark with something too honest. "It is... shameless."
Mailah swallowed. "You’re blaming your body for being attracted to me?"
"I am stating an observable flaw," he said. "I have spent most of my existence mastering impulse. This vessel ignores that training."
The corner of her mouth lifted despite herself. "So what are you going to do about it?"
His gaze sharpened. "If I don’t ground it, it will continue to distract me."
"And grounding it means—"
He leaned in, stopping just short of her lips. "I need to feel something real," he said softly. "And you are... very real."
Her breath caught. "We’re in a museum."
"Yes," he agreed, eyes never leaving her mouth. "Which is inconvenient. But tolerable."
She should have pushed him away. She should have reminded him of the open space just beyond the column, of the people wandering past unaware of the quiet pocket of heat they’d found themselves in.
Instead, she tilted her head up.
The kiss wasn’t brief at all.
It hit her like a held breath finally released.
His mouth found hers with a hunger he hadn’t meant to show, the contact deepening in an instant as if the restraint he’d been wrestling with all morning had finally snapped.
The world narrowed to heat and pressure and the quiet, dangerous way he pressed closer, his hand bracing beside her head as though he needed the wall to keep from pulling her into him completely.
For a heartbeat, he forgot the museum. Forgot the rules. Forgot the careful distance he’d been trying to keep.
Mailah felt it in the way his breath stuttered against her lips, in the way the kiss lingered too long to be accidental and too fiercely to be casual. The moment stretched, charged and unsteady, until it felt like something in him had reached its breaking point.
Then, with visible effort, he pulled back.
His forehead rested against hers, his breath uneven, his control reassembling itself piece by piece as if he were forcing a storm back into a cage.
Then he lifted his head.
His gaze slid past her shoulder.
And went abruptly still.
The heat in his eyes vanished, replaced by something colder.
Sharper.
Focused.







